Marrakech, Morocco

Palais Ronsard

Price per night from$349.89

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 (EUR322.36), via openexchangerates.org, using today’s exchange rate.

Style

Royal flamboyance

Setting

Rose-scented gardens

Surrounded by rose-scented gardens with century-old olive trees, Palais Ronsard occupies an elaborately adorned 1930s mansion, with interior design by architect Gil Dez, who did not hold back on the stylish hanging lanterns, potted plants or objets d’art. The restaurant duo alone is worth a stay – one is a fully gourmet affair and the other is an eco-friendly alfresco spot with ingredients sourced from the hotel’s beautifully manicured gardens. There’s also a pool (you’ll have your own, too, if you book a Pavilion) and a decadent spa with classic hammam treatments. Too relaxing for you? The hustle and bustle of the Marrakech medina is a short spin away.

Smith Extra

Get this when you book through us:

One hammam experience and a glass of wine each during lunch or dinner (champagne for GoldSmiths); GoldSmiths also get a 30-minute massage each

Facilities

Photos Palais Ronsard facilities

Need to know

Rooms

27, including 15 suites.

Check–Out

Noon, but flexible, subject to availability. Earliest check-in, 3pm.

More details

Rates usually include breakfast; French or Moroccan Continental breakfast is available, and dishes from the à la carte menu start at MA$110.

Also

Golf sessions, tennis lessons and personal training can be arranged on request.

At the hotel

Free WiFi throughout, spa, fitness room, bikes to borrow, vegetable gardens. In rooms: TV with Apple TV, Nespresso coffee machine, minibar, Moroccan pastries, laundry service (from MA$50), free bottled water and Guerlain bath products.

Our favourite rooms

The Pavilion and Grand Pavilions are separate from the main building and each has its own private pool and lounge terraces overlooking the gardens.

Poolside

The long outdoor pool sits pretty in the gardens, with a pergola-shaded bar at one end. It’s heated and flanked by rows of paired-up sunloungers.

Spa

Petite Le Ronsard spa has three treatment rooms – one kitted out for couples – a hammam, sauna, steam room and Jacuzzi. Choose from classic hammam scrubs, stress-melting massages and youth-giving facials, all using Sothys, 1944 and Palais Ronsard products. Fresh fruits, nuts and herbal teas are on offer in between or after treatments. There's also a fully-equipped fitness room with classes and personal training sessions available to book.

Packing tips

Bring your retro swimwear for poolside lounging and flowing cover ups and buttery-soft sandals for leisurely breakfasting in style.

Also

Wheelchair users may be able to navigate the hotel’s common areas, but there are no dedicated accessible rooms.

Pet‐friendly

Pups up to five kilos can stay for MA$300 a night; dog bowls, food and a stylish basket bed will be provided. See more pet-friendly hotels in Marrakech.

Children

The hotel only accepts babies under 24 months and children over 12 years. Cots can be added to rooms on request.

Sustainability efforts

Ingredients used in the restaurant are sourced from farmers or the hotel’s gardens (which are watered with grey water and plumped with compost). All outdoor lights are powered by solar panels and there’s a staff shuttle to minimise the carbon footprint of commutes. (There’s also a bee-keeping project underway.)

Food and Drink

Photos Palais Ronsard food and drink

Top Table

In Le Jardin d’Hiver, snag a table on the terrace for a side of garden views; in winter months, make a beeline for a table by the fireplace. We like the tables with veg-garden views at Le Verger du Poète.

Dress Code

Smart casual in Le Jardin d’Hiver (no shorts), but you can keep it poetically breezy at Le Verger du Poète.

Hotel restaurant

Gourmet restaurant Le Jardin d’Hiver is decadently cosy, with a beautiful fireplace, a generous helping of artwork, tassels lights and plump seating. Helmed by Chef Alexandre Thomas, under the watchful eye of chef Xavier Mathieu, it had an international menu flavoured by Mediterranean influences. Start with citrusy crab cannelloni, debate between bouillabaisse and salt-crusted sea bass and save room for desserts of grapefruit pavlova or ice cream-topped chocolate fondant. Le Jardin d’Hiver is also open for daily breakfeasts, er, breakfasts, of homemade breads, Moroccan pancakes, fruit salad, yoghurt and honey, eggs-many-ways, freshly squeezed juices and Traditional Moroccan mint tea, rich coffees and perfectly sweet hot chocolates. Le Verger du Poète dishes out leisurely lunches of prettily plated seasonal produce – all plucked from the hotel grounds and local farms – under greenery-strewn pergolas. 

