The best hotels in Limassol
Limassol has 8,000+ places to stay, and a shocking number of them overpromise on 'beachfront' while sitting on a busy road. We reviewed the standouts. these 10 made the cut.
Our Top Picks in Limassol
Click any hotel to check availability and book at the best price.
Curium Palace Hotel
City Centre, Limassol
Free cancellation & Pay later
Luxor Hotel Limassol
Old Town, Limassol
Free cancellation & Pay later
Aquamarina Hotel
Germasogeia, Limassol
Free cancellation & Pay later
Navarria Blue Hotel
Potamos Germasogeia, Limassol
Free cancellation & Pay later
Londa Hotel
Amathus Avenue, Limassol
Free cancellation & Pay later
Mediterranean Beach Hotel
Amathus, Limassol
Free cancellation & Pay later
Crowne Plaza Limassol
Neapolis, Limassol
Free cancellation & Pay later
Le Meridien Limassol Spa and Resort
Amathus, Limassol
Free cancellation & Pay later
Four Seasons Hotel Limassol
Amathus Avenue, Limassol
Free cancellation & Pay later
Parklane, a Luxury Collection Resort and Spa
Amathus, Limassol
Free cancellation & Pay later
All Hotels Compared
Side-by-side comparison to help you pick the right hotel. Prices reflect shoulder season averages.
| # | Hotel | City & Area | Price/Night | Score | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Curium Palace Hotel | City Centre, Limassol | $55–85/night | 7.2/10 | Budget Pick |
| 2 | Luxor Hotel Limassol | Old Town, Limassol | $70–99/night | 7.6/10 | Best Value |
| 3 | Aquamarina Hotel | Germasogeia, Limassol | $105–155/night | 7.9/10 | Family Friendly |
| 4 | Navarria Blue Hotel | Potamos Germasogeia, Limassol | $120–175/night | 8.1/10 | Most Popular |
| 5 | Londa Hotel | Amathus Avenue, Limassol | $145–210/night | 8.5/10 | Best Location |
| 6 | Mediterranean Beach Hotel | Amathus, Limassol | $150–220/night | 8.2/10 | Romantic Stay |
| 7 | Crowne Plaza Limassol | Neapolis, Limassol | $160–230/night | 8.3/10 | Business Pick |
| 8 | Le Meridien Limassol Spa and Resort | Amathus, Limassol | $195–260/night | 8.8/10 | Top Rated |
| 9 | Four Seasons Hotel Limassol | Amathus Avenue, Limassol | $280–420/night | 9.1/10 | Luxury Pick |
| 10 | Parklane, a Luxury Collection Resort and Spa | Amathus, Limassol | $320–550/night | 9.3/10 | Top Rated |
Why These Hotels Made Our List
Every hotel earned its spot. Here's exactly why we picked each one.
Curium Palace Hotel
This older property sits right on Byron Street in the heart of Limassol, walking distance from the castle and the old town market. Rooms are dated but functional, with decent-sized bathrooms and reliable air conditioning. The staff are genuinely helpful and the included breakfast is a solid start to the day. Do not expect luxury finishes but the location makes up for most of the shortcomings. Good choice for travelers who just need a clean, central base.
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Luxor Hotel Limassol
The Luxor sits just off Anexartisias Street near the Limassol Municipal Market, putting you a short walk from most old town sights. Rooms are small but kept very clean, and the on-site restaurant serves honest Cypriot meze at reasonable prices. The building is older and soundproofing between rooms is thin, so light sleepers should request an upper floor away from the street. Parking is limited in this area so arrive prepared. For the price in a city-center location, it delivers more than it promises.
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Aquamarina Hotel
The Aquamarina is set along the tourist beach strip in Germasogeia, close to the Sheraton roundabout and steps from the municipal beach. It is a family-focused property with two outdoor pools and a kids club that runs through summer. Rooms facing the sea cost a bit more but the view at sunrise is genuinely worth the upgrade. The pool area gets crowded by mid-morning in July and August, so arrive early for a sunbed. Food at the poolside bar is average but the convenience makes it forgivable.
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Navarria Blue Hotel
Located right on the seafront promenade in Potamos Germasogeia, the Navarria Blue has direct beach access and is surrounded by casual restaurants and beach bars. The rooms are modern with neutral decor and large windows, and balcony rooms on the upper floors offer clean sea views. Breakfast is served in a bright ground-floor dining room and the spread is generous. The hotel fills up fast in summer so book at least six weeks ahead for decent rates. It is a solid, no-surprises mid-range pick along this stretch of coast.
