Comporta, Portugal

Sublime Comporta

Price per night from$694.41

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 (EUR600.00), via openexchangerates.org, using today’s exchange rate.

Style

Unplugged indulgence

Setting

Pools and pine trees

Profiting from the pine-shaded peace of Alentejo, Sublime Comporta is an upscale retreat of two wings. On the original 17-acre site, Terracotta is a couples-friendly bolthole of suites and villas, many with private pools, and all with access to a consummate gym, adults-only spa and choice of dining spots. Its newer neighbour is Sand — three-times the size and across the road — but alike in character with family-friendly villas, a thoughtfully set-out kids' club and all-frills Aqua centre. 

Smith Extra

Get this when you book through us:

One bottle of local wine

Facilities

Photos Sublime Comporta facilities

Need to know

Rooms

65 rooms, suites and villas.

Check–Out

Noon, but flexible, subject to availability. Earliest check-in, 3pm, 4pm for villas.

More details

Rates usually include breakfast (Continental and cooked options, including just-baked pastries, ham, cheese, granola, eggs, bacon and so on), served either at Sem Porta (Terracotta) or Beefbar (Sand).

Please note

Room changes may be applied if you're staying in the Master or Standard Cabana Villa Rooms — please speak with our Travel Team before booking to confirm.

At the hotel

Scenic 70-hectare estate across two neighbouring sites; beach club, fashion and homeware boutiques, bikes to borrow and scheduled shuttles. At Terracotta: tennis and padel courts, gym, yoga and Pilates studio, and free WiFi throughout. At Sand: kids' club, gym and library (workspace); a sports centre is in the works. In rooms: TV, desk, minibar, bathrobes.

Our favourite rooms

Layouts are similar at both Terracotta and Sand, but differ in decor — light-filled and whitewashed at Terracotta; cosier in creams and taupes at Sand. Wellness seekers will want a Spa Room close to where the treatments happen. Nature lovers may fall for the Bio-Pool Suites at Terracotta, but bear in mind that these also attract wilder residents, such as nocturnal frogs. Cabana Suites and Cabana Suites Superior are worth the upgrade for their private pools and living space. Families may prefer to stay at Sand, closer to the child-friendly pools and kids' club.

Poolside

Swimmers can take their pick at either wing. At Terracotta, a raised, pine-shaded pool is set in the green-and-gold grounds, next to an outdoor lounge that hints at sociable evenings; plus an indoor pool at the spa is your tranquil dipping spot, pre-treatment. At Sand, the Aqua centre has a sprawling lounger-fringed pool outdoors with bar service, plus a separate shallow pool for tots, and an indoor swimming spot for cooler days. All villas and suites also come with private pools.

Spa

The adults-only spa at Terracotta flaunts a relaxation area overlooking the grounds, plus a pool complex with a steam room and sauna. On the lower floor, My Blend therapies are dished across a handful of cocooning treatment rooms. The main gym at Sublime Comporta is just as impressive, set across two floors with cardio equipment and free weights, a boxing ring, personal training and alfresco studio. There's also a separate Reformer Pilates and yoga studio with a schedule of classes. If you're staying at Sand, a smaller gym at Aqua enables workouts closer to your lodgings. And, although for now padel and tennis courts are also set at Terracotta, a sports centre for Sand is in the works.

Packing tips

With either gravel or sand underfoot in many spaces across both wings, footwear should be a key consideration. Also bring your thirst: Herdade da Comporta is home to some excellent wineries.

Also

Shuttle buses travel between Sand and Terracotta, and can take you to and from Sublime Comporta Beach Club, with pick-ups every 30 minutes at peak times.

Pet‐friendly

Dogs are welcome at Sublime Comporta in a Cabana Room, Cabana Suite or Villa. On a leash in communal spaces is fine, only the pool areas are off-limits. A one-off cleaning fee of €50 a pup includes a bed and bowls. See more pet-friendly hotels in Comporta.

Children

Very welcome.

