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The 5 Most Expensive Four Seasons Resorts in the World

The 5 Most Expensive Four Seasons Resorts in the World

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Naviva, A Four Seasons Resort (Punta Mita, Mexico)

These are the Four Seasons resorts that command the highest rates anywhere in the global portfolio. Knowing which resort sit at the pinnacle, and exactly why they charge what they do, is what separates an informed luxury retreat from a disappointing high-end vacation.

Pursuitist compared publicly reported starting rates, current resort offerings, property inventory, inclusions, and signature-villa pricing in the objective tradition of checking the marketing claim against the final receipt. Because nightly rates move daily based on seasonality, treat this ranking as the ultimate Four Seasons pricing pyramid rather than a completely rigid leaderboard.


1. Four Seasons Private Island Maldives at Voavah

The Ultimate Expression of Unlimited Luxury

Voavah is not a standard resort; it is a five-acre private island sanctuary tucked away in the Maldives’ UNESCO-protected Baa Atoll, reserved exclusively for one single group of up to 22 guests at a time. A buyout gives your party complete, absolute dominion over a seven-bedroom compound.

  • The Experience: Guests control the entire island’s schedule. Stays include a dedicated onsite staff, a private spa, a certified PADI dive center, a beach house, and a 62-foot private yacht (Voavah Summer) with its own dedicated maritime crew for spontaneous excursions.
  • The Heritage: Opened in 2016, Voavah was the world’s first exclusive-use private island located within a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve. It seamlessly layers the flawless operational infrastructure of Four Seasons over the total anonymity of a private estate.
  • Why Pursuitist Recommends It: This is the absolute ceiling of the brand’s hospitality portfolio. It is explicitly engineered for multigenerational families, milestone celebrations, and high-profile guests requiring strict, impenetrable security.
  • The Cost: Rates are strictly by inquiry. Industry estimates comfortably place a full-island buyout starting around $50,000 per night, heavily fluctuating based on seasonality and bespoke staffing requests.

2. Naviva, A Four Seasons Resort (Punta Mita, Mexico)

The Most Expensive Luxury Resort for Two

Naviva is an ultra-intimate, adults-only wild sanctuary featuring just 15 luxury tented bungalows nestled across 48 raw acres of Mexico’s dramatic Pacific coast.

  • The Experience: Every canvas-walled bungalow effortlessly blends indoor and outdoor living, featuring a private plunge pool, outdoor shower, and an expansive terrace with a fully stocked bar. To eliminate friction, the nightly rate is highly inclusive, wrapping in all daily dining, premium beverages, a 90-minute spa journey, and unscripted local experiences (like temazcal sweat lodge ceremonies or raicilla tastings).
  • The Heritage: Opened in December 2022, Naviva was built as a low-impact, deep-nature extension of the existing, highly acclaimed Four Seasons property in Punta Mita.
  • Why Pursuitist Recommends It: Naviva justifies its premium entry price by completely removing the nickel-and-diming common at other high-end resorts. Because premium meals, drinks, and spa care are entirely baked into the upfront cost, it represents one of the most cohesive luxury packages available.
  • The Cost: Highly representative baseline rates typically start around $3,300 per night for single occupants and $4,100 per night for couples.

3. Four Seasons Tented Camp Golden Triangle (Thailand)

The Pinnacle of All-Inclusive Glamping

Perched on a hillside overlooking the confluence of Thailand, Laos, and Myanmar, this iconic northern Thailand outpost strips away the traditional hotel setup in favor of 15 elevated luxury tents hidden among more than 300 acres of dense jungle.

  • The Experience: Sold strictly as two- to four-night immersive packages, a stay here wraps almost every operational cost into the bill: gourmet meals, open bars, custom spa treatments, airport transfers, and deeply ethical interactions with the camp’s resident rescued elephants.
  • The Heritage: Debuting in the mid-2000s, this property pioneered the modern luxury glamping movement, proving that high-end travelers would happily sleep under canvas if the service matched the setting. Please note that guests must be at least nine years old to stay.
  • Why Pursuitist Recommends It: You are paying directly for irreplaceable memories rather than just a mattress. Bathing a rescued elephant at the break of dawn before sitting down to an expertly prepared multi-course dinner under canvas is something a beach resort simply cannot replicate.
  • The Cost: Because there are no lower-tier, traditional rooms to fall back on, the entry point is remarkably steep, starting around $2,500 to $3,000 per tent, per night before local taxes and service fees.

4. Four Seasons Resort Bora Bora

The Gold Standard of Overwater Splurges

Occupying its own private, coral-fringed motu (islet) in French Polynesia, this flagship resort faces the jagged volcanic peaks of Mount Otemanu across a dazzling, neon-turquoise lagoon.

