Hotels & Accommodations
5 new hotels in Sri Lanka to bookmark for your next holiday

Located in Kegalle district in Sabaragamuwa Province, roughly 120km from Colombo, Rambukkana is a quiet agricultural town. Here, the recently-restored Jetwing Wahawa Walauwa is a luxurious all-suite boutique villa dating back to the 1870s. Carefully restored by PW architects, headed by Phillip Weeraratne and architect Lakmith Fernando, who took this on as a personal project, the two-storey property features just six rooms (four grand suites and two junior suites) filled with curated furniture, art and old Sri Lankan flags. ‘Walauwa’ means large house and was earlier used in reference to homes of local aristocracy. The seven-acre property is set amidst plantations of spices like cardamom and cinnamon and fruits like mango and rambutan. Each suite is expansive with a four-poster bed, hand-carved wood furniture and a separate living, bedroom, and bathroom space with a bathtub. A dedicated personal butler is on hand throughout your stay. All meals are served at the large open-style dining hall that overlooks the pool with some alfresco seating as well. Meals are à la carte, and you can choose from a menu that offers an interesting mix of Sri Lankan local fare like the banana leaf wrapped fish, local organically grown rice, and hot butter coconut, a creamy coconut rice and sweet potato sambal, as well as international cuisine. Bird watchers have lots to look forward to, as endemic birds like Layard’s Parakeet and the Sri Lanka Hanging Parrot can be found on the premises. There are temples and the Balana Fort in the vicinity. If you can take the short train ride from Rambukkana to Kadugannawa, you can see Bible Rock (Bathalegala) and the picturesque valley below. Doubles from Rs25,000. – Bindu Gopal Rao
NÜWA, Colombo
The first South Asian outpost of Melco Resorts’ flagship luxury brand, NÜWA has opened alongside Cinnamon Life inside Colombo’s new City of Dreams development, part of the joint venture with John Keells Holdings. This is a more intimate alternative to its glitzier sister property right next door which is a whopping 687-key property. NÜWA on the other hand, comes with 113 keys ranging from Oceanfront and Cityscape Deluxe Rooms to the exclusive Presidential and Dragon Suites. While restrained by Colombo standards, every space at the hotel is finished with a kind of relaxed opulence: clean-lined interiors, Italian amenities by La Bottega, and sweeping views of the Indian Ocean or the skyline. The dining is equally precise. The Crystal Lounge serves a gourmet Western menu and smartly assembled cocktails in a mood-lit space. The Vault is a private lounge with a darker, clubbier aesthetic, while the Pool Bar, breezier and more sociable, plays live jazz and serves signature drinks. For all its luxury, NÜWA doesn’t feel sealed off. Its scale makes it extremely navigable and guests still have full access to the larger City of Dreams complex. Doubles from Rs16,315. – Zara Flavia Dmello
*Prices are dynamic and subject to change
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Hotels & Accommodations
Oman’s premium hotels earn RO 141 million in H1 2025

MUSCAT: Revenues from three- to five-star hotels in Oman surged 18.2 per cent to approximately RO 141.21 million by the end of June 2025, compared with RO 119.50 million in the same period of 2024, according to the National Centre for Statistics and Information (NCSI).
The number of guests increased by 9.2 per cent to 1,142,702, up from 1,046,224 a year earlier. Occupancy rates rose by 14.4 per cent to 54.7 per cent, compared with 47.8 per cent in the first half of 2024.
By nationality, guests from Oceania recorded the highest growth rate, up 57.9 per cent to 24,681. African guests grew by 40.6 per cent to 7,794, while guests from the Americas rose 22.3 per cent to 39,293. European guests increased 20.1 per cent to 358,190, Gulf visitors grew by 10.6 per cent to 83,140, and Omani guests rose 5.7 per cent to 384,222. Asian guests also saw a modest rise of 2.4 per cent to 163,286.
The only decline was among other Arab nationalities, with numbers falling by 1.4 per cent to 48,453 guests. — ONA
Hotels & Accommodations
First look: Sax Paris, LXR Hotels & Resorts from Hilton

The City of Light is home to hotels aplenty, ranging from serviceable budget accommodations to luxury digs where your points can help you save some euros.
The newest entrant on the scene comes courtesy of Hilton’s upscale LXR Hotels & Resorts brand, and is an under-the-radar, 118-room gem in Paris’s sleepy 7th arrondissement.
Sax Paris, LXR Hotels & Resorts opened its doors at the end of May, and TPG popped in there just after Bastille Day for a spontaneous stay on the city’s Left Bank. Here’s everything you need to know about Paris’ latest points hotel and how to make the most of a stay there.