Hotel bar

Dive into a drink surrounded by the deep colours and rich velvets of the lounge bar – it’s to your right as you walk through the main doors. And for mood lighting? A chandelier, naturally. Rather remain permanently poolside? You can also order drinks from the pergola-shaded bar. How refreshing.

Last orders

Le Jardin d’Hiver is open for breakfast (7am to 10.30am), brunch (12:30pm to 1:30pm), lunch (12:30pm to 4:30pm) and dinner (7.30pm to 10pm); Le Verger du Poète serves from noon to 3pm.

Room service

A special room service menu is available round the clock.

Location

Photos Palais Ronsard location
Address
Palais Ronsard
Propriété SALAH 7 ABYAD
Marrakech
40000
Morocco

The hotel is located in Marrakech’s Palmeraie, about 15 minutes by car from the medina.

Planes

Marrakech Menara airport is 35 minutes away by car; transfers can be arranged from MA$600 - MA$900 each way. Alternatively, transfers to and from Casablanca airport, a two-hour drive away, are priced between MA$3,000 - MA$4,500 each way.

Trains

Trains from Casablanca, Fez, Tangier and Rabat pull into ONCF Marrakech station, 15 minutes by car from the hotel. Transfers by private limo or van can be arranged from MA$300 each way.

Automobiles

From airport or train station, follow the way to the Palmgrove, then follow the Palais Ronsard signs; there’s free valet parking at the hotel.

Worth getting out of bed for

Have a long leisurely lunch at Le Verger du Poète after soaking up the sun, catlike, on the poolside loungers. Escape to the shade in the afternoon with a serene stroll around the hotel’s gardens.

And when it’s time to explore further, the Palmeraie is pleasantly separate – but tantalisingly close – to the hustle and bustle of the medina, so it’s effortlessly easy to dive into relaxation at Palais Ronsard, then hop over to explore the medina when the mood strikes. Fancy a spot of shopping? Chabi Chic is stocked with modern ceramics, geometric jewellery and sweetly scented candles – jasmine, orange blossom and orange cedar. Popham Design Showroom & Workshop, open by appointment only, is the place to go if you’re in the market for beautiful Moroccan tiles. Palais Ronsard-inspired home-improvement project, anyone? 

Culture buffs can take a photographic tour through Moroccan history at Maison de la Photographie, home to a hefty collection of documents and pictures – including a rare set of 800 glass plates on the High Atlas – that span from 1870 to 1960. 

It can draw quite the crowd (and rightfully so), so be among the first early risers to arrive at Le Jardin Majorelle & Yves Saint Laurent museum and book a combi ticket - if you head into the museum first, you’ll be able to skip the queue into the gardens. 

Local restaurants

You’ll be well taken care of in the breakfast department at Palais Ronsard, but if you feel like mixing up your morning meal, make your way to the medina’s Café des Épices (75 Derb Rahba Lakdima) for Moroccan crepes, omelettes, spiced coffees and herbal teas. Its baked goodies – pistachio brownies, almond tarts and traditional pastries – makes it a good bet for a mid-morning or afternoon tea break too. Book a table in advance for lunch at La Famille (34 Derb Jdid), where you can escape the midday heat with a pumpkin-and-date-topped pizzeta or quinoa bowl in the shaded courtyard. For modern mezze and a fresh spin on classic Morrocan fare, head to dinner at Nomad (1 Derb Aarjane). Have a sweet tooth? You’ll be set with a slice of cardamom-and-ginger-spiced orange cake and locally made sorbets and ice creams (try a scoop of the olive oil and orange zest or the sweet pumpkin and saffron). Nomad’s sister restaurant Le Jardin (32 Souk Jeld Sidi Abdelaziz) also serves up salads, brochettes and honey-drizzled fig tarts. Celebrating something? You’ll want a table on the greenery-dotted rooftop at Le Foundouk (Rue Souk el Fassi) so you can gaze over the city’s rooftops as the stars start to twinkle. Nibble on fluffy brioche with goat cheese and zaatar, then share a plate of Moroccan pastilla with chicken and almonds or tuck into a classic tagine. For dessert? Crème brûlée with saffron or a plate of Moroccan pastries for two.

 

Local bars

Moody Kechmara (3 Rue de la Liberté) shakes up classic cocktails in its low-lit bar; listen up for the record of the week as you admire the artwork (of both the on-the-wall and in-your-glass varieties).

