Need to know
Rooms
91 villas, some set over the lagoon.
Check–Out
Noon, but flexible up until 6pm, for 50 per cent of the room rate. Earliest check-in, 2pm.
More details
Rates usually include breakfast (a buffet and some à la carte items) and one activity a day (depending on what's on when you visit).
Also
Unfortunately, the topography of this island stay makes it unsuitable for guests with mobility issues.
At the hotel
Two private islands (one reserved for one couple or family at a time); beaches; spa with nail salon, alchemy bar and biohacking lounge; fitness studio; yoga pavilion; Earth lab; gardens (including one dedicated to orchids); hydroponic farm; dive and watersports centres; free kids’ and teens’ clubs; boutique; bikes to borrow for free; courts for tennis and squash; football pitch; open-air cinema; boutique. In rooms: personal villa host.
Our favourite rooms
Hideaways have traditional thatch roofing, but otherwise the style is more mod-Maldivian, using local and sustainable materials. What will sway your choice like mosquito netting in an Indian Ocean breeze will be whether you’re a loved-up twosome or full-on family; some villas are sprawling, with huge decks for socialising and raised look-outs, and can sleep up to six adults and three kids. Would you like sand underfoot or uninterrupted ocean vistas? We find the latter from the overwater villas a touch more romantic, and keep in mind that all but the Beach Villas have a private pool. Whichever you choose, you’ll snooze nice and ‘zzz’-sy – the hotel has worked with sleep doctor Michael J Breus to develop programmes and aids: handmade mattresses, temp-regulating pillows, and duvets, sleep-tracking devices, a jet-lag-monitoring app, sound-therapy machines, pamper kits, and snacks and drinks to help you drift off.
Poolside
The hotel has two pools. The showpiece is at the Point, where the circular infinity pool (393 square-metres) is set at the tip of the beach (for optimum views); it’s close to the bar and tapas restaurant, and shaded day-beds for two are set out across its outer rim, facing sunset. And there’s a second, freeform pool set by casual restaurant Sip & Sand, with plentiful lounging space.
Spa
Six Senses Kanuhura continues the brand’s dedication to well-rounded self care. Mix up your own lotions and potions using the natural goodies in the Alchemy Bar, go on a chakra-balancing sound journey, practice breathwork and meditation, try yogic cleansing or aerial yoga, or simply stretching on the sand. The Biohacking Lounge levels up wellness with compression therapy, vibrational pain relief, electromagnetic mats, red-light and LED face masks and more. Partake in focused sleep or detox programmes, or simply relax in one of eight treatment suites (including one for couples and one extra-tricked-out VIP cabin). Each treatment starts with a spin through a hot and cold pool circuit, after which you can be wrapped in coconut and papaya; have your face layered with 24-karat gold; be massaged any which way. And finish off with a mani-pedi. There’s a high-spec gym with inspiring tropical views too, and personal trainers to put you through your paces on request.
Packing tips
Water, water everywhere, and not a heart will sink – with two pools, private swimming spots for nearly all villas, and the whole Indian Ocean at your disposal, you’ll need more than one trusty swimsuit. You can’t bring alcohol into the Maldives, so it’s bottoms-up for drinks on the plane.
Also
If you can’t bear the thought of snoozing on anything less than Six Senses’ organic cotton bedding, you can buy them in the on-site boutique.
Children
Little castaways will love it here, with endless distractions at clubs for kids and teens, huge villas to house all relatives, endless sands to play on, tropical sea life to discover, and nanny and babysitting services (charged).
Best for
Really we can’t see even the tiniest baby grumbling too much at the prospect of a trip here; but the fun really starts from three up, when kids can attend the on-site club.
Recommended rooms
Aside from the entry-level Beach Villas, Deluxe Beach Villas, Beach Retreats and Water Villas, hideaways here have plenty of space for the whole gang. Keep in mind that most family-sized villas have private pools where little ones must be supervised.
Activities
There’s a lot for kids to do here. And parents will be thrilled to learn that the Grow With Six Senses Children’s Club (for three to 11 year-olds) and Island Hideout for tweens and teens are both free. Activities include arts and crafts, treasure-hunting, beach and pool games, and mini yoga, plus pastimes involving local culture, ocean life and connecting with nature on the island; while the teens have a games room. But whole-family days could involve guided snorkelling and gentle watersports, biking about the island, dive lessons (for ages eight and up), easy cookery lessons after foraging in the kitchen garden, island picnics and PG film screenings under the stars. And, the spa has a menu of mini massages, facials, foot-mapping and mani-pedis, too.
Swimming pool
Of the two pools, the one by Sip & Sand is best suited to smalls, but it’s unsupervised. And, if you have a private pool, the hotel can supply a cover or gates.
Meals
We imagine you’ll make multiple stops for free ice-cream and sweet treats at Scoops, whatever age you are, but there are varied (and healthier) options at most of the resort’s restaurants. Kids under five eat free from the children’s menu, and kids aged six to 11 eat full price from the children’s menu or half price (for a half portion) from the regular menu. The hotel has highchairs and child-sized cutlery too.
Babysitting
Babysitting and nanny services are available on request, at a charge.
No need to pack
You may need more niche baby kit, but if you’re missing anything just ask your personal villa host to help.
Sustainability efforts
At all their luxury properties, the Six Senses group have set a high standard for sustainability. Kanuhura is no exception; the property was constructed using local and natural materials to thatch-topped traditional Maldivian style, water is conserved where possible and bottled onsite, plastics are kept to the utmost minimum, the kitchen works closely with local fishermen and growers and liberally picks from the organic garden on-island. And this relationship with the community is a two-way street, through hiring, training and education programmes, or providing infrastructure, medical and sanitation resources where needed, while neighbourhood knowledge is passed along for guests’ benefit. Any new plantings are non-invasive, cleaning products are all-natural, and the Earth Lab hosts workshops to inspire cleaner, greener ways to live. Funding from 0.5 per cent of revenue, all proceeds from soft-toy sales, and 50 per cent of bottled water sales is funnelled back into environmental programming. And even the mattress materials are sourced from certified organic coconut and rubber plantations.