Best hotels in Rhodes | A Curated Visual Guide to Top Stays
Welcome to PressBeyond, the ultimate curated visual guide for design-driven hotels! My name is Will Miller and this is my recommendation for the best boutique and luxury hotel in Rhodes.
I am the founder of PressBeyond and I am an ultra-meticulous hotel curator who loves clean visuals. I have individually analyzed and tiered the hotel included in this guide based on a variety of criteria (architecture & design, location, brand & brand affiliation, existing reviews, and my own personal experiences), and importantly, I have hand-selected the leading imagery for this hotel to provide you with easily-digestible, yet detailed and complete, like-for-like, high-level visual profiles. I felt this summarization step was a critical missing piece across existing guides, blogs, and booking platforms. My aim is to make it easier for people to identify hotel environments that resonate with them, along with enabling them to visualize the types of social experiences that those environments help foster. My brain doesn't work when exposed to cluttered content, so my goal was to create the opposite.
Underneath this, we are also a full booking engine offering 5% Venmo cash back along with other exclusive perks. For all of you design-obsessed hotel enthusiasts out there, I hope this guide helps get you to where you see yourself!
An Overview of the Boutique & Luxury Hotel Landscape in Rhodes
Rhodes carries its history in layers that are almost too compressed to believe. The medieval Old Town — a UNESCO World Heritage Site and one of the best-preserved fortified cities in Europe — was built largely under the Knights of St John between the 14th and 16th centuries, then absorbed Ottoman mosques, hammams, and minarets after 1522, then acquired a peculiar Italian rational-modernist overlay during the Mussolini-era occupation, when the Fascist administration built the Mandracchio harbor district with a civic ambition that still reads clearly today. To walk through Rhodes is to move between architectural grammars that shouldn't coexist but somehow do, limestone rubbing up against minaret against rationalist arcade, all of it sun-bleached to the same warm ochre. Lindos sits about fifty kilometers south of Rhodes Town along the island's eastern coast, and it operates as a world apart — a whitewashed hill village of Dodecanesian vernacular architecture that clings dramatically to the rock below an ancient acropolis. The geometry here is almost entirely horizontal: flat roofs, thick cubic walls, mosaic pebble courtyards known as hochlakia. It is the kind of place that resists visual noise, and most of the accommodation reflects that restraint, for better or worse. Lindos Blu Luxury Hotel and Suites sits above the village and the bay, and it earns its position in the landscape with considered restraint rather than architectural spectacle. The property works in white volumes and clean horizontal lines that read as contemporary without aggressively announcing themselves. Rooms are oriented to maximize the view across the bay toward the acropolis, and the palette — bleached stone, natural linen, muted terracotta — takes its cues from the village below rather than imposing a signature aesthetic from outside. For the design-conscious traveler, the case for Lindos Blu rests less on any single architectural gesture and more on its understanding of context. This corner of Rhodes rewards restraint. The acropolis above Lindos is one of the ancient Greek world's most spatially dramatic sites, and the village itself is a lesson in how much character can be achieved with almost no ornamentation. A hotel that knows when not to compete with that is doing something right. At around $489 a night, it positions itself as the considered choice for a place that is, genuinely, worth the effort of getting to.




