If you’re mapping out this year’s journeys, consider this a short list of hotels worth building a trip around.
Each year brings a wave of new hotel openings, but not all of them shift the conversation. The most compelling new hotels of 2026 are less about spectacle and more about genuine sense of place. From a fjord-side retreat in Norway to a rewilding estate in the Scottish Highlands, these addresses are already shaping where discerning travellers will want to stay in 2026.
Ytri — Årdal, Norway
Opening Date: April 2026
On a quiet stretch of shoreline in western Norway, Ytri feels almost elemental. The small retreat in Årdal occupies a former farmstead overlooking the Sognefjord, where mountains drop straight into steel-blue water. The architecture is restrained — timber, glass and dark metal — designed not to compete with the landscape but to frame it.
What makes Ytri particularly compelling is its devotion to seasonality. In colder months, when daylight is fleeting and snow softens the hills, the experience turns inward: wood-fired saunas beside the fjord, bracing cold plunges, and long dinners shaped by what the region yields — lamb, preserved root vegetables, cured fish, wild herbs. The kitchen works closely with nearby producers, leaning into fermentation and preservation traditions that make sense in this climate. It feels less like a hotel imposed on nature and more like a considered extension of it.
Conrad Corfu — Corfu, Greece
Opening Date: June 2026
Corfu’s history is layered — Venetian fortresses, French arcades, British cricket pitches — and its food reflects that mix. The newly built Conrad Corfu, set along the Ionian coast, taps into that complexity rather than flattening it into generic Mediterranean gloss. Terraced toward the sea and framed by olive groves, the property feels contemporary but grounded in place.
Dining anchors the experience. Expect Corfiot staples such as slow-braised sofrito, citrus-forward seafood and island olive oils, alongside broader Mediterranean influences. Local wines, fresh catch and wild greens feature prominently. The design — pale stone, linen textures, wide-open terraces — keeps the focus on the light and the water. Visiting outside peak summer reveals a more contemplative island, and the hotel seems designed for that gentler rhythm.
OKU Bodrum — Bodrum Peninsula, Turkey
Opening Date: May 2026
The Bodrum Peninsula has matured into one of the Aegean’s most polished enclaves, and OKU Bodrum arrives with quiet confidence. Adults-only and carved into a hillside facing the sea, the hotel is all low lines, textured stone and open-air spaces that blur the boundary between indoors and out.
Food plays a central role. OKU’s signature approach — Aegean ingredients meeting Japanese technique — shows up in grilled seafood with bright herbs, sashimi alongside mezze, seasonal produce handled with restraint. It’s less about fusion than conversation between cuisines shaped by coastal living. Days unfold unhurriedly here: mornings in the water, afternoons shaded from the sun, evenings that stretch well past sunset. For travellers emerging from winter, Bodrum in late spring offers warmth without the height-of-summer frenzy.
NIHI Rote — Rote Island, Indonesia
Opening Date: May 2026
Rote Island lies at Indonesia’s southern edge, closer to Australia than Bali, and NIHI Rote builds on the philosophy established by its sister property in Sumba: low-impact design, strong ties to local communities and a deep respect for land and sea.
Villas open toward empty beaches and consistent surf breaks, with architecture that favours natural materials and cross-breezes over excess. The culinary programme centres on Indonesian flavours — grilled fish with sambal, fragrant rice dishes, tropical fruit — alongside produce grown on-site or sourced from nearby villages. The remoteness is deliberate. Getting to Rote requires effort, but the payoff is a coastline that still feels largely unclaimed and a pace that encourages genuine disconnection.
Hope WildLand Lodge — Scottish Highlands
Opening Date: May 2026
In the far north of Scotland, Hope WildLand sits within a large-scale rewilding initiative aimed at restoring native woodland and biodiversity across a sweeping Highland estate. Accommodation is deliberately minimal — a lodge and cottages positioned to immerse guests in the surrounding terrain rather than distract from it.
The kitchen reflects that same ethos. Menus draw on Scottish seafood, venison, hardy vegetables suited to the climate and herbs gathered from the estate. Meals feel rooted rather than performative. Days might include guided walks through recovering forest, discussions about habitat restoration or simply watching weather roll across open moorland. The hotel’s ambition extends beyond comfort; it’s part of a longer environmental story unfolding across the Highlands.