  • The Experience: Accommodations are split between iconic overwater bungalow suites with private plunge pools and massive, multi-bedroom beachfront villa estates designed for ultimate privacy. The property features an open-air marine sanctuary, several world-class restaurants, and a full-service spa. Published rates routinely include round-trip airport boat transfers and daily breakfast.
  • The Heritage: Opened in September 2008, it stands as the brand’s singular foothold in French Polynesia. It serves a dual purpose: acting as one of the world’s premier honeymoon addresses while housing the Ruahatu Lagoon Sanctuary, a highly functional, working marine research site home to over 100 species.
  • Why Pursuitist Recommends It: The massive price tag matches a spectacular physical reality. Very few places on earth successfully strike this exact balance of raw isolation, geographical beauty, and hyper-polished service.
  • The Cost: Standard overwater bungalows typically kick off between $1,500 and $2,500 per night, while peak-season beachfront villa estates easily scale multiple times higher.

5. Four Seasons Resort Lanai (Hawaii)

An Unmatched, Near-Private Island Enclave

This sweeping oceanfront property sits directly above the marine sanctuary of Hulopoe Bay on an island completely devoid of single traffic lights, offering an accessible slice of old Hawaii entirely untouched by mass tourism.

  • The Experience: The resort treats the island as an expansive playground, offering championship golf designed by Jack Nicklaus, off-road 4×4 exploration, and dining at a cliffside Nobu Lanai. To drastically streamline the arrival experience, round-trip flights between Honolulu and Lanai on Lanai Air are entirely included with all qualifying reservations through December 31, 2027.
  • The Heritage: Originally opened as the Manele Bay Hotel in 1991, the property transitioned to Four Seasons management in 2005. Its true evolution came after Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison purchased roughly 98 percent of the entire island in 2012, pouring hundreds of millions of dollars into a complete modernization of the resort layout.
  • Why Pursuitist Recommends It: It grants affluent travelers the relative ease of traveling within the United States while delivering the distinct flavor of a highly secluded international private island.
  • The Cost: Baseline rooms hover in the low thousands per night ($1,400 to $1,700), while upper-tier specialty suites routinely exceed $5,000 per night.

At a Glance: The Luxury Pricing Pyramid Compared

Resort Core Distinction Baseline Pricing (Est.) Accommodation Style Best Suited For
Voavah Maldives Full Island Enclosure Around $50,000+ / night 7-Bedroom Buyout Corporate retreats, VIPs, multi-gen families
Naviva Punta Mita Adult All-Inclusive Wellness $3,300 – $4,100 / night Luxury Plunge-Pool Tent Couples seeking effortless privacy
Golden Triangle All-Inclusive Jungle Glamping $2,500 – $3,000 / night Elevated Safari Tent Adventurous travelers and wildlife lovers
Bora Bora Iconic Lagoon Setting $1,500 – $2,500 / night Overwater Bungalow Classic honeymoons and milestone trips
Lanai Hawaii Secluded Domestic Escape Low Thousands / night Resort Rooms & Suites Golfers and privacy-minded luxury travelers

An Honorable Mention for Heritage: If your travel tastes lean European rather than tropical, the Grand-Hôtel du Cap-Ferrat on the French Riviera is the historic equivalent to these numbers. Its baseline rooms jump from an off-season price of $1,100 straight past $7,000 per night during peak July and August weeks, driven by its legendary Palace status and Belle Époque heritage.


Frequently Asked Questions

What is the absolute most expensive Four Seasons property?

The single most expensive experience is Four Seasons Private Island Maldives at Voavah, which requires booking the entire five-acre island starting around $50,000 per night. For a standard, single-room booking, Naviva in Mexico and Four Seasons Tented Camp Golden Triangle in Thailand hold the highest typical baseline entry rates due to their highly inclusive structures.

Are all meals included when booking these premium resorts?

No. The vast majority of standard Four Seasons reservations operate on a room-only or room-and-breakfast basis. However, Naviva and Four Seasons Tented Camp Golden Triangle are distinct exceptions, their nightly tariffs are all-inclusive, fully covering dining, premium beverages, and core activities.

Is the private flight to Four Seasons Lanai actually free?

Yes, with qualifications. Four Seasons has extended its luxury aviation partnership, meaning round-trip charter flights between Honolulu International Airport (HNL) and Lanai on Lanai Air are included for all qualifying room and suite bookings with arrivals through December 31, 2027.

Why are the Maldives properties split up in rankings?

Four Seasons operates an entire ecosystem in the Maldives. They have two completely distinct traditional island resorts (Landaa Giraavaru in the Baa Atoll and Kuda Huraa in the Malé Atoll), an exclusive private island asset (Voavah), and a luxury catamaran cruise ship (Four Seasons Explorer). This ranking highlights Voavah due to its unparalleled status as an ultra-luxury private island buyout.