First impressions
An ever-changing cast of well-heeled foreigners — some toting bags from fashion brands galore, others furtively issuing orders via mobile phones to unseen assistants — seems to play background characters in front of the 1899 former telephone exchange that has recently been transformed into the Sax. If you can tear your surreptitious gaze away from their antics, you might spot the golden dome of Les Invalides down one of the wide boulevards radiating from the hotel, and the spire of the Eiffel Tower in another direction down a leafy street.
Sharply dressed doormen do their best to match the right parties to the right Mercedes sedans, or to help the latest arrival wheel massive pieces of luggage that hark back to the monthslong ocean voyages of yore into the relatively diminutive reception area.
One of the check-in agents will surely compliment your high-school French as you complete the check-in formalities, then they will hop out from behind the standing desk to personally escort you to your chamber, pointing out the alfresco The Garden restaurant (and plunge pool) through the back door, or the sultry, chandelier-filled The Galerie lounge along the way before leading you under a ceiling mural by street artist Sto on the way to the elevators.
Rather than one of the city’s grande dame hotels, this feels more like a well-to-do residential building that you just happen to be calling home during your visit to Paris.
The rooms
For a hotel with so few rooms, the Sax Paris actually has a preponderance of room categories — I counted 18 on the booking page — which can make it hard to suss out exactly what you’re getting. However, there are just king and queen rooms in the starting Sax category, and these are the ones available for the fewest points, so that is likely what most guests will end up trying to book.
Thanks to my Hilton Honors Diamond status, I was upgraded a single category from a Queen Sax room to a King Deluxe room that was 280 square feet versus just 250 square feet. Though small, it was still spacious by Parisian standards and efficiently laid out.
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Anchoring the space was a sumptuously dressed king-size bed with crisp, white, monogrammed linens, flanked on both sides by marble-topped nightstands.
Rather than a headboard, the wall behind it was a window looking into the bathroom (albeit with electronic privacy blinds).
At the far side of the room, a wall of mirrored doors hiding the closet lent the space a more expansive feel while also reflecting the natural light from the wall of windows overlooking the hotel’s courtyard.
The room also held a marble breakfast table with two chairs — one wood, the other leather — providing a decent workspace. Next to this, the 55-inch flat-screen HDTV was mounted on a floor stand. The rough-hewn wooden minibar held a variety of specialty treats like savories and sweets from La Grande Epicerie and bottled cocktails from the Avantgarde Spirits Company.
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ERIC ROSEN/THE POINTS GUY
To one side of the short corridor to the front door was a water closet containing an automated toilet.
To the other was the main bathroom, clad in gorgeous white marble with deep black veins and with a dual sink carved from dark marble. One quirk of this was that the hot water pipes seemed to run through the brass fixtures upon which the towels hung — an ingenious way of warming the linens, perhaps, but hot to the touch otherwise, so attention!
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The walk-in shower had hand-held and overhead showerheads and pleasantly scented custom-made hair and skin products.
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ERIC ROSEN/THE POINTS GUY
Contemporary but with nods to art deco and 1960s style, the room felt very chic and well laid out, if a tad on the small side for this price point.
Dining
The hotel has several dining and drinking establishments.
Those looking for a swinging scene should head straight to Kinugawa, a Japanese fusion restaurant with other outposts in Dubai, Morocco and St. Barts, among others, on the top floor, where a raft of hosts and hostesses stand ready to escort you to your table. Those around the central bar and the omakase counter are the liveliest, but the ones with Eiffel Tower views are the most coveted. All have plush pink velvet chairs and banquettes, though, with a potted palm or two thrown in for good measure.
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There are tables outside on a small deck as well as one floor up via a spiral staircase (though this area was not yet ready for guests). Just a heads-up that this tends to be where the smokers congregate, so your panoramic view might come with wafts of smoke.
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ERIC ROSEN/THE POINTS GUY
The menu is pricey, even by Parisian standards, with standout dishes like crispy rice with salmon, snow crab and avocado ($35); katsu duck cress salad ($30.50); a wagyu burger with yuzu kosho aioli ($47); and a variety of sushi rolls and sashimi, including ultrafresh spicy tuna ($25) and individual pieces of sweet crab ($8).
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ERIC ROSEN/THE POINTS GUY
Kinugawa is also where breakfast is served from 7-10:30 a.m. daily. It was included as part of my Hilton Diamond benefits and featured an extensive buffet of pastries, fruit, cold cuts, juices and even Taittinger Champagne, plus a selection of a la carte dishes like avocado toast, brioche French toast and eggs made to order.
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Guests looking for something more continental can sample the same menu whether dining in the lobby-adjacent all-day dining venue, Sax, or the tranquil courtyard restaurant, The Garden, which is also where you’ll find a small plunge pool, a Jacuzzi and a handful of loungers.
