Málaga, Spain

Hotel Castillo Santa Catalina

Price per night from$263.62

Price information

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

Prices have been converted from the hotel’s local currency (EUR244.64), via openexchangerates.org, using today’s exchange rate.

Style

Bastion of style

Setting

Courtyards & castle ruins

Among the tall trees and grand old houses that typify genteel Málaga neighbourhood El Limone, you’ll find boutique stay Hotel Castillo Santa Catalina – a Moorish Revival villa from the 1930s built on the site of a 17th-century hilltop fortress – its brick arches and crumbling walls still dotting the grounds. Rooms and suites pair original flourishes (ornate windows, pretty plasterwork, Moorish arches) with modcons and traditional décor. A courtyard restaurant and convivial bar in the gardens mean there’s no need to head into the city for nights out – but there is want – especially with the restaurants and tapas bars of Málaga’s lively barrios so close by.

Smith Extra

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Welcome drink (soft or alcoholic) each, plus free late check-out (on request and subject to availability)

Facilities

Photos Hotel Castillo Santa Catalina facilities

Need to know

Rooms

24, including four suites.

Check–Out

Noon; earliest check-in, 2pm.

Prices

Double rooms from £230.59 (€269), including tax at 10 per cent.

More details

Rates are room only, but à la carte breakfast is available at the hotel (from €25).

Also

At El Castillo, chef offers a seven-course tasting menu of greatest hits that begins with oysters and ends with chocolate, but you’ll need to book ahead.

At the hotel

In rooms: free WiFi, flatscreen TV, minibar, Nespresso coffee machine, free tea and coffee, free bottled water, Chopard bath products.

Our favourite rooms

Deluxe doubles make up the lion’s share of rooms at the castillo and are dressed elegantly in classic patterned fabrics and soft tones with decorative plasterwork and marble floors; some of these rooms also come with high ceilings and Moorish archways or arched windows. Two junior suites with sea views have Juliet balconies, high ceilings and a separate living room; the curvaceous terrace adjoining a third junior suite doubles as part of the two-bedroom suite – and either way is a sun-kissed bonus.

Poolside

On a tree-shaded terrace in the grounds, a raised plunge pool reached by a flight of steps, is a panoramic spot to cool off with views of Málaga bay in the distance.

Spa

The owners have plans to introduce a spa and gym at the hotel – for now, in-room massages booked through the hotel are a therapeutic stopgap.

Packing tips

The Andalusian sun calls for oversized accessories – face-eclipsing shades, your widest-brimmed hat and most cavernous beach bag.

Also

One of the deluxe doubles is wheelchair accessible with an adapted ensuite and the hotel has a lift for access to all floors; the paved, terraced grounds require ramps to get around.

Pet‐friendly

No pets are allowed at this calm, coastal castillo stay. See more pet-friendly hotels in Málaga.

Children

This upscale historic hotel is an adults-only stay.

Food and Drink

Photos Hotel Castillo Santa Catalina food and drink

Top Table

Grab a table overlooking the bay for breakfast with blissful sea vistas; by evening, any table in the courtyard strikes the right balance of intimate romance and convivial cheer.

Dress Code

For evening, a change of attire to smart-casual threads is called for; on Friday and Saturday nights, channelling cocktail-hour glamour can only enhance the weekend party vibes.

Hotel restaurant

El Castillo is an all-day restaurant, open for à la carte breakfast, lunch and dinner: a nominally Mediterranean menu borrows liberally from across the continent with starters such as caviar and blinis, Iberian ham or smoked sardines with fig; refined mains include confit cod with capers and fried sea lettuce or duck magret with beetroot tartar and glazed shallots. A pared-back salon indoors has a handful of linened tables but is more of a fallback option for inclement mornings, with diners tending to gravitate to tables outdoors in the atmospheric courtyard edged by covered walkways and castle ruins. On Friday and Saturday nights (April–October), dinner is accompanied by live music, too. 

