San Jose Province, Costa Rica

Hacienda AltaGracia

Price per night from$2,238.60

Price information

If you haven’t entered any dates, the rate shown is provided directly by the hotel and represents the cheapest double room (inclusive of taxes and fees) available in the next 60 days.

Prices have been converted from the hotel’s local currency (USD2,238.60), via openexchangerates.org, using today’s exchange rate.

Style

Natural highs

Setting

Pérez Zeledón peaks

Some stays are about cocooning yourself away but, from the Auberge Resorts CollectionHacienda AltaGracia is a transformative wellness retreat amid the thickly forested Talamanca mountains, which encourages you to emerge in a new resplendent form after spa spoiling that might well be life-changing. Do some serious self work with massages with adaptogenic herbs from the organic kitchen garden, trad healing such as wood therapy and psyche soothing via healing circles and river bathing. Then conquer the wild landscape, dine abundantly on farm-fresh fare and gallop into the sunset on an indigenous horse from the onsite stables. Check-out will undoubtedly see you changed for the better.

Smith Extra

Get this when you book through us:

US$100 resort credit per stay, to use towards adventure and wellness experiences

Facilities

Photos Hacienda AltaGracia facilities

Need to know

Rooms

50 casitas, casas and casonas.

Check–Out

11am, but flexible, subject to availability. Earliest check-in, 2pm.

More details

Rates include all meals and soft drinks, daily adventure and wellness activities (could be yoga, meditation, qi gong and more) and a dedicated experience designer. There’s a minimum stay of five nights over the festive period.

Also

The large light-filled reception instills the sense of indoor-outdoor living with its central art installation of an upside-down tree. And there’s more to draw your attention: a ‘cabinet of curiosities’ filled with natural scents from the surroundings and a boutique selling Costa Rican delicacies and handicrafts.

Hotel closed

The hotel will close from 18 September to 1 November in 2023.

At the hotel

Spa with tepidarium, jetted pool, steam room, sauna, infrared cabins and juice bar; gym; coffee plantation; stables; kitchen garden; mercado coffee shop and deli; lobby boutique; laundry service (charged); free WiFi. In rooms: private terrace, a dedicated ‘compa’ (short for compadre) to look after you throughout your stay, TV, minibar with free soft drinks and snacks, Bluetooth speaker, air-conditioning and ceiling fan, bathrobes, black-out blinds.

Our favourite rooms

All of the casitas, casonas and casas are set in a tropical paradise and have a terrace, romantically canopied bed and picturesque views crafted by Pachamama’s fair hand, so you’re unlikely to be disappointed. But, given the choice, we’d go ‘con piscina’ for an extra-large terrace, swinging day-bed and heated plunge pool.

Poolside

There are three. A semi-circular adults-only pool – with two in-built Jacuzzis – by Las Brisas restaurant, surrounded by cabanas and loungers, which has a view worthy of a National Geographic cover. A palapa bar serves up cervezas, cocktails packed with local fruits and more, plus plates you can pick at while prone on a lounger. A second, set by Picoteo restaurant is open to swim-confident kids too. The third is in the spa’s Casa de Agua, a greenhouse-style building with elaborate hanging baskets and primed for views. It plays an important part in the ‘purification’ ritual that kicks off all treatments; float blissfully as its jets tackle hard-to-reach knots.

Spa

In the 20,000 square feet of wellness-dedicated space, where treatments demonstrate ancient wisdom and a deep love of the land, come to Pachamama (AKA Mother Earth) for some serious pampering. The hotel has collaborated with New York-based health and fitness experts the Well for a truly unique spa offering, and they do indeed go deep. Treatments are kicked off with a ‘purification’ ceremony involving Costa Rican clays, loofahs and oils and a spin through experience showers, a lavender-scented steam room, sauna and a gentle pummelling with jets in the tranquility pool. From there you might get massaged with adaptogenic herbs or batons of local wood, have a craniosacral facial, or bask in the good vibes of a lunar gong bath. There are weekly intention-setting and burning ceremonies, light-touch reiki, mindful silent breakfasts, energy-healing circles and forward-thinking tech to give you a boost: amethyst bio-mats, Celluma light therapy, infrared cabins and specialised soundtracks to set the mood in the sauna. And, a range of yoga practises, guided meditation and qi gong are carried out in open-air ranchos (gazebos). It’s a lot to consider, but the hotel has health coaches and even a chief medical officer to map out a path for you. Oh, and there’s a gym too, where the view from the treadmills is all the motivation you’ll need.

