Need to know
Rooms
12, including three suites.
Check–Out
Noon. Earliest check-in, from 3.30pm, but flexible, subject to availability.
More details
Rates include a hearty country breakfast with garden produce and local delicacies (homemade bread and cakes, cold cuts, cheese, fruit and veg, granola, pastries, pancakes and more). A city tax of €1 a day will be added at check-out.
Also
A stay here can only make your relationship stronger, but you’ll connect with the staff too – after all, they make it easier by being just a message away over Whatsapp for whatever you need. Another cocktail by the pool, candlelight dinner in the wine room, birthday cake and candles, apéritifs in a secret pergola for two, a rose-petal turndown: they can make it all happen.
Hotel closed
The hotel stays open throughout Tuscany’s salad months (and a little beyond) from the middle of March to early December.
At the hotel
Tuscan gardens with private and sociable lounging spaces, salon with a selection of books, magazines and board games, wine cellar, gym, kitchen garden, free-to-hire bikes and e-bikes (€20 an hour, €60 a day), small boutique, plug adaptors to borrow, charged laundry service (from €4 a piece), free WiFi. In rooms: Satellite TV, Bluetooth sound-system, free minibar with non-alcoholic drinks, Nespresso machine, free bottled water, heating and air-conditioning, pool bags, L:A Bruket bath products.
Our favourite rooms
Each uniquely decorated room has something special to offer, but all have wood beams, vintage brickwork, heirloom statement pieces, sprays of flowers and views to sigh for. We like Standard Bassa for its gauzy four-poster, flowery frescoes and intimate feel (although, tall people take note, the sloped ceiling is a little low in places). Sage-hued Deluxe Alma has money-shot views of Montepulciano and lots of heartstring-tugging trappings; Suite San Biagio has a cushioned reading nook and Victorian bath tub big enough for two; and Junior Suite Serra’s living room is extra cosy with its stone fireplace, and we’re very taken with its dramatic iron chandelier.
Poolside
In terms of pool placement, the hotel owners nailed it. Of course, they had a lot to work with (the immensely photogenic Val d’Orcia, hilltop town Montefollonico and general Tuscan loveliness), but swim up to the edge of the large tiered infinity pool (open 9am to 7pm), facing out to the west, and you’ll feel as if a Renaissance master’s brush has been busy, especially as the sky turns hues during the day. Set into the deck beside the main pool is a smaller Jacuzzi, and there are shaded sunloungers from which to gawp, plus a small beachy bar where you can order up various negronis (we like the mouthy coffee and vintage iterations), refreshing spritzes, and pick-of-the-region wines – just ding for service.
Spa
There’s no spa on site, but there is a small fitness room with a treadmill, elliptical and kettle bells. If that sounds like far too much effort, a masseuse can be summoned for in-room pampering, and the hotel has links with Adler Spa Resort Thermae if you need more me time.
Packing tips
Pack the clothes you can see yourself in for countryside picnicking, candlelight dining, zipping about on a Vespa laughing – that sort of thing. And Lupaia’s something of a moment-maker, so pocket a ring just in case.
Also
Lupaia means ‘she-wolf’, but its emblem is a bright red lantern inspired by one found in the barn and restored during the hotel’s remodelling.
Pet‐friendly
Docile doggos can stay for €30 a pet, each night. See more pet-friendly hotels in Tuscany.
Children
The Italian largesse for little ones is evident here – baby cots are free for kids up to two, and many rooms take extra beds (€65 a night for three to 16 year olds; €95 for over-16s). But this swoonsome hideaway is more about baby-making.
Sustainability efforts
Austrian owners Heidi and Christopher Mueller have restored the five buildings on this expansive Tuscan estate – including two that date back to 1622 – into one of the most rip-roaringly romantic stays you could dream of. The grounds are bursting forth with flowering bushes, cypress trees, rambling ivy and more lush leafiness, but there’s also olive and fruit groves, wild herbs and a kitchen garden from which the chef picks and chooses the produce for that day’s meal. Whatever can’t be grown is sourced from very close by.