Hotel bar

El Castillo’s bar follows the alfresco vibes, serving beer, wine and a selection of cocktails from house mimosas to tequila-laced Mexican sours to tables in the tranquil gardens.

Last orders

Breakfast is served 7.30am until noon, when lunch service begins until 4pm; for dinner, it’s 7pm–11pm.

Room service

A small selection of light bites is available to order to your room (hours vary by season), although heading downstairs to the all-day restaurant remains your best bet.

Location

Photos Hotel Castillo Santa Catalina location
Address
Hotel Castillo Santa Catalina
Calle Ramos Carrión 38
Málaga
29016
Spain

Hotel Castillo Santa Catalina is set on a wooded hillside in the eastern Málaga neighbourhood of El Limonar, overlooking the bay, with the city centre a 30-minute walk or 15-minute drive away.

Planes

Málaga airport is 25 minutes from the hotel by road; private transfers can be arranged from €45 one way.

Automobiles

There’s a car park at the hotel with free valet parking.

Worth getting out of bed for

Once dismissed as a gateway to the costa, Málaga is worth more than a stopover these days: tick the Picasso Museum (he grew up here), impressively aged Moorish fort the Alcazaba and landmark cathedral off your list, then consider a few less obvious options: an invigorating bathe at Hammam Al Andalus; street art worth tracking down in the barrios of Soho and El Ejido; or hire bikes and cycle along the seafront via promenade Paseo Marítimo Antonio Banderas (another famous child of the city). The nearest beach to the hotel is the city’s Playa de la Caleta – although a 40-minute drive east, the shores around Nerja and Maro are picturesque and often less populous.

Local restaurants

International flavours and pin-sharp presentation are the hallmarks of Aire Gastrobar – a fine-dining restaurant with linen-topped tables in La Malagueta neighbourhood: roasted grouper with artichoke cream, curried scallops, oxtail, suckling pig and steak tartare are finessed into polished plates that mean you’ll still have room for crema catalana or mojito sorbet. A ten-minute walk from the hotel, Restaurante María is a timber-lined dining room open for lunch daily (and dinner on Fridays and Saturdays) where Piti and Enrique have been proudly championing Castilian fare since the Nineties. Its menu takes classical turns via huevos rotos, shellfish aplenty and Iberian roast lamb; paella is cooked to order, the house salad has more pincers than leaves – and there’s a daily-changing rotation of guisos (or casseroles), too. Palm trees frame bay views through the floor-to-ceiling windows at Chiringuito Mediterraneo, where the seafront setting inspires a seafood fest of paella, grilled sardines and whatever fish is fresh from the market. 

Reviews

Photos Hotel Castillo Santa Catalina reviews

Anonymous review

Every hotel featured is visited personally by members of our team, given the Smith seal of approval, and then anonymously reviewed. As soon as our reviewers have returned from this hilltop Andalusian stay and unpacked their tapas bowls and bottles of fino, a full account of their coastal break will be with you. In the meantime, to whet your wanderlust, here's a quick peek inside Hotel Castillo de Santa Catalina in Málaga

Built in the 1930s by Count Mieres, Hotel Castillo de Santa Catalina is a Moorish Revival palace on the site of an original 17th century fortress, the ruins of which still strew the grounds. Now a boutique stay with just 24 rooms, its stellar interiors retain period charm with decorative plasterwork, cool marble floors and classic decor in muted tones. Traditional details, such as Moorish arches, stained-glass windows and stair risers inlaid with tiles further elevate its first-class credentials. By day, Málaga’s beaches beckon and the city’s shops, galleries and museums are all walkable (or a hop in a taxi) from the hotel. Your hillfort hideaway, however, can’t help but encourage staying put; this is a place to revel in peace surrounded by bougainvillea-draped archways, panoramic terraces and mature, shade-giving trees. Balmy Andalusian nights lend themselves to sybaritic suppers under the stars; Málaga’s city lights something to admire from the terrace, flute of mimosa in hand – although the option for full-on fiesta is only a short cab ride away.

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Price per night from $263.62