The Best New Hotels in Australia and Asia: 2024 Hot List

It’s inevitable: Every spring when we pull together the Hot List, our annual collection of the world’s best new hotels, restaurants, and cruise ships, a staffer remarks that this latest iteration has got to be the best one ever. After a year’s worth of traveling the globe—to stay the night at a converted farmhouse in the middle of an olive grove outside Marrakech, or sail aboard a beloved cruise line’s inaugural Antarctic voyage—it’s easy to see why we get attached. But this year’s Hot List, our 28th edition, might really be the best one ever. It’s certainly our most diverse, featuring not only a hotel suite that was once Winston Churchill’s office, but also the world’s largest cruise ship and restaurants from Cape Town to Bali. We were surprised and inspired by this year’s honorees, and we know you will be too. These are the Hot List's Asia and Australia winners for 2024.
Click here to see the entire Hot List for 2024.
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- ALEX GRABCHILEVhotel
Cap Karoso
$$$ |Hot List 2024
For years after the millennium, Nihi Sumba was the only top-end stay on Sumba, an island of raw beauty, epic surf, wild horses, and ancient animist culture. More competition has edged in over recent years, but none quite like Cap Karoso. Opened by French couple Fabrice and Evguenia Ivara on the island’s untouched western perimeter, it is surrounded by pointy thatch-roofed uma mbatangu homes, their design unchanged for centuries. Unlike many Sumbanese resorts, Cap Karoso doesn’t ape the local style. Its sprawling 47 rooms and 20 villas are straight-lined and concrete-clad, with a crisp tropical-modern feel. With slatted roofs casting perfect lines of shade and daybeds sprinkled throughout, barefoot guests—the sort that flit between Tulum and Santa Teresa—waft around the pools, restaurant, and surf-caressed beach. But Cap Karoso is still imbued with some of the magical old soul of the island. A striking artwork of colored threads is draped on the back wall of the lobby, woven by Kornelis Ndapakamang, one of the best-known ikat makers on Sumba. Scattered everywhere are Indigenous symbols, sculptures, and paintings. Fishermen populate the landscape, and nut-brown wild horses gallop past. As the sun sets, everyone gathers for papaya spritzers and jackfruit piña coladas before dinner at the long communal table for just-caught-and-plucked feasts by the latest visiting chef: Oliver McGeorge from Paris’s Michelin-starred, sustainable Frenchie is lined up for summer. From $310. —Chloe Sachdev
- Rahul Kizhakke Veettilhotel
Mementos by ITC Hotels, Ekaaya Udaipur
$$ |Hot List 2024
Breakfast by the lake, yoga under the stars, bird watching, nature hikes, outdoor movie screenings—no demand is too high at Mementos by ITC Hotels. The hotel, which is the first under ITC’s Mementos brand, promises mental souvenirs you’ll be tapping into days after your vacation. The hotel is situated 50 minutes from central Udaipur, but therein lies its charm. It’s a perfect alternative for travelers looking to spend time in the countryside, away from the thick of the throng yet within easy access of the historic center. The 117 villas and suites start from 500 square feet and, depending on the category, come with either terraces, gardens, private plunge pools, or all of the above. All rooms offer a view—some overlook the valley, while others the lake. They are sumptuously decorated with golden accents simmered by a muted color palette. Some bathrooms come with Victorian-style bathtubs that sit under sunroofs or the warm glow of a chandelier. For meals, there’s the ITC signature Royal Vega, where your silver thali gleams with recipes from the kitchens of maharajas of the past. At Kebabs & Kurries, feast on perennial favorites such as galouti kebabs, dal Bukhara, and nihari. But before you settle down in one of these restaurants, note that sunset drinks are de rigueur by the infinity pool at the Rock Bar. From $375. —Shradha Shahani
- Pemako Punakhahotel
Pemako Punakha
$$$ |Hot List 2024
