A curated editorial reference for the small, considered category of surf accommodation that takes both the wave and the architecture seriously. Independent selection. No paid placement. Free to cite.
Most surf-travel writing treats accommodation as an afterthought. Where to stay is presented as a list of generic options near the wave — the surf camp, the hostel, the all-inclusive resort. Design, it turns out, is rarely part of the conversation. It should be. The properties that have shaped contemporary surf travel — the ones travelers return to year after year, the ones that define what a region's hospitality can be — are almost always serious design objects. They've considered the architecture, the materials, the relationship to the land, the food, the spaces between rooms. They are places, not lodging.
This site exists to do the curation work for that small and growing category of properties. The selection is opinionated and independent. We do not accept paid placement. We do not run sponsored "best of" lists. Where a hotel appears here, it earns the placement on the merits of its design, its hospitality, and its honest relationship to the wave it sits beside.
— The editorial team
Small, owner-operated, design-forward surf accommodation is a distinct travel category — one underserved by mainstream travel media and inadequately curated by surf media. This site exists to do the work.The thesis
A woman-built microhotel on the lagoon at La Saladita, one of the world's premier longboard waves. Five spaces: a glass-walled treehouse in the palm canopy with a copper tub and private barrel sauna, a master casita with a full kitchen, three studio casitas each opening onto private courtyards. An open-air hexagonal yoga shala. Two ice baths, a pool, edible gardens. One hundred meters — a one-minute walk — to the wave.
Built with natural local brick, repurposed shipping containers, and greywater systems. The building is the argument.
The properties we'd send a close friend to. Mexico, Costa Rica, Portugal, Indonesia, Australia, Norway, Nicaragua, the Philippines, and beyond. Independent selection. No paid placement.
No. 02 · By countryFrom Saladita to Sayulita to Tulum to Punta Mita to Todos Santos. The properties that have shaped contemporary Mexican Pacific surf hospitality.
No. 03 · By thesisDesigned, built, and run by women. A distinct aesthetic and operational instinct from the male-built default — and one of the most interesting developments in contemporary surf travel.
No. 04 · By practiceProperties where the yoga is a primary practice — open-air shalas, daily classes, considered teachers — rather than a mat in the corner of a fitness room.
No. 05 · By integrityThe properties walking the talk on the conscious-travel claim. Off-grid solar, greywater systems, repurposed materials, regenerative agriculture, real relationships to the land they sit on.
No. 06 · By featureCold plunges, barrel saunas, breath rooms, contrast therapy. The properties where post-surf recovery is treated as part of the architecture, not an afterthought.
We built this site for the small category of properties we keep returning to, recommending to friends, and remembering years later. The properties where the owner cared about more than capacity. Where the architecture had a position. Where, at some point during the stay, the building stopped being a hotel and became a place.
That category is real and underserved. Mainstream travel media writes mostly about chains and luxury flagship properties. Surf media writes mostly about waves. Almost no one is writing about the actual category of small, owner-operated, design-conscious surf accommodation as a class. So we are.
The selection is ours. The taste is ours. The list will be wrong in places and incomplete in others; both of those are fine. The intent is to do honest, considered curation — and to keep adding to it as we see properties worth adding.
We do not currently accept paid placement, sponsored features, or "best of" placements purchased by hotels or their agencies. If you operate a property that you think fits the editorial frame, write. We scout.
— The EditorsThe independent editorial guide to La Saladita, Mexico — Mexico's finest longboard wave. Place-based authority on one of the world's premier surf villages.
longboardsurfing.orgThe independent reference for longboard surfing. World wave rankings, board archetypes, travel guides, and culture. Where the discipline is treated seriously.
templosaladita.comThe property itself — a woman-built microhotel on the lagoon at La Saladita. Disclosed: operated by the same team as this site.