4 Best Hotels in Kenya

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We've compiled the best of the best in Kenya - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Fatuma's Tower

$ | Lamu, 80500, Kenya

Set against the dunes in Shela village, Fatuma's Tower is a beautiful, cool, calm escape. The magical homestead was built in the late 1990s on crumbling ruins, and looks like it's been there for centuries. Bougainvillea clamber up the concrete walls, and a giant tortilis acacia watches over the back garden, where healthy, fresh-cooked meals are served in its shade. The rooms are large and airy and furnished with Swahili antiques and local textiles and have solar-powered hot water. A big draw for staying at Fatuma's Tower is its yoga space where very accessible classes are available every afternoon.

Pros

  • There's a cook who can do your food shopping and preparation of all meals
  • It's extremely peaceful and there's total serenity beyond the sound of motorboat engines
  • Refreshing plunge pool in the garden

Cons

  • Mosquitoes can occasionally be a nuisance
  • It's about a 10-minute walk through Shela to the beach
  • No air-conditioning but there are fans
Lamu, 80500, Kenya
0716-572--370
Hotel Details
10 rooms
Free Breakfast

Quick Facts

  • $

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Lake Naivasha Country Club

$ | Moi South Lake Rd., Naivasha, Kenya

This resort sits on a large lakeside property and oozes historical character as it dates back to the 1930s when it served as a staging post for a flying boat service between Durban and Ireland; today's Country Club has received a massive overhaul and now features lavish public areas, although the original rooms themselves by modern standards are very small. There's a dining room, a choice of bars, a resident’s lounge with a cozy fireplace, a snooker room, and a gift shop. The highlight is to dine on the lawns in the shade of the beautiful giant fever trees and watch zebra, wildebeest, and various antelope wander by. Numerous activities include bird-watching walks, hippo and sunset cruises on the lake, and day trips to the local attractions.

Pros

  • Lovely lakeside setting
  • Property has been renovated
  • Bush dinner with a bonfire can be arranged

Cons

  • Very small bathrooms
  • Buffet needs more variety for longer-staying guests
  • Can be busy with conference groups
Moi South Lake Rd., Naivasha, Kenya
0730-818–040-reservations
Hotel Details
50 rooms
Free Breakfast

Quick Facts

  • $

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Lamu House

$ | Waterfront, Lamu, 80500, Kenya

The rooms in this boutique hotel, located next to the Donkey Sanctuary on Lamu's waterfront, are all different, but each one is superbly decorated in traditional Swahili style and has a separate dressing room and a terrace looking out either onto the water or the town. The communal areas in the inside courtyard of the hotel are comfortable and tranquil, and there is one large pool and a plunge pool for cooling off. Don't miss the gift shop attached to the hotel, which sells gorgeous soft kikois, sandals, bags, and kaftans. The hotel's restaurant, Moonrise, is open to nonguests and is one of the best in town. You can order fish of the day steamed in a banana leaf or pan-fried with a tamarind sauce, or lobster, tuna, sailfish, pasta, chicken curry, or a good vegetarian dal. The hotel offers mid- to long-term rentals on high-end apartments in Lamu.

Pros

  • Each room has a fridge
  • There are free boats to shuttle you to Shela Beach
  • Breakfast is available all day

Cons

  • It can be noisy as it's in the center of town
  • Some staircases are narrow and steep
  • Rooms downstairs are a little dark
Waterfront, Lamu, 80500, Kenya
0792-469–577
Hotel Details
10 rooms
Free Breakfast

Quick Facts

  • $

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Recommended Fodor's Video

Salt Lick Safari Lodge

$ | Taita Hills Wildlife Sanctuary, Kenya

This truly uniquely designed lodge is set in the Taita Hills Wildlife Sanctuary just outside Tsavo West and off the main Voi-Taveta road (A23). A clutch of giant honey-color rondavels with dark brown thatched roofs sit on stilts, linked by aerial bridges, and overlook a chain of small floodlit waterholes—it looks a bit like a fantasy settlement from The Lord of the Rings's Middle Earth. The entire lodge is so high off the ground that the animals, even elephants and buffaloes, simply walk underneath. The en suite, small, round rooms are comfortably if basically furnished, but it's the experience you're here for, not the room decor, although the public areas are sumptuously decorated with rugs, batiks, and a number of authentic African artifacts. Request a top room or one over a waterhole for close-up encounters with game. Be sure to visit the underground viewing room at night, too, and you might be lucky to spot nocturnal animals like civets, porcupines, and maybe even a leopard. The food is excellent with lots of fresh homegrown vegetables.

If you can't get a room here, stay at the renovated Taita Hills Safari Resort nearby, also in the Taita Hills Wildlife Sanctuary, and visit Salt Lick during the day.

Pros

  • The underground viewing room
  • Watching animals from your bed
  • Fantastic architecture

Cons

  • No pool
  • The half-moon shaped rooms are small
  • Stairs and bridges make it not suitable for small kids
Taita Hills Wildlife Sanctuary, Kenya
078-888--8221
Hotel Details
96 rooms
Free Breakfast

Quick Facts

  • $

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