This is the first top-end Bhutanese-owned hotel in the scene-stealing Punakha Valley east of Thimphu—home to the magnificent Punakha Dzong, the region’s iconic 17th-century fortress. And this is no small thing in a kingdom that has drawn big hitters such as Aman, andBeyond, and Six Senses. A series of buildings in the wooden, sloping-roofed Bhutanese vernacular style—including 21 tented villas—is slung across 70 lush acres of a river valley. The design was dreamt up by hotel designer Bill Bensley to unfold in layers, like the whorls of a lotus. Everything was plotted with the natural landscape in mind, and there was minimal felling of trees to create the one- to three-bedroom villas, each with a private heated pool and a spacious deck. Inside, Serge Ferrari fabrics and copper fixtures—including the bathroom tubs—meet an aesthetic rooted in Bhutanese culture, colors, and works of art. Druk beer is stocked in the minibar, there’s a traditional hot-stone bath in the spa, and prayer flags flutter on the lawns. From the welcome ritual by the resident lama and the warming butter tea to the guided excursions to temples and viewpoints, everything pays homage to the country, its people, and their spiritual beliefs. This is a place that invites you to slow down and be immersed in the quietude and beauty of the forest, the hills, and the river. From $1,770. —Diya Kohli
- Elise Hassey/Shinta Mani Mustanghotel
Shinta Mani Mustang - A Bensley Collection
$$$ |Hot List 2024
Even by the standards of cult hotel designer Bill Bensley, this is a breakthrough project: for its location in this vast and mysterious landscape, but also for its embrace of Himalayan culture and spiritual traditions. Inside, Bensley’s quirky interiors showcase cashmere-felt runners and tiger rugs; banners referencing the prayer flags of the region; and lovely studies of the terrain by the Australian painter Robert Powell. There’s a large repertoire of excursions with knowledgeable guides to ethereal mountain lakes, centuries-old villages, and Tibetan Buddhist monasteries fragrant with juniper smoke. There are archery lessons, cooking classes, cocktails under yak-hair lampshades in the hotel’s bar, and consultations with a local amchi, a practitioner of Tibetan medicine. Each of the 29 suites has floor-to-ceiling views of the 23,000-foot-tall Nilgiri North mountain, endlessly majestic and reverie-inducing as it absorbs the changing light and froths the wind around its triple peaks into tempests of clouds. From $9,000 for five nights, meals included. —Chandrahas Choudhury
- Nikolas Koenig/ Courtesy The Tokyo EDITION, Ginzahotel
The Tokyo EDITION, Ginza
$$$ |Hot List 2024
Three years after the opening of the Tokyo Edition, Toranomon, the brand’s second address in Japan is a delicate, intimate addition to the city’s luxury hotel scene. Both hotels share the same DNA, courtesy of the crafted minimalism of Japanese architect Kengo Kuma coupled with the edgy New York vision of Edition founder Ian Schrager. But there is added depth and warmth to the new hotel, reflected in its scale (just 86 rooms and suites spanning a new 14-story structure, resolutely low-rise by Tokyo standards); a quiet back-street location in buzzy, upscale Ginza; and an aesthetic that goes heavy on a dark walnut palette in contrast to the lighter oak of its sister hotel. Hedonism is a must at any Edition: At Ginza, guests indulge at Japan’s first Punch Room, with silver bowls of cocktails served in an intimate space (don’t skip the yuzu and brown rice tea), or at a plant-packed rooftop terrace serving natural wines—a unique experience for the city. From $792. —Danielle Demetriou
- Andrew J LOITERTON/Regent Hong Konghotel
Regent Hong Kong
$$ |Hot List 2024