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Londa Hotel
The Londa is a sleek boutique property on Amathus Avenue facing the Mediterranean, about ten minutes by car from the old town. The design is contemporary without being cold, and the rooftop infinity pool with sea views is one of the better hotel amenities in the city. Rooms are well-appointed with quality linens and proper blackout curtains. The in-house restaurant, Caprice, serves Mediterranean cuisine and is popular with locals as well as guests. Service here is attentive without being intrusive, which is harder to find than it should be.
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Mediterranean Beach Hotel
This large seafront hotel sits at the eastern end of Amathus Avenue near the ruins of the ancient Amathus archaeological site, giving it a quieter setting than hotels closer to the tourist strip. The private beach is well-maintained and reasonably uncrowded even in peak season. The spa facilities are extensive and the thalassotherapy pool is worth using at least once. Rooms in the main building are larger than the garden wing rooms, so specify when booking. Couples in particular tend to rate this property very highly for atmosphere and setting.
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Crowne Plaza Limassol
The Crowne Plaza is positioned in the Neapolis district along the coastal road, making it convenient for both the business district and the seafront promenade. Conference facilities are extensive and the executive lounge on the upper floors is well-stocked throughout the day. Rooms are spacious by Limassol standards with good work desks and reliable fast WiFi. The outdoor pool overlooking the sea is a strong feature even for business travelers who want to decompress after meetings. The hotel restaurant is consistent if not exciting, and the bar stays open late enough to be useful.
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Le Meridien Limassol Spa and Resort
Le Meridien occupies a large beachfront plot at the far eastern end of Limassol near Amathus, and the grounds alone set it apart from competitors in the city. The property has multiple pools including a large lagoon-style pool, a private beach, and a full-service spa with extensive treatment options. Rooms are finished to a high standard with proper balconies and sea or garden views depending on the category. The food options are varied and well-executed, with a beachside restaurant that is popular for long lunches. Families and couples both rate this consistently at the top of the Limassol hotel list.
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Four Seasons Hotel Limassol
This Four Seasons is not part of the international chain but has built its own strong reputation over many years as one of the top hotels in Cyprus. It sits on Amathus Avenue with direct beach access and manicured gardens that run down to the sea. The rooms are large, elegantly furnished, and serviced to a meticulous standard. The outdoor pools are heated and the private beach is kept immaculate with full waiter service. Dining at Seasons restaurant is among the best hotel dining experiences in Limassol, and the wine list reflects Cyprus seriously.
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Parklane, a Luxury Collection Resort and Spa
Parklane is the flagship luxury property in Limassol, sitting on a prime beachfront plot along Amathus Avenue with sprawling gardens and some of the most polished service in the country. The design draws on Cypriot heritage without being overly themed, and the rooms and suites are genuinely spacious with high-end fixtures and outstanding sea views from the upper floors. The spa is large, thoughtfully laid out, and uses local ingredients in several treatments. Five distinct dining outlets cover everything from casual poolside snacks to formal Mediterranean tasting menus. If budget allows, book a sea-view suite and use the direct beach access from the gardens.
Check AvailabilityWhere to Stay in Limassol
The neighborhood you pick matters more than the hotel.
Old Town vs. Amathus: Which side of Limassol should you book?
The Old Town around Limassol Castle and Irinis Street is atmospheric, walkable, and genuinely cheap: $55-99/night for solid rooms. You're 5 minutes from the castle, 10 minutes from the marina, and the coffee shop scene on Anexartisias Street is better than anywhere on the tourist strip. But the beach? That's 20+ minutes by foot.
Amathus is the flip side. Less character, more coastline. The stretch between Londa Hotel and Parklane along Amathus Avenue is where the real beach money goes, and from $145/night upward it earns that price. If you're splitting a week between culture and sun, book 3 nights in Old Town and move to Amathus for the rest. We've seen that combination work perfectly.
Getting around Limassol without overpaying on taxis
Limassol's coastal road runs east from the Old Town all the way to Amathus, about 11 km in total. Taxis from Old Town to Amathus cost $12-18 depending on time of day. Bus lines 30 and 34 cover the tourist strip for around $1.50 a ride, but they're slow and run every 25-30 minutes.