Best for

All ages are catered for at Sublime Comporta, but you'll need to be vigiliant with mobile toddlers around the pools.

Recommended rooms

Villas across both wings are perfectly suited to families, offering two, three or four bedrooms. Sand's selection edges ahead, thanks to the proximity of the kids' club and family-friendly pools.

Crèche

Sublime Comporta's purpose-built kids' club is open year-round and welcomes children aged three and older for a charge. The downstairs is a delight for younger Smiths, with plenty of play areas, indoors and out, including a garden corner, soccer goal, basketball hoop and tiny, shallow pool. Upstairs is reserved for tweens and teens with lounge space, a pool table and table football.

Activities

The kids' club takes care of your children's entertainment needs with a varied programme of fun activities, and the pools and beach club take care of the rest. Juniors can expect movie nights, cookie-baking sessions and treasure hunts, arts and crafts. Older kids may enjoy surf lessons or horse riding. 

Swimming pool

Sand's Aqua centre is your go-to for family bathing, with an expansive pool outdoors, close to the bar and Davvero, and a shallow pool for the smallest of water babies. Terracotta's spa pool is for adults only.

Meals

Many of the restaurants have children's menus and highchairs, with Davvero Blu (at Sand) and the Beach Club most likely to appeal to younger palates. Subject to availability, the concierge team can arrange for a family picnic to be prepared and set up in a cool pine-shaded spot on the estate. 

Babysitting

Available with notice from an external agency; from €15 an hour.

Food and Drink

Photos Sublime Comporta food and drink

Top Table

Watching chef at work at The Food Table is a unique experience; windowside at Sem Porta or Beefbar. And the round tables at Daverro are set for sociable dining for larger clans.

Dress Code

Easy-breezy by day. For dinners at Beefbar, Canalha or Daverro, a dash more glamour suits the sense of occasion.

Hotel restaurant

Sublime Comporta has a trio of dining spots at either wing. Floor-to-ceiling windows that put Sublime’s locale in the frame are complemented by equally rooted cuisine at Terracotta’s staple restaurant Sem Porta, which celebrates Alentejo gastronomy. In a rustic-luxe dining room, also at Terracotta, Canalha expands the brief to spotlight Portuguese and Iberian culinary influences. Experiential dining is served seasonally at The Food Circle, set amid the forest at Terracotta, where just 12 guests pull up a high stool beside the kitchen to watch local ingredients (many of which are grown using the principles of permaculture) being transformed using ancestral cooking methods into a unique tasting menu.  

Over at Sand, Beefbar has arrived in Comporta and, as well as serving its signature prime cuts and sharing plates by evening, it doubles as the wing’s à la carte breakfast spot. Daverro Comporta is Sand’s love letter to Italy with Milan-worthy interiors in a light-filled spot at Aqua. Its casual little sister for daytime poolside bites is Daverro Blu

When you're shoreside at Sublime Comporta Beach Club, its indoor-outdoor restaurant serves Alentejan surf-and-turf classics, include a selection of cooked-to-order rice dishes, plus family-friendly fare (open 12.30pm until 5pm; until 9pm on summer Fridays and Saturdays). 

Hotel bar

The answer to thirst is never far away at Sublime Comporta. At Sand, Daverro Blu has terrace tables alfresco or can dish drinks to your poolside lounger, as well as a selection of snacks, small plates and pizza. There's also a bar area for pre-prandial sips at the main Daverro Comporta restaurant. In summer, Beefbar stays open until 1am, morphing into a night spot for drinks and beats. At Terracotta, Sem Porta Bar is an all-day spot for coffees, then softs and cocktails, set in a double-height space between the lobby and its namesake restaurants with tables alfresco too. At Sand, although ostensibly a workspace, the Library has a wine dispenser — load a card at reception, then explore Portuguese vintages by the glass with its self-serve set-up. Sublime Comporta Beach Club is open until 9pm on Friday and Saturday nights in summer — a prime spot for sundowners that's as convivial as it is scenic. 

