Solo Travellers
10 Best Hotel Saunas Around the World Worthy of Your Next Sweat Session

Saunas are having a moment. In the US, we’ve finally cottoned on to what the Finnish have known for centuries—that sweating it out makes you feel good. Sauna-stocked spas and wellness clubs (like Othership) keep popping up all over major cities, and ads for at-home saunas can be spotted on social media pages across the country.
But plenty of wellness hotels worldwide have been doing the sauna thing excellently for years. There are high-tech offerings, such as RXV Wellness Village in Thailand, which has a hyperbaric chamber for skin and tissue regeneration, an infrared sauna, and a cryo sauna for extra-speedy muscle recovery. Then there are the Finnish hotels, many of which have suites with in-room saunas, like Hotel Kämp in Helsinki. In the UK, plenty of lovely hotels are revamping their offerings: Soho Farmhouse in Oxfordshire recently expanded its spa to include various onsen tubs, three infrared sauna cabins and an ice hut, while at the Lake District’s Brimstone Hotel & Spa, you’re taken on a thermal journey around a sequence of Finnish, lava, and herbal saunas, before settling in for a blast in the Himalayan steam rooms.
Touted benefits of a sweat session include pain relief, deeper sleep, improved circulation and a glowing complexion, so working a few stints into your vacation is a no-brainer. For the top places to soak, steam and sweat yourself happy, see below for our editors’ picks of the best hotel saunas in the world to visit in 2025 and beyond.
For more wellness inspiration, visit:
How we choose the best sauna hotels in the world
Every hotel on this list has been selected independently by our editors and written by a Condé Nast Traveler journalist who knows the destination and has visited that property. When choosing hotels, our editors consider properties across price points that offer an authentic and insider experience of a destination, keeping design, location, service, and sustainability credentials top of mind.
Solo Travellers
How to Go Swimming in the Seine, If You Must

Théo (who preferred not to provide his last name), a Frenchman who moved to Paris a year ago for a tech job, found it thrilling to swim in such a setting: “I’ve walked and cycled along the Seine many times, but this was a unique opportunity to swim surrounded by beautiful architecture I’ve always seen from a different angle.” He compared the feeling to urban swimming in Copenhagen and Zurich. “Although the pristine waters of Lake Zurich, these were not!”
Despite lingering concerns about historical contamination from industrial runoff and sewage overflow (issues that plagued the Seine for decades), strict safety protocols have reassured most swimmers. For example, all must wear yellow lifebuoys around their waists, not only for visibility but to prevent drowning in case of fatigue or a cramp. Additionally, daily bacterial monitoring has proven effective in keeping swimmers safe: This week, the three official swimming sites were closed due to heavy rains; significant rainfall can overwhelm stormwater systems, leading to spikes in bacteria levels, including E. coli and enterococci.
“What I’d love is to swim for more than just these two months,” says nutritionist Ariane Grumbach, who has done leisurely laps in the Seine several times. For now, the experience is limited to July and August, the driest and warmest months when water quality remains most stable. More than 50,000 swimmers have participated in the experience since the sites’ openings on July 5, with no reported health issues. City officials view this as a crucial pilot phase before expanding access more broadly in 2026. If all goes well, this brief summer season could mark the beginning of a beloved new Parisian ritual.
How to go swimming in the Seine in Paris
Want to have your own Seine swim? Read on for how to go swimming in the Seine, and which of the three official sites is best for you. And a reminder: Though swim caps are usually required in municipal pools, they are not obligatory in the Seine—all you need is a proper swimsuit. For more information, visit Paris.fr.
Bras-Marie
Swimming hours: 8 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. Monday-Saturday; 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. on Sunday
Right off the Sully – Morland stop on the Paris Metro, this is the smallest of the three sites and can welcome 150 swimmers at a time. Swimming hours are shorter during the week due to tourist boat traffic. There are no changing cabins available at this location (but there are restrooms), so swimmers should plan to come suited up. Children must be at least 14 years old to swim at this location.
Bercy
Swimming hours: 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily
This is the largest of the three sites, accommodating 700 people simultaneously (300 in the water), and located near the Metro’s Bercy stop. There are actually two bathing areas here, separated by a lateral protection to allow swimmers and boats. Restrooms, changing cabins, and showers are available. Children aged 10 and up who know how to swim are permitted.
Bras de Grenelle
Swimming hours: 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. daily
This is the only site of the three with a secure pool for children and families (40 to 60 centimeters—about 14 to 24 inches—deep), which can accommodate 200 people at a time. Children must be 14+ years old to swim in the bottomless area; children 3+ years old accompanied by a parent in the secure pool. Get there via the Champ de Mars Tour Eiffel stop on the Metro.
Solo Travellers
13 Best Beaches in Maui, From Quiet Coves to Surfing Strongholds

