Need to know
Rooms
30 stilted bungalows.
Check–Out
Noon; earliest check-in, 3pm. You’re welcome to stash your luggage and use the hotel’s facilities if you arrive earlier.
More details
Rates include à la carte breakfast, a guided morning hike and an introductory yoga session. There’s a two-night minimum stay, although it’s advisable to stay at least three.
Also
An introductory yoga session and a guided morning hike are included free with your stay. Two of the East Bungalows meet Costa Rican and ADA regulations for wheelchair-accessible rooms, and chauffeured golf-carts are available to ferry those with mobility issues around the reserve (on request).
At the hotel
Yoga platforms, network of trails, artisanal boutique, mountain bikes, and free WiFi. In rooms: air-conditioning, smart TV, minibar, coffee-maker, tea-making kit, and Costa-Rica-made Aromas bath products. In Center Bungalows, instead of a TV, there’s an HD projector, pull-down screen, and a sound bar with a dedicated subwoofer.
Our favourite rooms
Most of the bungalows at Río Perdido lie east of the thermal river: cosier than their Center counterparts, these original stilted suites are elegantly dressed in pale hues with painted wood and polished concrete floors – their contemporary lines softened with rustic wall hangings and textured cushions. East Bungalows come with a made-for-reading corner sofa beside the window, and open onto a private balcony with a pair of hammock chairs. Center Bungalows have a larger footprint, floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the forest, and a dark-hued, elemental aesthetic that brings together black concrete, volcanic-rock flooring, solid steel, brushed copper and singed-hardwood walls. As well as a spacious, private terrace, these bungalows have side-by-side outdoor showers, and a projector set-up for movie nights.
Poolside
Find your Goldilocks bathing temperature among the three geothermal mineral pools edging the main building at Río Perdido: the first two are curvaceous and wider than long and offer the warmest (first), then the coolest (middle pool), and finally the one in-between at the Canyon Bar, which has a swim-up counter served by submerged stools. The water in all pools is heated by geothermal activity, and completely untreated – only filtered and tested for mineral content – it’s basically a health-kick while you bathe. All are open from 7am until 10pm, and although little Smiths are allowed, pool floats and splashy hijinx are not – these are pools for peaceful, contemplative dips.
Spa
With mineral-rich natural springs, a thermal river and pools, plus volcanic mud shipped riverside so that you can slather on a health-boosting pack ahead of your soak, it’s fair to say that the whole of Río Perdido is one great outdoor spa… Indoors, it’s complemented by three open-air treatment rooms in the base of the main building, where you can check in for a massage or facial, or couple’s treatments in a fourth double-cabin; mani- and pedicures are also available. A dedicated spa building away from the hotel’s main hub is in the works…
Packing tips
Outdoorsy threads for highlands hikes; yoga kit; clothes for messing about on the river; and enough swimwear to serve multiple dips each day.
Also
The hotel can arrange private dining in a number of romantic nooks around the reserve, as well as riverside picnics – a platform above the water where the two rivers (cold and thermal) converge is a favoured spot.
Children
There’s an adults-only feel to the serenity of Río Perdido: however, little Smiths aged eight or older are welcome, and East Bungalows can take an extra bed, or opt for a Center Bungalow, which can accommodate two extra single beds.
Sustainability efforts
A hotel that has a wholly positive impact on its environment is a rare beast – but Río Perdido is just that: without this hotel, the biodiversity of its 600 acres, set among volcanic highlands and canyons, forested riverbanks and gorges, would not have been nurtured and improved (through a programme of assisted reforestation). Now, 10 years after opening, the acquisition of a further 900 acres west of its original boundary ensures a huge swathe of Costa Rican wilderness is protected from detrimental development. Its design, from the outset, has been about minimising the hotel’s impact: buildings set on stilts, lying below the canopy line; four kinds of sustainable power incorporated – wind, hydro, geothermal and solar; no cars on the reserve (it’s golf-buggy only past the parking lot); rigorous standards for using natural, biodegradable or recyclable products across the hotel; rainwater harvesting, and strict policies around conserving water and energy. Río Perdido’s community partnerships are equally robust: the majority of staff (90 per cent) are recruited locally; the hotel has a collaborative approach to conservation, working to stamp out poaching, to educate its neighboring communities about biodiversity, and to operate a locals-first supply chain, as well as championing Costa Rican traditions, culture and cuisine.