Last orders

Breakfast is from 8am to 11am; lunch, 12.30pm to 3.30pm; dinner, 7pm to 11pm. The Food Circle opens April to November at 7.30pm nightly. Beefbar opens Thursday to Monday. Canalha is lunch only in low season.

Room service

Order from a limited menu between 10am and 10pm.

Location

Photos Sublime Comporta location
Address
Sublime Comporta
EN 261-1,Muda, CCI 3954
Comporta
7570-337
Portugal

Sublime Comporta sits in a stunning forested estate, south of Lisbon, on Herdade da Comporta: a swoop of coast between the Sado Estuary and the sea. One of Portugal’s best beaches is just a 15-minute drive away.

Planes

Lisbon Airport is 128 kilometres from the hotel (www.lisbon-airport.com); EasyJet offers direct flights from major cities in the UK, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Spain and Switzerland. Transatlantic flights arrive via Madrid-Barajas; flights across the Pacific arrive via Abu Dhabi or Guangzhou Baiyun and Amsterdam Schipol. If you take the speedy route from the airport, you’ll be at Sublime Comporta in one hour and 15 minutes. Hotel transfers are €195 a vehicle (for up to four guests), each way.

Automobiles

Lisbon is around one hour and 15 minutes away by car. From the airport, take the Vasco da Gama bridge and the A12 highway, then the A2 towards south (Algarve) for approximately 100 kilometres. Take exit 9 (Grândola/Sines) and merge onto the IC33. Continue for about nine kilometres, then take the exit towards Comporta/Troia. Turn left onto N261-1 and continue for another 10.5 kilometres, until crossing the small village of Muda. Just 1.5 kilometres down the road, you’ll find the signs for Sublime Comporta: on the right for Terracotta; on the left for Sand. The hotel has plenty of free on-site parking.

Other

If you’re not in a rush to get here, take the scenic route from Lisbon and hop on the Troia ferry (keeping your eyes peeled for dolphins) across Sado River. It’s a short drive to the hotel from the Troia Peninsula (http://www.atlanticferries.pt/en/index.aspx).

Worth getting out of bed for

Herdade da Comporta has plenty to write home about: discover its tranquil 70-kilometre coastline, home to Portugal’s best beach. Ask nicely and staff will pack you a picnic, drop you off at a deserted patch of white sand and arrange a time to come and collect you. Visit some of Comporta’s amazing wineries, Herdade da Comporta and Quinta Brejinho da Costa (staff will tip you off to some others if needed), or ask the hotel to arrange horse-riding in the surrounding rice fields and beaches. It’s also a beautiful place to go running, should you be so inclined. A word to the wise  if you've got your heart set on a particular activity or excursion, be sure to book before arrival to avoid disappointment. During Christmas, the hotel hosts a fare-filled market, wine tastings by the fireplace, and cookie making classes for all. 

Local restaurants

Soak up the prime beach views and squabble over crunchy calamari, fat prawns and just-caught fish at Sal Comporta, which occupies a prime slice of sand on Praia do Pêgo. Owned by a fisherman, O Dinis, Grandola woos locals and global fashion-editors alike, serving succulent seafood in a humble-but-brilliant space in Carvalhal.

Reviews

Photos Sublime Comporta reviews
Felicity Cloake

Anonymous review

By Felicity Cloake, Gourmet globetrotter

While it’s hard to regret the invention of air conditioning in Portugal, even in late September, the pine-drenched warmth that greets me as I hoist myself out of the car window to reach Sublime’s (perfectly positioned) entry phone proves so thrilling I immediately stop complaining about Someone’s bad driving and start loudly regretting the wasted hour we’ve just spent inhaling Eau de Fiat Panda instead.

In fact, the Panda – a serviceable yet notably ugly vehicle we quickly christen the Popemobile in honour of His Holiness’ recent visit to Portugal (or more truthfully, because of its ungainly proportions) – is to prove a millstone round our necks for the entirety of our stay. Within those artfully rustic gates lies a world of understated elegance and quiet luxury – and, for this weekend only, our pea green entry-level hire car.

