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No Longer a Last Resort

The new wave of luxury-forward Mexico all-inclusives delivers cultural immersion and culinary delights.

A neon-lit entrance with tropical leaf designs leads to an adults-only beach club at dusk, where string lights and the ocean evoke the relaxation and wellness in Mexico found at top all-inclusive resorts.
Bright nights. Situated on the Caribbean Sea, the Fiesta Americana Condesa Cancún recently completed a multi-year renovation.
Photo COURTESY OF FIESTA AMERICANA CONDESA CANCÚN

This article originally appeared in the March/April 2026 issue of Seattle magazine.

Thanks to years of party-goers etting south in the winter, the mention of a Mexico all-inclusive resort tends to conjure a specific image: wristband-wearing revelers in a crowded pool, dancing the Macarena to booming music, and the relentless buzz of the frozen margarita blender. Luring guests with all-you-can-drink packages and stocked buffets, these hotels left little room for appreciating the dynamic cultural tapestry of their host country. Times have changed, however, and many travelers are looking for more from their stay than a quick buzz and a loud pool. These days, the new all-inclusives have grown up, offering cultural and wellness experiences that aren’t easily replicated: an ancient cacao ceremony, a guided excursion off property, or a night spent tracing constellations over the desert.

Today’s best properties function as cultural curators and culinary classrooms, where craft mezcal flights and chef’s table dinners coexist comfortably with afternoon naps and lazy swimming. The appeal remains obvious—knowing the costs up front, avoiding vacation math, sidestepping the friend who orders dry-aged steak and vintage Bordeaux at every group dinner—but the experiences have expanded. These are the resorts leading the shift.

Grand Velas Los Cabos

Cabo San Lucas, Baja California Sur | loscabos.grandvelas.com

At the southern tip of the Baja California Peninsula, Grand Velas Los Cabos continues to dismantle the myth that all-inclusives can’t deliver serious cuisine. Multi-course tasting menus, wine-paired dinners, and chefs who treat Baja seafood with reverence and skill elevate the stay into something special. The resort’s Art Deco culinary gem, Frida, stuns, with top-shelf mezcal and tequila accompanying gourmet Mexican fare.

Beyond the table, the stargazing experience offers one of the property’s most memorable evenings. Under jet-black skies, guests gather with telescopes, blankets, champagne, and a guide who renders the cosmos fascinating—an elegant nod to the ancient Pericú people who once read the same stars.

Garza Blanca Los Cabos

Cabo San Lucas, Baja California Sur | garzablancaresort.com

Garza Blanca Los Cabos strikes a confident balance between modern design and easygoing energy. Interiors are airy and contemporary, early arrivals can ease in with hospitality suites, and the spacious rooms—many with balcony hammocks—are an immediate signal that vacation mode has been activated.

Culinary offerings are the inevitable litmus test, and here they pass with ease. The Blanca Blue restaurant reframes regional Mexican cuisine with a modern hand, NOI turns Italian classics into rooftop theater overlooking the Pacific, and Hiroshi’s sushi and sashimi showcase local seafood with precision. The atmosphere skews youthful but composed—cocktail-literate, well-traveled, and more interested in whale watching than late-night parties. During the right season (typically December to April), those whales often oblige, surfacing just offshore, visible from the rooftop infinity pool.

A couple stands on a balcony overlooking greenery and water at one of the top Mexico all-inclusive resorts, with lounge chairs, a table with food, and an outdoor bathtub; text reads "Designed to unwind.
Secrets Bahia Surf & Spa Resort features striking modern architecture—with sweeping ocean views to match.
Photo COURTESY OF SECRETS BAHIA SURF & SPA RESORT

Secrets Bahia Mita Surf & Spa Resort | Dreams Bahia Mita Surf & Spa Resort

Punta de Mita, Riviera Nayarit | Secrets Bahia Mita | Dreams Bahia Mita
Secrets Bahia Mita and Dreams Bahia Mita occupy a particularly compelling stretch of Riviera Nayarit, where the Sierra Madre foothills drop toward Banderas Bay and the scenery feels organic rather than contrived. Designed by famed architecture studio Sordo Madaleno, with a nod to classic brutalism, the twin properties lean into eco-conscious modernism with rounded, flowing lines.

What distinguishes the pairing is its flexibility. Secrets offers adults a calmer, more elevated experience—quieter pools, dedicated Preferred Club spaces, and a sense of rhythm that suits long lunches and late sunsets. Dreams, which is seamlessly connected to its neighboring property, introduces family-friendly energy via a water park, zip line, and activity-forward programming. Together, they create a multigenerational setup that doesn’t feel compromised in either direction.