 

Reviews

Photos Palais Ronsard reviews
Millie Walton

Anonymous review

By Millie Walton, Writes from the art

We’d been giving each other uneasy glances since the taxi turned off the last chaotic roundabout and headed out into what looked like the desert. Like all eager, sun-deprived hotel guests, we’d flicked through the photo gallery obsessively in the weeks leading up to our trip and had imagined that Palais Ronsard was somehow squeezed into the heart of the medina – all those pools, all those trees! It sounds ridiculous but I suppose it shows how limited our perspective of Marrakech was at the time and of course, there is much to do and see beyond the medina.

The hotel, in fact, is only a 20-minute drive from the centre in an area known as palmeraie (palm grove) after the thousands of tall palms that rise up in spiky silhouettes from the sandy earth, but it feels a world away from the crowds and clamour of the market: a Thirties-style mansion house cocooned in its own private, edenic garden – there’s even a peacock who struts around the grounds and appears hopefully bobbing its head by the tables at lunch time. ‘Don’t worry,’ our waiter told us. ‘He’s very polite.’ 

Palais Ronsard oozes opulence. There are plumes of ostrich feathers arranged in ceramic vases, ornate lamps that look like parrots with tasseled shades, silvery velvet furnishings, polished marble floors, gold table tops and a floating pathway that runs down the centre of a decorative pool populated with bronze flamingos. Every evening a member of staff wades into the pool to place a floating candle in the middle of each mosaic star that’s drawn on the bottom. If it sounds over the top, it is – but in a lovably eccentric kinda way. 

This is partly due to the size of the hotel grounds in comparison to the number of rooms – there are only 28 suites including six ‘pavilions’ (private villas) with heated pools, while the communal spaces and gardens are so expansive that much of the time we felt as if we were wandering around our own private stately home. Our stay in late September fell just out of peak season so the hotel was perhaps less busy than it might ordinarily be, but the feeling of seclusion is largely thanks to the layout and interiors. 

We stayed in a prestige room on the upper floor of the main building which we reached via the sweeping marble staircase in the lobby, along a veranda and through a pretty iron gate that opened onto our private terrace. The room itself comprised a large bedroom painted in duck-egg blue and touches of gold with a four-poster bed, fireplace, sofa and armchair, and an enormous marble bathroom with a shower, bathtub and two sinks. Ordinarily, if we’re somewhere hot, we like to spend as much time as possible by the pool, but we found the room so relaxing that we found we were reluctant to leave. We spent long, lazy mornings reading our books in bed and returned in the afternoon for a snooze or to have a drink on the terrace at sunset, listening to the gentle hum of cicadas between the palms. 

The main restaurant, romantically called Le Jardin d’Hiver (the winter garden), is spread across a sumptuous indoor dining room with soft turquoise furnishings and a marble fireplace, and a small number of tables beneath the poolside colonnade, which is where we chose to eat each evening. Seated under warm, golden lighting, in wicker armchairs covered with soft pashmina blankets and cushions, we both agreed it was by far the most relaxing hotel dining experience we’ve ever had.

The menu is split into traditional Moroccan dishes and international cuisine – the tagine was our favourite along with the lemon-infused bread that’s homemade daily. Le Verger restaurant meanwhile is open for lunch only from 12pm to 3pm, and on Sundays for brunch where guests pay a set fee for an indulgent buffet which, during our stay, included barbecued lobsters, king prawns, fresh oysters, a salad bar, wood-fired pizzas and all manner of cakes and pastries.  

There’s a small spa too with a hammam, sauna, and a tempting menu of treatments that make use of natural ingredients such as rose, bergamot, honey and coconut pulp. For us, however, the most special thing about the hotel was the people. With luxury hotels where guests expect a certain level of service, the staff can sometimes come across as overly formal or performatively attentive, which in turn can create a slightly unsettling atmosphere. At Palais Ronsard, there was none of that.

The staff were friendly and quick to help with all of our queries – misplaced contact lenses, requests for taxis, drinks orders and recommendations for restaurants – but in a natural, relaxed manner. We spent twenty minutes talking to the head chef, Alexandre Thomas, about the food and his training, and when we expressed our love of the lemon bread at dinner, we were offered the handwritten recipe. 

There are very few places that manage to balance grandeur with authenticity, luxury with eccentricity, but Palais Ronsard is one of them. Truly one of a kind.

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Price per night from $342.66