The best beaches in Maui are the stuff of our summer daydreams. On the island, whale pods arcing parallel to over-ocean rainbows, epic waves that crest and crash one after the other, and grottoes fit for a fairytale mermaid are not rare sights. Completely surrounded by the balmy North Pacific, Hawaii’s second biggest island enjoys a wealth of experiences that highlight the tropical island as a destination that is as diverse as it is idyllic. Soak in the sun along the cabana-skirted shores of Wailea, or explore the hidden coves of Hana for some low-key R&R. Fancy yourself more of an adventurer? Take to the backdrop of rugged Upcountry cliffs and rainforests, or dive into the expansive underwater playground before you and snorkel around the island’s clear-as-glass waters. With 120 miles of coastline, there’s no shortage of shores to get your fill. Here, we’ve hand-picked the 12 best beaches in Maui for sun, sand, and surf.
Read our complete Maui guide here, which includes:
Solo Travellers
Tracee Ellis Ross top tips for traveling solo might surprise you

Tracee Ellis Ross is a seasoned solo traveler. The 52-year-old actor has been traveling by herself since she was 25. And now, she’s sharing the many lessons learned from her trips over the years.
In Solo Traveling with Tracee Ellis Ross, which premieres on July 25, audiences will follow her on solo adventures to Morocco, Mexico, and Spain.
“Something clicked. I’m responsible for my own happiness,” Tracee explained in an exclusive clip from the show. “So much of what solo traveling is, is about not waiting for something in order to experience my life.”
When it comes to packing, Tracee has her go-to essentials. “There’s always one bathing suit, a flip flop, and a little dress I can roll up,” Tracee told Travel + Leisure about her packing essentials. “And there’s always two undies.”
Why just two? She explained that she washes her delicates in hotel sinks using shower gels. “If I’m gone for a month on this trip, you can’t pack a month’s worth of underwear,” she said. “How do you do that? They take up a lot of space.”
After her comment circulated online, Tracee clarified her system: “I pack two pairs in my carry-on…in case my luggage doesn’t make it,” she wrote to her 11.3 million Instagram followers. “This is hilarious.”
The Black-ish actress and daughter of music icon Diana Ross, grew up traveling with her mom for work and even living in places like Paris and Switzerland. Those experiences shaped her approach to travel.
“[I] really learned how to find home inside myself,” Tracee told Travel + Leisure. “[Travel] allowed me to see the similarities between human beings no matter where we are.”
In a recent Instagram post, Tracee showed the realities of traveling – sitting on luggage to make sure all her clothes fit and lounging in hotel pools. She captioned the post: “I hope [Solo Traveling with Tracee Ellis Ross] reminds all of us that we can live our lives courageously on our own terms and be our best selves, by ourselves, out in the world.”
Tracee says that traveling solo “means I can do what I want when I want.”
Her advice for anyone curious about traveling solo? “Start by going to dinner by yourself on a Friday night. See if you can do that. And you might not be a person who can do that. You might say, ‘I’m not doing that ever again.’ Then you’re not somebody who can go on vacation by yourself.”
As for Tracee, she will continue solo traveling.
“My life is really busy,” she told Savannah Guthrie and Willie Geist on TODAY with Jenna & Friends. “I go away by myself to decompress and enjoy the luxury of being.”
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