Dining options range from polished Mexican classics and Pan-Asian picks to casual options, including a food truck that feels refreshingly legit. Days unfold easily between surf lessons, yoga, and pickleball, and whale watching offshore. Evenings shift toward live entertainment and tequila-fueled conviviality. The stunning, circular spa—with design inspired by the nearby Marietas Islands—anchors it all, with hydrotherapy, cabanas, and treatments designed for maximum decompression.

Hotel Mousai Puerto Vallarta

Puerto Vallarta, Jalisco | puertovallarta.hotelmousai.com

Puerto Vallarta’s only AAA Five Diamond hotel, Hotel Mousai, occupies rare ground in the all-inclusive landscape: adult-focused, design-forward, and quietly assured. The designation—held consecutively for more than a decade—feels less like a selling point than a standard the property simply refuses to dip below.

Hotel Mousai’s all-inclusive program includes 24-hour room service, fine dining across its signature restaurants, serious mixology, and casual beachfront bites. Blanca Blue delivers Mexican alta cocina with water views; DAO handles Chinese with confidence; Bocado covers steakhouse cravings—no bill required.

Geography does the rest. Set between Banderas Bay and the foothills of the Sierra Madre, Mousai offers guided mountain hikes directly from the resort—an unexpected contrast to infinity pools and rooftop lounges, and a reminder that Jalisco’s interior is as compelling as its coastline. A hydrotherapy session at Spa Imagine rounds out a stay that feels curated rather than crammed.

Grand Velas Riviera Nayarit

Nuevo Vallarta, Nayarit vallarta.grandvelas.com

Also set along Banderas Bay, Grand Velas Riviera Nayarit continues the brand’s preference for thoughtfulness over spectacle. The introduction of Sleep Suites reflects a broader shift toward wellness that values rest as a cornerstone of the vacation experience. Aromatherapy, meditation sessions, herbal infusions, and wind-down rituals are designed for travelers who consider sleep a necessity, not a luxury.

Equally notable: guests are encouraged to leave the property. Puerto Vallarta’s dining scene, nightlife, and beaches are within reach, as is the mountain town of San Sebastián del Oeste, a pueblo mágico—a designation given by the Mexican government—perched high above the coast. It’s a refreshing stance in a category once defined by keeping guests firmly inside the gates.

Fairmont Mayakoba

Mayakoba, Riviera Maya | fairmont.com

Within the gated enclave of Mayakoba—a tranquil network of lagoons, bike paths, and luxury resorts—the Fairmont Mayakoba stands as the community’s only all-inclusive option. The setting feels more biosphere than beach complex, with herons gliding low over the canals and frigatebirds overhead.

Worried that you’re missing out on the “real” foodie scene in Mexico City? The Fairmont culinary programming leans delightfully adventurous, including edible insect tastings for travelers eager to experience the small-but mighty protein source taking the (rest of the) world by storm. Cooking classes, tequila pairings, and chef-led experiences showcase the Yucatán’s rich flavors, while boat rides through the mangroves reveal the quieter side of the Riviera Maya.

Modern beachfront condominium with glass balconies and wood paneling overlooks a sandy beach, palm trees, and clear blue ocean—perfect for relaxation and wellness in Mexico under a sunny sky.
All grown up. The adults-only Impression Moxché by Secrets.
Photo COURTESY OF IMPRESSION MOXCHÉ BY SECRETS

Impression Moxché by Secrets

Playa del Carmen, Riviera Maya | hyattinclusivecollection.com/

Part of Hyatt’s luxury collection, Impression Moxché offers a rarefied take on the all-inclusive concept. Private rooftop pools, beachfront sanctuaries, Californian-Mexican cuisine at Cielo—and the seven-course tasting menu at Teodoro, of course—establish a quieter, exclusive rhythm.

The most resonant experience, however, arrives weekly at the Seaside Beach Club. During a complimentary cacao ceremony, guests gather as the legend of Quetzalcoatl is shared in both Nahuatl and English, tracing cacao’s role as a sacred seed in ancient Mesoamerican culture. Accompanied by live music, the ritual creates a contemplative pause and an experience that lingers.

Fiesta Americana Condesa Cancún

Cancún, Quintana Roo | fiestamericanatravelty.com/en/

A long-standing favorite property in Cancún, Fiesta Americana Condesa has returned with renewed focus and polish under the guiding muse of “La Condesa,” or the countess. The suites, leaning into the theme of elevated elegance, are stocked with aromatherapy touches and mixology kits for guests inclined to refine their vacation cocktail technique.

Food anchors the transformation: rotating regional menus at El Mexicano, chef ’s table experiences at Rosato Bottega, beachfront omakase nights, and tableside carvings at Brasa by the Sea. Elsewhere, La Playa Privada offers shaded cabanas and spritz service, while a cigar-and-spirits lounge pairs rum flights with live Latin jazz.

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