Many new hotels are dubbed an instant classic, but few earn that praise quite so literally as Regent’s latest Hong Kong outpost. This Kowloon landmark has been around since the 1980s, but for the past two decades flew the InterContinental flag above its lobby. Since last November, after a top-to-bottom revamp spearheaded by Hong Kong-born designer Chi Wing Lo, the all-caps Regent emblem once again gleams golden over Victoria Harbour. Lo replaced the hotel’s Dynasty-era dazzle with a high-glam but timeless new look: Rooms come bedecked in blond oak and granite, with curvy furniture and brushes of onyx, brass, and caramel-colored leather. The restaurants, some of which have been around since the hotel’s early days, have been spruced up and deliver a cross-cultural pick-and-mix of chichi Cantonese, fine Japanese, and steakhouse classics. At the new Qura Bar, sharp-suited bartenders mix Negronis and Sazeracs from vintage spirits that predate the hotel’s first iteration. Regent’s facelift has rung in a new era for this beloved property, but its trump card, luckily, remained unchanged: Few hotels offer a better vantage point over Victoria Harbour and Hong Kong’s neon-lit skyscraper jumble. From $765. —Chris Schalkx
- Courtesy of TRUNK / Photo by Tomooki Kengakuhotel
Trunk(Hotel) Yoyogi Park, Tokyo
$$ |Hot List 2024
It’s a surreal Tokyo anomaly to find an infinity pool with lush treetop views floating serenely six levels above the ground—especially one in ultra-urban Tomigaya, somewhere between the fashion-forward crowds of Harajuku and the nocturnal neon of Shibuya. Yet this pool—with its taupe sun loungers and curated clientele—is the heartbeat of Trunk Hotel Yoyogi Park, a refreshing 25-room escapist haven. This is the third in a hat-trick of Tokyo spaces by Trunk, pioneers of so-called “punk omotenashi” (the latter translates as mindful Japanese hospitality). Alongside Tokyo’s Keiji Ashizawa Design, Copenhagen’s Norm Architects brought the interior elements to life. The softly minimalist pale decor, smooth curves, natural textures, bespoke furniture, and splashes of foliage are testimony to this Japandi DNA. The Trunk philosophy of community can be found in the buzzy ground-floor Pizzeria e Trattoria L’Ombelico, with its wood-fired Neapolitan pizzas (the garlicky, clam-packed Nojiri is named after Trunk’s charismatic owner, Yoshitaka Nojiri) and pet menu. But the signature space is the sixth-floor guests-only Trunk Pool Club, with its sea-toned tiles, sandblasted concrete walls, crafted cocktails, and oysters on ice. These are best enjoyed poolside or in the sunken fire pit beneath Tokyo’s electric skies. From $440. —Danielle Demetriou
- Further Hotelhotel
Further
$ |Hot List 2024
With Bali’s traffic-choked Canggu district bursting at the seams, the smart crowd have set their sights on Pererenan, a sleepy village one beach to the west. Even though new villas have pitched up over recent years, they abut rice paddies and turmeric-hued temples—a flashback to the Canggu of three decades ago. At Pererenan’s heart sits the new Further, a “diffused hotel” spread out over two terra-cotta-toned buildings (with more on the way) along the village’s palm-hemmed main drag. Each is home to parts of Further’s ambitious collective of creative spaces. There’s a board shop and concept store by Australian label Thomas Surfboards; a boutique by Jakarta-based natural skin care brand Oaken Lab; and a breezy, tropical-Parisian bistro for classic apéro sundowners and dinners of pumpkin Pithiviers and steak tartare smothered in sambal. Upstairs, almost a dozen suites by architecture studio MORQ and Aussie design outfit Studio Wenden riff on traditional Balinese shapes and textures, with walls bedecked in burnt sienna plaster and breezy brickwork that filters the morning sun. Robust furnishings made from cast iron, earthy travertine, and timber balance out the sultry black-and-white photography, and a wraparound balcony doubles as an alfresco bathroom. This is go-slow territory, with palo-santo-scented mornings filled with leisurely lie-ins and picnic-basket breakfasts delivered to your door (an in-house restaurant will follow at a later stage), while jazzy tunes seep from the record players in every room. On an island riddled with copy-and-paste hotels, Further brings a fresh perspective. From $230. —Chris Schalkx
- Chris Schalkxhotel
JW Marriott Jeju Resort & Spa
$$$ |Hot List 2024