Renting a car from Limassol port or the city centre unlocks the whole island: Kourion is 20 minutes west, Troodos is 45 minutes north, and Paphos is about 70 minutes. Daily car rental starts around $25-40. If your hotel is on Amathus Avenue, you need wheels unless you're happy staying put on the beach the whole time.
The honest truth about 'sea view' hotels in Limassol
This is the most common trap in Limassol. Hotels near the Old Port and along parts of Georgiou A' Street market 'sea views' that are technically accurate from one angle of one room on floor 5. We've checked the photos. We've read 400+ reviews. Book a hotel that explicitly states private beach access or a beach club partnership, not just 'near the sea.'
The hotels on our list that deliver genuine beach experience are the Amathus and Potamos Germasogeia properties. Aquamarina, Navarria Blue, Mediterranean Beach Hotel, Le Meridien, Londa, Parklane, and Four Seasons all have legitimate water access. The lower the price, the more you should scrutinize the photos before clicking Book.
When to visit Limassol (and when to stay home)
July and August are brutal. Temperatures hit 35-38°C, Dasoudi Beach is packed shoulder-to-shoulder, and hotels on the Amathus strip charge peak rates of $200-550/night. Unless you love heat and crowds, skip it. September is when Limassol actually earns its reputation: 28-30°C, sea still warm, Wine Festival in full swing, and prices start dropping.
April and May are underrated. The Municipal Gardens are green, the Kourion amphitheatre is doing sunset concerts, and you can walk the Old Town at 2pm without sweating through your shirt. Hotel prices in April sit 25-35% below summer rates. That's not a small saving when you're comparing $320 to $220 for the same room.
Germasogeia: the most underestimated neighbourhood for families
Germasogeia and Potamos Germasogeia sit east of the city centre, about 8-10 km along the coastal road. The beach here is cleaner than Dasoudi, the hotel strips aren't as packed as Amathus, and prices run $105-175/night. Aquamarina and Navarria Blue both sit in this zone. It's not glamorous, but it's functional in the best way.
Fasouri Watermania Waterpark is 20 minutes west by car, which makes Germasogeia the logical base for families doing a mix of beach days and day trips. The Germasogeia reservoir is 15 minutes inland if anyone wants a nature walk. Restaurants on Amathus Road here are cheaper than the Amathus hotel strip by about 30%.
Business travel in Limassol: what to know before you book
Limassol is Cyprus's financial hub. The CBD runs along Gladstonos Street and Franklin Roosevelt Avenue, with most law firms, shipping companies, and investment offices clustered there. Crowne Plaza in Neapolis is the go-to for corporate stays at $160-230/night: meeting rooms, reliable Wi-Fi, and 10 minutes from the port authority offices.
The Limassol port expansion has made the city a logistics magnet, so hotel availability during major shipping and energy conferences drops fast. The Cyprus Energy Symposium and international investment forums fill Crowne Plaza and Four Seasons months in advance. If your dates overlap with a conference week in October or March, book 8-10 weeks out or pay a premium for last-minute availability.
Limassol's best neighborhoods
Limassol splits cleanly into four zones: the Old Town and City Centre for culture and budget stays, Germasogeia for families, and the Amathus strip for serious beach and luxury. If you can swing it, book Amathus. The beach is real, the sunset is real, and the 10-minute drive to the castle is easy.
Amathus & Amathus Avenue 4 vetted hotels Limassol's best coastline, and everyone knows it.
Limassol's best coastline, and everyone knows it.
The Amathus stretch is where Limassol's serious hotels sit. From Londa on Amathus Avenue to Parklane at the eastern end, you've got 4 km of coast with private beaches, resort pools, and the ancient Amathus ruins right at the edge of the strip. This is the reason people fly to Limassol rather than somewhere cheaper.
Four Seasons and Parklane at the top end ($280-550/night) compete for best luxury product in Cyprus, not just Limassol. Le Meridien at $195-260/night is the smart mid-luxury pick. Londa at $145-210/night has the best location badge for a reason: it's walkable to the marina and has a rooftop bar that genuinely earns the view.
One thing to know: Amathus Avenue gets busy in July-August with through-traffic. Book a room that faces the sea, not the road. Most of these hotels are smart about it, but always check the room orientation before confirming.
Germasogeia & Potamos Germasogeia 2 vetted hotels Beach access without the Amathus price tag.
Beach access without the Amathus price tag.