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Among the signatures on offer are lobster gyoza ($27), mini grilled cheese ($20), a jamon de bellota platter ($40), Caesar salad ($35) and a club sandwich ($38), plus specialty cocktails like the heady Mr. Burns with Glasgow Blend whisky, Planteray O.F.T.D. rum, buckwheat tincture and Martini Rubino vermouth ($22).
With trellises, trees, tiled floors and umbrella-shaded tables, as well as a dramatic mirrored sculpture titled Rockstone, by artist Arik Levy, The Garden feels like a St. Tropez beach club transported to the city, while Sax is more luxe, with velvet chairs, crystal chandeliers and a black-and-white reproduction of Delacroix’s “Liberty Leading the People” on the ceiling.
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Though not completely open while we were there, The Galerie is a sultry space opposite Sax with red velvet banquettes and slipper chairs, mirrored walls and ceilings, and fanciful Baccarat crystal chandeliers, all tinted red by the street-facing windows.
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Amenities and service
- Two floors underground, the small fitness center has the latest Technogym fitness and cardio equipment and men’s and women’s locker rooms with steam rooms and saunas.
- The spa offers various massages and facials ranging from 45-90 minutes, and advance reservations are suggested.
- There is a small pool and Jacuzzi in The Garden, but lounge chairs are in limited supply.
- Staff members throughout the hotel could not have been friendlier, transitioning between French and English depending on what guests preferred, and ready to lend a hand with everything from luggage to directions.
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Location and logistics
The Sax Paris, LXR Hotels & Resorts is on Avenue de Saxe in the 7th arrondissement of Paris. The surrounding area is a relatively quiet, upscale, residential area of the city, though the hotel is only a short walk to tourist-thronged spots like the Eiffel Tower and Les Invalides. There are plenty of Metro and bus stops nearby, so getting around the city via public transport is a breeze.
It’s relatively quick and inexpensive to get to the hotel from Paris-Charles de Gaulle Airport (CDG) via the RER B and Metro 10 line ($15) or a $50-$80 ride using Uber or Bolt, depending on the time of day and the type of car you prefer.
What it costs
Nightly rates at the Sax Paris, LXR Hotels & Resorts start at around $780 or 110,000 Hilton Honors points per night, with plenty of award availability, for rooms in the starting Queen Sax and King Sax categories.
That equates to a value of around 0.71 cents per point, which is slightly above TPG’s August 2025 valuation. Also consider that, during one of Hilton’s frequent sales of points with a 100% bonus, you could purchase points at a rate of 0.5 cents apiece, so 110,000 of them would cost you $550, which could end up saving you money on a stay.
The room to which I was upgraded, a King Deluxe, starts at around $840 per night.
When booking the Sax Paris, LXR Hotels & Resorts, try to use one of the credit cards that earn the most points for Hilton stays, or one that offers automatic Hilton Honors elite status for value-added benefits. These include:
- Hilton Honors American Express Surpass® Card: Earn 12 points per dollar spent on eligible purchases at Hilton hotels, automatic Gold elite status and the ability to upgrade to Diamond status through the end of the next calendar year by spending $40,000 on eligible purchases in a calendar year.
- The Hilton Honors American Express Business Card: Earn 12 points per dollar spent on eligible purchases at Hilton hotels, automatic Gold elite status and the ability to upgrade to Diamond status through the end of the next calendar year by spending $40,000 on eligible purchases in a calendar year.
- Hilton Honors American Express Card: Earn 7 points per dollar spent on eligible purchases at Hilton hotels and automatic Silver elite status (with an upgrade to Gold through the end of the next calendar year when you spend $20,000 on eligible purchases in a calendar year).
- Hilton Honors American Express Aspire Card: Earn 14 points per dollar spent on eligible purchases at Hilton hotels and automatic Diamond elite status.
The information for the Hilton Aspire Card has been collected independently by The Points Guy. The card details on this page have not been reviewed or provided by the card issuer.
Accessibility
The hotel’s public areas, including the lobby and restaurants, are accessible with wheelchairs, though the use of elevators is required in some cases, and these are on the small side.
The hotel has wheelchair-accessible rooms in the King Sax and King Prestige categories that have features such as more floorspace for easier wheelchair navigation, roll-in showers and toilet grab bars. As always, call the hotel directly to ensure you can book an accommodation that meets your specific needs.
Bottom line
Removed — but not far — from the Left Bank’s busiest tourist attractions in the sophisticated 7th arrondissement, Sax Paris, LXR Hotels & Resorts provides the refined backdrop for a relaxed stay in the French capital. It’s a welcome alternative to the city’s sometimes over-the-top luxury hotels. What’s more, it is readily bookable using Hilton Honors points, albeit at sky-high rates. Still, if you have the points to spare, they can save you quite a bundle on a Parisian getaway and open up a sometimes overlooked corner of the city for your exploration.
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