Packing tips

Arrive with all your frustrations, anxieties, aches and stresses – trust us, you’ll have a lot less baggage by the time you leave.

Also

Most of the hotel’s private areas are accessible, special transportation can be arranged on request, ramps can be provided as needed and the casas have plenty of space. Plus, staff will happily read out info for visually impaired guests.

Children

Children are very welcome, and the hotel holds an equally holistic Adventurers’ Club for a fee. Babysitting can be arranged one day in advance for $36 and $5 per additional child (maximum two children).

Best for

The kids’ club is for over-6s and under-12s can stay for kids’ rates, so any ages in-between will fare well here.

Recommended rooms

Most of the casas or casitas have two bedrooms.

Activities

The Adventurers’ Club (held in season), has a range of culinary, wellness and outdoorsy activities that matches the adult programme for innovation and creativity. It’s for over-6s (although supervised five-year-olds can also attend) for an extra charge.

Swimming pool

One of the pools, by Picoteo restaurant, is child-friendly.

Meals

Some of the hotel’s small plates and dishes at the more casual eateries may suit smalls’ palettes more.

Babysitting

Babysitting must be arranged at least a day in advance (US$25 an hour).

Sustainability efforts

The hotel collaborates with Los Jilgueros, a local coffee cooperative in the neighboring village of Cedral and they work with local Nery’s farm to give guests an authentic experience and boost local business. Onsite, they lean into Costa Rica’s impressive eco-friendliness with seasonal ingredients, mostly homegrown in the restaurant’s organic gardens and their ethically run coffee plantation. The hotel is plastic-free, they compost for the gardens and casitas are heated with solar panels.

Food and Drink

Photos Hacienda AltaGracia food and drink

Top Table

The terrace has a truly astounding view that plays out like a tracking shot of an epic jungle adventure, where cloud-swathed mountains soar above and valleys are pooled with greenery.

Dress Code

Dress for a higher plane.

Hotel restaurant

The best way to dine at Hacienda AltaGracia is to orbit their six eateries throughout your stay – all meals and soft drinks are included, so get stuck in. Grano, billed as the ‘chef’s laboratory’ is the main restaurant. In the warmly rustic dining room banquettes double up as planters, natural wood and wicker abounds and floor-to-ceiling windows – and tables on the jutting-out terrace – overlook the natural drama playing out over the Valle de El General. Cuisine is Central American, dictated by tradition and history, with a dash of the chef’s chutzpah for good measure. Picoteo is the more casual poolside eatery with sharing and small plates and Las Brisas will keep the peckish sated throughout the afternoon. Cienfuegos offers a dining experience inspired by gatherings at barbecues and rodeos, where a simple land and sea menu (plus some Korean influence, with grains, beans, salads and fermented delicacies) is cooked over a dried-coconut-husk fire. And, the Mercado offers fresh fruit, rich flavourful coffee and pastries, plus a range of treats to buy. Want to see the chef work his magic up close? After a tour of the organic gardens and farm, take an intimate dinner laced with medicinal plants and foraging finds at El Cultivo.

Hotel bar

The palapa bar at Las Brisas serves up simple fruity cocktails, cervezas, wines and juices by the main pool. Picoteo also has a selection of fresh juices and harder drinks served poolside, with healthy small plates, and Grano is all set for more sophisticated drinks, with a side of view.

Last orders

Mercado is open from 6am to 6pm; Grano from 6am to 10am and 6pm to 10pm; and Las Brisas serves from 10am to 6pm.

Room service

Meals can be ordered to your casita on request.

Location

Photos Hacienda AltaGracia location
Address
Hacienda AltaGracia
Contiguo al Escuela de Santa Teresa de Cajon Santa Teresa
Pérez Zeledón
11908
Costa Rica

Hacienda AltaGracia’s 180-acre estate is spread out like a leafy tablecloth over the Talamanca foothills to the south of Costa Rica’s San José Province. Its casas and casitas sit between pockets of rainforest, a working coffee farm and craggy peaks.

Planes

The best way to reach the Hacienda is to fly into Juan Santamaría International Airport in capital San José or Daniel Oduber Quirós International Airport in Liberia. There are direct flights from some cities in mainland Europe, but most flights arrive from North America, and if you’re travelling from the UK you’ll need to stopover. From either you can charter a flight to Pérez Zeledón airstrip in San Isidro in a Cessna Grand Caravan or Kodiak; flights carry up to 10 passengers and tickets range from $900 to $2,600 a flight, depending on the route and numbers onboard. From the airstrip the hotel’s a 45-minute drive away and these transfers are included in your room rate. Alternatively, take the scenic route – there’s a choice of mountain roads or coastal cruising – with land transfers from San José (a four-hour drive) or Liberia (a six-hour drive), from $375 a journey for up to five guests.