That said, Sublime’s lovely young staff don’t raise so much as a well-groomed eyebrow at our aesthetically challenged transport choice – they’re so friendly that I’m tempted to hop on the golf buggy with the receptionist and leave Mr Smith to do the drive of shame to our suite solo. Instead, I spend the entire three minute journey crouched over, pretending to try and find the coin that slipped under the seat in the inevitable frenzy of the motorway tollbooth. (You never know when you might need 20 cents in a luxury hotel.)

All this embarrassment is no doubt all in my head; Sublime is the kind of place where fellow guests politely ask whether you’d mind if they put on some ‘Balearic beats’ round the pool – ‘it’ll be super chill, I promise’ – or if you could do with a spritz of organic insect repellent. (The beasts in need of repelling are tiny flies, not mosquitoes, which is an important distinction as far as I’m concerned; flies only take a single punchy margarita to stop being annoying, mosquitos require a bottle of tequila to be even tolerable.)

The whole vibe here is so super chill, in fact, that it’s almost otherworldly – a feeling reinforced by the fact that, although our room is but a couple of minutes walk along clearly marked forest paths from the main reception area, I manage to get lost on several occasions, too busy wandering around with my mouth open wittering on about the beauty of the parasol pines (‘absolutely my second favourite tree’) to pay attention to directions. This is nothing, however, to the panicky half hour I spend flailing around thorn bushes with a family of wild boar after embarking on an overambitious run one morning – the surrounding countryside is glorious, but I’d recommend asking staff about routes rather than striking out in the dubious company of Google maps.

During my epic struggle to find my way back to Sublime civilisation, I’m struck by the worrying, but increasingly credible possibility that the estate actually exists in an alternative, and rather more desirable reality. Though, once safely installed in front of a strong coffee, I recognise this as the rambling of a woman desperately afraid of missing out on homemade granola. Nevertheless the feeling persists, and indeed it’s a reality I’d be more than happy to defect to full time, if only I were a different person. The clean white decor of the room, for example, all sheer white curtains billowing in the breeze and soaring ceilings, has a profoundly calming effect on us both – until I open my suitcase and all is chaos again.

Sadly said suitcase is too tightly packed (I laugh in the face of baggage charges) to accommodate one of the lovely embroidered cushions that provide the only splash of colour in an ocean of tasteful neutrals, though I strongly consider making an offer for the wall-hanging fashioned from local cork. A sculptural pinboard would be so useful for the detritus that tends to follow me round in real life.

To my considerable relief, there’s very little need for the Panda on our three-day stay, though we do razz it down to the hip village of Comporta one afternoon on the pretence of exploring the local area. The beach – wide, sandy, almost empty, save for a couple of laid-back bars serving icy rosé and tapas – is perfect, but I fall harder for the Gomes Supermercados, a dimly-lit warren of culinary joy with an extensive range of tinned sardines in beautiful packaging, and a fabulous pair of goat-shaped salt and pepper shakers that nearly spark divorce proceedings.

Otherwise we loll about on dove-grey sun loungers next to the bracing infinity pool, sip margaritas by the sunken fire pit and eat. Mostly we eat. So generous are the breakfasts (pasteis de nata on tap!) that, with the help of the odd olive or 70 we just about manage to hold out until dinner, where we ravage the eclectic, rather sprawling menu like ill-bred locusts, boldly chasing up xara, an Alentejo speciality which I surmise to be brawn, and homemade pickles with rice pudding and avocado ice cream.

If the kitchen sometimes seems to be trying a bit too hard, the food is certainly never boring, which is refreshing in a place where there are no alternatives within walking distance. The two local wines recommended to us are so exceptional I order a case of the white on my phone as the Panda rattles us back to reality. After all, that hard-won 20 cents won’t spend itself.


 

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Price per night from $694.41