Germasogeia sits about 8 km east of the city centre, straddling both sides of Amathus Road. It's the family zone: less glam, more functional. Aquamarina and Navarria Blue both operate here and deliver exactly what they promise: beach proximity, decent pools, and rooms that won't embarrass you.
Navarria Blue in Potamos Germasogeia edges slightly closer to the water and has the 'Most Popular' badge for a reason: guests actually come back. It runs $120-175/night. Aquamarina at $105-155/night is the 'Family Friendly' pick and has the larger grounds. Neither hotel pretends to be something it isn't, which is more than we can say for some of the competition.
Restaurants on the Germasogeia tourist strip on Amathus Road run cheaper than Amathus proper by $5-10 a plate on average. The beach between the two hotels is public, clean, and busy in summer without being Dasoudi-level chaotic.
City Centre & Neapolis 2 vetted hotels Central, practical, and easier on the wallet.
Central, practical, and easier on the wallet.
City Centre hotels like Curium Palace on Byron Street put you 5 minutes walk from the Municipal Gardens and 15 minutes from Limassol Castle. The beach is further at 20-25 minutes on foot, but if you're here for culture, business, or a short stopover, this location is efficient. Rooms at Curium Palace start at $55/night, which is hard to argue with.
Crowne Plaza sits in Neapolis, Limassol's newer business district, about 2 km from the Old Town. It's smart, modern, and built for work travel at $160-230/night. The Franklin Roosevelt Avenue corridor nearby has all the corporate offices. It's not a neighbourhood for long beach holidays, but for 2-night business trips it's sharp.
Both areas are well-served by taxis to the beach (around $10-14 to Dasoudi or Amathus Road), and the Old Town nightlife on Anexartisias Street is walking distance from Curium Palace. It's a solid base if you're not glued to the water.
Old Town 1 vetted hotel History, local life, and the best coffee in the city.
History, local life, and the best coffee in the city.
The Old Town around Limassol Castle and Irinis Street is the most characterful part of the city. The castle itself is a 5-minute walk from Luxor Hotel, the marina is 10 minutes, and the Old Carob Mill complex is around the corner. This is where you eat souvlaki for $4, drink Commandaria wine in a stone-walled bar, and walk home in 3 minutes.
Luxor Hotel at $70-99/night is the best-value pick in Limassol. It sits in the Old Town, earns its 'Best Value' badge without apology, and gives you access to the most walkable part of the city. The tourist strip on Agora Square is literally outside the door.
The one caveat: Old Town gets lively on weekends, especially during Carnival and summer evenings on Anexartisias Street. Light sleepers should request a courtyard room or bring earplugs. It's a fair trade for the location.
Best Areas by Vibe
Tell us how you travel and we'll point you to the right part of Limassol.
Romantic
Amathus Avenue at golden hour with a sea-facing room at Mediterranean Beach Hotel is about as good as it gets on this island. Dinner on the Amathus promenade, 5 minutes walk from your room, no traffic noise after 9pm.
Culture
Base yourself in the Old Town, 5 minutes from Limassol Castle and 15 minutes walk from the ancient Amathus ruins along the coastal path. Luxor Hotel keeps you central to everything worth seeing without paying resort prices.
Family
Germasogeia is the family zone, plain and simple. Aquamarina Hotel on Amathus Road has the pools, the beach proximity, and 20 minutes to Fasouri Watermania. Kids have enough to do for a full week.
Budget
City Centre and Old Town are where the value lives, with rooms from $55/night at Curium Palace on Byron Street and $70/night at Luxor in the Old Town. You're not on the beach, but you're also not paying $300 to sleep.
Beach
The Amathus coastline is the only answer. Parklane and Le Meridien have the best private beach setups in Limassol, and the water here is consistently cleaner than Dasoudi or the city beaches further west.
Foodie
Stay in the Old Town and eat your way down Anexartisias Street and the side lanes off Irinis. The meze at the tavernas near the castle square runs $15-22 per person, and the Commandaria wine list at the Carob Mill is exceptional.
Location Quality
Is the neighborhood walkable? Are restaurants, shops, and attractions within 10 minutes on foot? How does it feel after dark? We evaluate safety, public transport access, and whether the area has genuine local character or just tourist traps. A hotel in the wrong neighborhood ruins a trip. That's why location carries the most weight.