Automobiles

Driving in Costa Rica will give you a little more flexibility and hiring a car is easy enough at both main airports; however, it may unravel the sense of calm this wellness-focused stay fosters. The Hacienda’s vast estate will keep you occupied from check-in to check-out, so take the path of least resistance and rely on transfers and letting resort drivers chauffeur you as needed on excursions, giving you all the more time to bathe in rivers, commune in a healing circle or gently trot through the jungle on horseback. If you take the plunge, there’s valet parking at the hotel.

Worth getting out of bed for

A Blue Zone might not sound the most positive of things, but it's an area of the world where people tend to live longer, healthier, happier lives – and the hotel just so happens to be smack bang in the middle of one. The pura vida is indeed strong here: after all, everywhere you look there’s the entrancing forested topography of the Talamanca mountains where adventure waits from the depths of the valleys to the tips of the peaks. Go wild in El Rio, the hotel’s expanse of au naturel playground, where you can follow five kilometres of jungly hikes, climb 30 metres up into the tree canopy then zipline through it, or get settled in a quiet stretch for forest bathing. Or take a more literal bath in the Calientillo River, where you’ll meditate on a massage bed as the water washes over you, followed by a wild-bergamot massage and herbal soak in leafy surrounds. Alternatively, set out with a caballista on one of the fine indigenous fillies from the hotel’s stables (the less experienced can trot round the picadero or riding ring). They’ve been specially trained for equine therapy sessions too. Other mood-lifting distractions include plant-ruffling walks where you’ll learn about the healing properties of the lush greenery surrounding you, qi gong or meditation in a secluded rancho and yoga that ranges from blanket-wrapped poses to a full vinyasa flow. The Hacienda has tamed some of the terrain to plant 7,000 coffee plants, and they’ve teamed up with local co-op Los Jilgueros to harvest and roast the beans for tasting sessions. The co-op also give talks about the bean-to-brew journey, and you can learn more about local agriculture with a visit to Don Nery’s Trapiche & Farm, where you’ll be given a homemade breakfast or lunch, explore the fields and gardens, learn how to cook tortillas and extract sugar cane and see this remarkable region authentically through the eyes of Don Nery and his wife Doña Yamilette. The hotel also runs cooking classes too, passing on recipes that have been handed down for generations and imparting local culinary knowhow. After dark, spend a few hours gazing up into the cosmos on a stargazing tour – the skies are crystal clear here and your guides are skilled in planet-spotting. And, while the hotel has many unique traits, perhaps one of its most incredible is that it’s ideally placed for exploring both of Costa Rica’s coasts on a day trip – the Atlantic to Pacific experience flies you cross-country, and the hotel can whisk you off north and south too on request. 

Reviews

Photos Hacienda AltaGracia reviews
Cassia Geller

Anonymous review

By Cassia Geller, Features editor

The moment I realised that Mr Smith really knew me was when he declared – as I tried to balance myself, a water and a wine on a €2 lilo – that I am only truly happy in, on and ideally while consuming water of some form.
 
So consider Hacienda AltaGracia hotel, which has so many infinity pools, plunge pools, spa pools, waterfalls and fountains that navigating them could make you seasick; so many jugs of watermelon-infused water, juice-filled fridges and glass bottles preaching ‘water is the driving force of nature’; plus a 20,000 square-metre spa with a Casa de Agua, water ritual and river bath ceremony – my idea of pure, unadulterated H?O heaven.
 
I think it might be a lot of peoples’ idea of utopia actually. Let me count the ways. First, there’s the location: 180 acres in the foothills of Costa Rica’s Talamanca Mountains. Its lush green hillscape – carved by meandering paths and streams descending on the Pacific, dappled by sunbeams and roly-polying clouds – feels like the culmination of the creation story. It’s very ‘seventh day’, when God finally gets on a dayb-ed, looks over the bougainvillaea-lined walkways, coffee plants and palms, the birds, butterflies and all of creation, and confirms it is good. In short, it’s a great place for a retreat.
 