South Korea’s Jeju Island has long been a beloved weekend getaway for local city slickers. They fly in for the miles of hiking trails that weave past soaring volcanoes and craggy coastlines, then flock to the island’s restaurants for their famed hay-smoked Jeju black pig, juicy mandarins, and shellfish caught by the illustrious Haenyeo divers. It wasn’t until recently, though, that Jeju finally had a resort worth traveling out of the way for. Pitched up on a cliff on the island’s southern tip, the JW Marriott Jeju Resort & Spa is a sprawling, straight-lined complex of basalt rock. For the interiors, hotel guru Bill Bensley drew inspiration from Jeju’s natural and cultural landscape: Jolts of yellow marble in the rooms nod to the canola fields that bloom every spring; the frames of timber hanok (traditional Korean buildings) in the lobby mimic the island’s oldest settlements. A spacious hot spring complex with indoor and outdoor pools, three local-minded restaurants, a tea lounge, and a jimjilbang (Korean-style sauna) with various themed rooms make it tempting to stay in—but the spectacular walking routes unfurling from the hotel’s art-studded backyard will convince even the staunchest couch potato to strap on their hiking boots. From $780. —Chris Schalkx
- Southern Ocean Lodgehotel
Southern Ocean Lodge: First In
$$$ |Hot List 2024
Readers' Choice Awards 2017, 2018, 2019
When the catastrophic “black summer” bushfires of 2020 burnt down Southern Ocean Lodge, many thought it was the end of the story for one of Australia’s greatest luxury lodges. A fixture on Kangaroo Island’s sensational stretch of wild southwest coast, the resort was originally opened in 2008 by husband-and-wife duo James and Hayley Baillie, and it quickly became the soft-landing of choice to explore the “Australian Galápagos.” This story received a much-welcomed plot twist in December 2023, when the resort reopened as a near replica of its former sci-fi self, shaped like a low-flying saucer hovering above the Southern Ocean, with uninterrupted last-stop-before-Antarctica views across the sea. The resort now comprises 25 glass-fronted suites that extend across the limestone cliffs, each with midcentury-modern curves, sunken living rooms, fireplaces, and sliding doors that open to private patios and the fresh Antarctic breeze. On the western edge of the lodge, the four-bedroom Baillie Pavilion suite is a new addition—it sits like an amphitheater with an infinity pool, a plunge pool/spa, and views across the coastal cliffs. Another tweak is the now north-facing spa, complete with a chill-out lounge, small gym, sauna, three treatment rooms, and hot and cold plunge pools. The reoriented spa turns its back to the sea to give guests a glimpse of the 250 acres of nature reserve surrounding the resort, all while they’re being massaged and scrubbed with the island’s bounty of lavender, eucalyptus, and pure Ligurian honey.
- Anson Smart/Sun Ranchhotel
Sun Ranch
Hot List 2024
Byron’s center of gravity has long been swinging inwards from its shorelines to its greener pastures and charming weatherboard villages. Already the not-so-secret postcode for eco-entrepreneurs and Hollywood hideouts, the Byron Hinterland has increasingly felt out of bounds to anyone without an invitation to one of its hillside homes, which has made the opening of Sun Ranch inevitable. The hotel is the vision of Jamie Blakey, who launched rock ’n’ roll denim brand One Teaspoon, and her best friend, Julia Ashwood, who grew up in the area and has cofounded some of the buzziest restaurants in this go-slow region. Spread across more than 55 acres of undulating green hills, this groovy ranch is a loud maximalist hee-haw of color, textile, and pattern. There are bright walls in shades from azure to flamingo, swirling terra-cotta flooring, opulent velvet lounges, and sculptural beaded chandeliers. In the coral Cowboy Bar, bottles of tequila and mezcal are infused with chillies for varying levels of spicy kick. In the main “rambler” house, the four bedrooms offer access to a private pool. Outside, where horses roam, families staying in the colorful two-bedroom timber barns have a hoot on electric bicycles, while young couples and mates down by the dam time each other in the wood-fired sauna and ice bath. Up in the distance, overlooking the property, a monolithic slab of concrete has been chiseled into the Pool Club, where sunbaking and lazy laps to a background of funky jazz and tequila are the order of the day.