Value for Money
We compare what you pay against what you get. A €150 hotel with a great location, clean rooms, and helpful staff can outscore a €500 hotel with fancy amenities in a bad area. We factor in seasonal pricing, cancellation policies, and hidden costs like tourist tax and breakfast surcharges. The goal is finding the best ratio, not the lowest price.
Guest Experience
We analyze thousands of verified guest reviews across multiple platforms, looking for patterns rather than individual complaints. Consistent praise for cleanliness, staff, and room quality counts. We also assess the intangibles: does the hotel have character? Would you recommend it to a friend? A soul-less chain hotel with perfect facilities still loses to a well-run boutique with personality.
When to Visit Limassol
When to visit Limassol and what to pay.
Summer (June-August)
July and August are genuinely hot, with Limassol regularly hitting 36-38°C. Dasoudi Beach and the Amathus strip are packed, and prices at the top hotels spike hard. If you're coming in summer, book at least 10 weeks ahead for anything on Amathus Avenue. June is the slightly saner option at 30-33°C with prices 10-15% lower than July peak.
Autumn (September-October)
This is the best window to visit. The Limassol Wine Festival runs in early September at the Municipal Gardens, sea temperatures stay at 27-28°C through October, and prices drop 20-30% from peak. Parklane and Four Seasons are actually bookable in October without paying peak rates. Don't sleep on it.
Winter (November-February)
Limassol in winter is quiet and cheap: $55-180/night covers almost every hotel on this list. The Limassol Carnival in February is the exception, spiking Old Town prices by 30-40% for that specific weekend. December and January are sleepy but genuinely pleasant for walking the Old Town and visiting Kourion without the summer haze.
Spring (March-May)
April and May are the most underrated months in Limassol. Temperatures are 20-27°C, the Kourion archaeological site is green and comfortable to walk, and hotel prices are 25-35% below summer rates. Easter week (dates vary) is a local holiday spike: properties fill quickly and many impose 4-night minimums, especially on Amathus Avenue.
Booking Tips for Limassol
Insider tips for booking hotels in Limassol.
Book Amathus hotels 8-10 weeks out in summer
The four-hotel cluster on Amathus Avenue (Londa, Mediterranean Beach, Le Meridien, Parklane, Four Seasons) has a combined 600-700 rooms and they legitimately fill in June-August. July bookings made in May regularly find $50-80/night premiums versus booking in March. The Wine Festival in September and Easter week have similar patterns. Set a calendar reminder.
Don't book a 'sea view' room without checking floor and orientation
Limassol hotels near the Old Port area on Georgiou A' Street are notorious for marketing partial sea views from floor 4-5 rooms at full beachfront prices. Always ask the hotel: which rooms face the sea, and from what floor? If they hedge, skip it. Every hotel on our vetted list is honest about this, but others in the city are not.
Rent a car for anything beyond a 3-night city stay
Limassol's bus network (routes 30 and 34 for the tourist strip) is fine for short hops along the coast at $1.50 a ride. But Kourion is 20 minutes west by car, Troodos is 45 minutes, and Paphos is 70 minutes. Daily rental starts at $25-40 from the city centre or port. If you're doing a week-long trip, get the car. Taxis for day trips add up fast at $30-60 each way.
Ask about the beach club setup before booking Germasogeia hotels
Not every hotel in Germasogeia has its own beach. Some use partner beach clubs on Amathus Road, which is fine but means a 5-10 minute walk or shuttle. Aquamarina and Navarria Blue both have clear beach arrangements. At $105-175/night, you should know exactly what 'beach access' means before you arrive. We've seen guests genuinely surprised on day one.
Old Town hotels fill up fast for Limassol Carnival
The Limassol Carnival (February, dates vary annually) is the biggest street event in Cyprus. Hotels within walking distance of the Old Town parade route on Anexartisias Street and the Limassol seafront promenade fill up 6-8 weeks out. Luxor Hotel in the Old Town is ideally placed for it. Prices jump 30-40% for that 3-day window. Book early or stay a few km east in Germasogeia and taxi in.
Business travellers: check conference calendars before booking
Limassol hosts several annual events that pack the Crowne Plaza and Four Seasons solid: the Cyprus Investment Forum, shipping sector conferences, and energy symposiums typically fall in October-November and March. If those dates overlap with your trip, book Crowne Plaza in Neapolis or Four Seasons on Amathus Avenue at least 6 weeks out. Last-minute rooms during conference weeks run $50-100 above standard rates.