Second is how AltaGracia honours and immerses you in this slice of paradise. There is a dizzying amount to do, from horse riding, tree climbing and forest bathing to conservation, meditation, mindful surfing and macrame. Third, there’s the food, which is all-inclusive and all outstanding: a celebration of local ingredients and ancestral cooking across three restaurants, a café called Mercado and a range of experiential dinners.
 
And fourth is the casas and casitas scattered across the hillside, with their ranch-luxe interiors and sweeping valley views. It is here that we’re buggied after an enchanting welcome ritual for an in-room check-in with our compa (‘personal experience designer’ or ‘compadre’), who will book our classes, reserve our meals and remotely adjust our pool temperature, all via WhatsApp.
 
With yoga scheduled for an hour and dinner booked for 8pm, we were left to play with the room. Did I say room? I mean plus-sized Casa con Piscina, with a comfy living room, bedroom with a colossal canopied four-poster, bathroom that sets the tone for the upcoming spa experience and spectacular stone terrace with a swinging day-bed and plunge pool that transforms into a Jacuzzi – all centred around that valley view.
 
I could spend hours raiding the cacao- and kombucha-stocked kitchen while one-time carpenter Mr Smith admires the joinery, but we’ve got a whole hacienda to explore. And so it begins: 48 heavenly hours of adventuring. After an hour’s energising alfresco yoga, we roam the site, ricocheting from a 700-pound ceremonial crystal to an actual butterfly garden, with mounting wonder. By evening we’re at fever pitch, watching the sunset from our hot tub as everything the evening light touches turns purple, until a slither of moon announces night and the sky fills with stars. Vibrating with glee, we follow the fireflies down to dinner.
 
Food here is fabulously, fanatically local, sourced from the hacienda’s kitchen garden or neighbour farms, with the healthy spin you’d expect of a retreat. We outsmart this by massively over-ordering: rustic bread with pumpkin spread, gallo pinto and plantain, creamy kale and trucha (trout) tartar, chimichurri chicken and caramelised potatoes, local linefish and tres leches cake, eaten overlooking the lights of San Isidro. The problem with unlimited food and limited self-control is that you start to inhabit a space somewhere between bliss and bloatedness – but that’s a tomorrow problem.
 
For now, we float back up the lantern-lit paths, greeted by a gorgeous, high-end hippie turndown. The fire is lit, and a sleep meditation, pillow spray and manifestation cards are beside our beds (mine stating, ‘I am healthy’, Mr Smith’s ‘worthy’). It all works – eight hours later the black-out blinds come up and a beautiful day has arisen. We pad down to the pool in our raffia slippers for a morning swim before breakfast. As a London millennial, I have naturally eaten my first-house’s-worth of avocado on toast, but AltaGracia’s version – with limón mandarina, salsa and eggs on nutty, seedy bread – is unequivocally the best.
 
This is becoming a theme. We find the most loungeable of day-beds to lounge on after breakfast; the hummiest hummingbirds flit past us. The freshest coconut water is brought to us by the most amiable poolside crew. Absolutely everything is absolutely superlative. But, we’ve seen nothing yet. As tempting as it is to roll from day-bed to pool and repeat, we haven’t had our water ritual at the Well spa yet. I cannot articulate the joy I experience over the next 90 minutes. We start with intention-setting to Pachamama (roll with it), then it’s off to  the ‘robe bar’ to choose the perfect grade of gown (from fluffy to waffle). Then the regime is: shower, steam, sauna and smother oneself in essential oils. Shimmering, I meet Smith in the Casa de Agua, a light-filled wonderland of pools, fountains and hot-stone beds. Coated in herb-infused mud, we lie side-by-side on the warm stone, green and giggling like Mr and Mrs Hulk on honeymoon. Showered, we bliss out in the pools before adding more yummy oils – emerging gloriously scented, serene and strokable.
 
Then, as sure as night follows day, it’s cocktail hour, spent spying on a sunset intention-setting ceremony, nursing our mezcals, before another divine dinner. Now, I’m not proud of this, but I think for the sake of a well-rounded review I should admit that during my final morning swim, I was so sad to be leaving I actually cried. I felt like Eve, checking out of Eden. But we’re not cast out completely bereft; our car comes back filled with treats, trail mix and myriad waters. It is so beautifully thoughtful and characteristic of the AltaGracia approach that it brings another tear to my eye. 

Thus we unwillingly head to the airport, me clutching glass bottles of AltaGracia-grade water in a deeply unhinged manner, taking as much Hacienda hydration heaven with me as I can. With a few more wistful tears to shed, I’ll need it.

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Price per night from $2,056.60