Park Hyatt Cabo del Sol opens in Mexico, features hydrothermal cold plunge
Park Hyatt Cabo del Sol debuts in Mexico with a nearly 60,000 sq ft spa and a hydrothermal circuit that includes a cold plunge overlooking the Sea of Cortez.

Perched on a beachfront stretch inside the private Cabo del Sol community, Park Hyatt Cabo del Sol has opened as Park Hyatt’s debut in Mexico, anchoring 163 guestrooms, 88 suites and three private ocean-view villas along the Sea of Cortez. The resort also offers for-sale turnkey residences, 11 villas and eight apartments, and 34,500 square feet of indoor-outdoor meeting and events space for weddings and conferences.
Wellness is front and center. One set of materials describes a 59,000-square-foot fitness and wellness center, which Hyatt positions as one of the largest in the region and says includes a yoga studio, a beachside lap pool and a 24-hour gym. A travel preview calls the property’s spa a showpiece at nearly 60,000 square feet and highlights a hydrothermal therapy circuit that explicitly lists a cold plunge, a sensory shower with changing temperatures, light and scent, and a Jacuzzi. That preview also notes ten treatment cabins, including five double cabins, framed around a courtyard clad in white stone.
There is a naming and measurement discrepancy across sources. The hotel’s own materials refer to the property spa as Araya Spa, with an attached Araya Salon and treatment menu organized around intention-based names such as Inner Calm, Release and Soothe; Hyatt’s copy describes Inner Calm as “a gentle invitation to pause and breathe,” Release as “a therapeutic journey that eases deep tension,” and Soothe as “a hot-stone massage that improves circulation and quiets the mind.” By contrast, the travel preview refers to the facility as Park Hyatt Saria Spa and calls it “set around a sprawling courtyard of white stone and water features that looks like the kind of place a Roman emperor would be fed grapes.” The resort’s opening materials and outside coverage use both the 59,000 and nearly 60,000 square-foot figures; the two labels and numbers have not been reconciled in the published materials.
Design credits for the project list Sordo Madaleno as lead architect, with Paulina Morán and George Wong Design contributing interiors; Madaleno said the resort is “inspired by the natural duality that defines Los Cabos: land and sea, openness and refuge, light and shadow - a sanctuary that offers a home away from home, where warmth, serenity, and the spirit of Baja come together in perfect harmony.”
Dining and recreation rolled out alongside wellness. Executive Chef Miguel Gomez leads a food-and-beverage program that includes Dátil, a lobby café noted for strong Mexican coffee and grab-and-go options; Mesa Madre, which foregrounds Mexican egg and masa dishes and oversized smoothies; and Costamar, a beach club overlooking the Sea of Cortez serving snacks and crudos. The signature restaurant Silán, with Levantine and southern Mediterranean influences, was planned to open in spring 2026; while it remained closed during the preview, a Levantine menu item, turbot with herbs and saffron rice, was served at the beach club.
Fitness features include an outdoor training patio with a hulking Outrace Tower device referenced for strength and functional training. With meeting space, family-oriented private villas and the sizable spa and fitness footprint, Park Hyatt Cabo del Sol positions itself as a wellness-driven destination on the Sea of Cortez as the Park Hyatt brand expands in Mexico, with Park Hyatt Mexico City and Park Hyatt Cancun expected to open in 2026.
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