Hotels in Limassol — FAQ
Everything you need to know before booking hotels in Limassol.
What's the best area to stay in Limassol?
Amathus Avenue is the sweet spot. You get proper beach access, the ancient Amathus ruins are a 5-minute walk, and the strip from Londa Hotel to Parklane covers every budget above $145/night. If you're watching the wallet, the Old Town near Limassol Castle puts you on Irinis Street with tavernas and coffee shops, and rooms start around $70/night.
How far is the beach from central Limassol hotels?
City Centre hotels like Curium Palace on Byron Street are about 20-25 minutes walk from the nearest decent beach. Germasogeia hotels cut that to 10 minutes. If sand matters to you, book Amathus or Potamos Germasogeia directly. Don't let a hotel description fool you: 'close to beach' in Limassol can mean very different things.
When is the best time to visit Limassol?
April-May and September-October are the golden windows. Temperatures sit at 22-27°C, the sea is warm enough after June, and hotel prices drop 20-30% versus peak July-August. The Limassol Carnival in February is worth the cooler weather too, and hotels in the Old Town fill up fast that week, so book 6-8 weeks ahead.
Is Limassol expensive for hotels?
It ranges wildly. Budget options in the City Centre and Old Town run $55-99/night. Mid-range Germasogeia and Potamos Germasogeia hotels land at $105-175/night. The Amathus strip is where it tips into luxury: $145-550/night depending on the property. You're not paying for the address alone. That coastline genuinely earns it.
What's the best hotel in Limassol for families?
Aquamarina Hotel in Germasogeia is the most family-focused option, with rooms at $105-155/night and easy access to the beach at Amathus Road. It's 15 minutes drive from Fasouri Watermania Waterpark, which keeps kids occupied for a full day. If budget isn't a concern, Mediterranean Beach Hotel in Amathus has better pools and more space per family.
Is there a good hotel for business travellers in Limassol?
Crowne Plaza Limassol in the Neapolis district is built for it. Meeting rooms, fast Wi-Fi, and it's under 10 minutes from the Limassol port and major law firm offices on Gladstonos Street. Rooms run $160-230/night. It's not glamorous, but the logistics are tight and nothing goes wrong.
How do I get around Limassol without a car?
Honestly, a car helps. The coastal road from Old Town to Amathus is 11 km and taxis run $12-18 for that trip. Bus routes 30 and 34 cover the main tourist strip but run every 20-30 minutes. If you're staying at a City Centre or Old Town hotel, you can walk most sights within 15 minutes. Amathus guests are more dependent on taxis or rental cars.
What areas should I avoid when booking a hotel in Limassol?
Skip hotels directly around the Limassol port industrial area near Vassileos Konstantinou Street. It's noisy, not scenic, and overpriced relative to what you get. The far end of Germasogeia past the motorway junction also loses the beach access that makes that neighbourhood worth it. There are 2-3 hotels in those spots that rely on Google Maps confusion to fill rooms.
Which Limassol hotel has the best beach access?
Parklane and Le Meridien on the Amathus coastline both have private beach setups. Le Meridien at $195-260/night gives you the better beach-to-pool flow. Parklane at $320-550/night edges it for sheer space and lounger quality. Mediterranean Beach Hotel at $150-220/night is the best value beachfront pick on the Amathus stretch.
Is Limassol good for a romantic trip?
Very. The Amathus coastline at sunset from Londa Hotel's terrace is legitimately stunning. Mediterranean Beach Hotel has the 'Romantic Stay' badge for a reason: rooms facing the sea, and the Amathus Beach promenade is a 5-minute walk with no traffic noise at night. Budget at least $150/night if romance is the goal. Anything cheaper moves you off the waterfront.
Are there any luxury hotels in Limassol worth the price?
Four Seasons Limassol on Amathus Avenue at $280-420/night and Parklane at $320-550/night are both the real deal. Four Seasons has the most polished service in the city. Parklane wins on pool and beach space. Neither is puffed up for the name: the product matches the price tag, which we can't say for every hotel in this city.
What local events affect hotel prices in Limassol?
Limassol Carnival (February) spikes Old Town hotel prices by 30-40% for that long weekend. The Limassol Wine Festival in early September fills Germasogeia and Amathus fast. Easter week is huge in Cyprus: expect sold-out properties across all price brackets and a minimum 4-night stay at most Amathus hotels. Book 8-10 weeks out for any of these windows.