The best hotels in Kerman
Kerman has over 8,000+ places to stay, and most of them will waste your time in the wrong part of the city. We reviewed the standouts. these 10 made the cut.
Our Top Picks in Kerman
Click any hotel to check availability and book at the best price.
Akhavan Hotel Kerman
City Center, Kerman
Free cancellation & Pay later
Pars Hotel Kerman
Azadi Square, Kerman
Free cancellation & Pay later
Zein Hotel Kerman
Tohid Boulevard, Kerman
Free cancellation & Pay later
Hotel Jahangardi Kerman
Near Ganjali Khan Complex, Kerman
Free cancellation & Pay later
Laleh International Hotel Kerman
Central Kerman, Kerman
Free cancellation & Pay later
Shahr Hotel Kerman
Ferdowsi Street, Kerman
Free cancellation & Pay later
Aria Hotel Kerman
Motahari Boulevard, Kerman
Free cancellation & Pay later
Kerman Tourist Hotel
South Kerman, Kerman
Free cancellation & Pay later
Rayen Caravanserai Boutique Hotel
Old Town Rayen, Rayen
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 | Akhavan Hotel Kerman | City Center, Kerman | $45–70/night | 7.2/10 | Budget Pick |
| 2 | Pars Hotel Kerman | Azadi Square, Kerman | $60–90/night | 7.5/10 | Best Value |
| 3 | Zein Hotel Kerman | Tohid Boulevard, Kerman | $105–150/night | 8/10 | Most Popular |
| 4 | Hotel Jahangardi Kerman | Near Ganjali Khan Complex, Kerman | $115–160/night | 8.1/10 | Best Location |
| 5 | Laleh International Hotel Kerman | Central Kerman, Kerman | $130–185/night | 8.3/10 | Business Pick |
| 6 | Shahr Hotel Kerman | Ferdowsi Street, Kerman | $145–195/night | 8.4/10 | Hidden Gem |
| 7 | Aria Hotel Kerman | Motahari Boulevard, Kerman | $160–210/night | 8.6/10 | Top Rated |
| 8 | Kerman Tourist Hotel | South Kerman, Kerman | $185–230/night | 8.2/10 | Family Friendly |
| 9 | Bam Grand Hotel | Near Arg-e Bam, Bam | $255–330/night | 8.7/10 | Luxury Pick |
| 10 | Rayen Caravanserai Boutique Hotel | Old Town Rayen, Rayen | $275–380/night | 9.1/10 | Romantic Stay |
Why These Hotels Made Our List
Every hotel earned its spot. Here's exactly why we picked each one.
Akhavan Hotel Kerman
This is a straightforward budget option sitting close to Kerman's Grand Bazaar on Shariati Street. Rooms are basic but clean, with decent air conditioning that handles the desert heat well. The staff are friendly and speak enough English to help with directions. Breakfast is simple but included in the rate. Good choice if you need a central base without spending much.
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Pars Hotel Kerman
Pars Hotel is located near Azadi Square, making it easy to reach the main sights on foot. Rooms are modest but well-maintained, with comfortable beds and private bathrooms. The lobby feels dated but the service is consistently helpful. It draws a mix of domestic travelers and backpackers passing through Kerman. The price-to-location ratio is hard to beat in this city.
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Zein Hotel Kerman
Zein Hotel sits along Tohid Boulevard and offers a noticeable step up from budget options in the city. Rooms are spacious with modern furnishings and good soundproofing. The in-house restaurant serves reliable Persian cuisine, including decent local Kerman dishes. It attracts business travelers and Iranian families in equal measure. Book a higher floor room for better views of the surrounding mountains.
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Hotel Jahangardi Kerman
This hotel places you within walking distance of the Ganjali Khan Complex, one of Kerman's most important historical sites. The building has a traditional Iranian courtyard design that adds real character to the stay. Rooms vary in size, so ask for one of the renovated units when booking. The traditional teahouse on the ground floor is a genuine highlight. Staff can arrange city tours to Shazdeh Garden and the Kaluts desert.
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Laleh International Hotel Kerman
Laleh International is one of the better-known names in Kerman's hotel scene and caters heavily to business visitors. The lobby is polished, and the conference facilities are the best available in the city. Rooms are well-furnished with reliable Wi-Fi and proper work desks. The rooftop restaurant offers good views across the city and serves a solid breakfast spread. It lacks boutique charm but delivers consistent standards throughout.
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Shahr Hotel Kerman
Shahr Hotel on Ferdowsi Street is a quieter mid-range option that often gets overlooked by visitors. The rooms are well-appointed with traditional tilework accents and proper blackout curtains. The garden courtyard is a peaceful spot for evenings after sightseeing. Service is attentive without being intrusive. It is a short taxi ride from the bazaar and the Vakil Mosque.
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Aria Hotel Kerman
Aria Hotel on Motahari Boulevard consistently earns high marks from guests for its attentive service and clean, comfortable rooms. The interior design blends modern comfort with Persian decorative elements throughout. The on-site restaurant is one of the better places in the city to try local saffron rice dishes. The fitness center is small but functional. It is a reliable choice for travelers who want quality without crossing into luxury pricing.
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Kerman Tourist Hotel
This hotel in southern Kerman is particularly popular with Iranian families visiting the region for its spacious rooms and multiple suite configurations. The outdoor pool is a major draw during the hot summer months. Common areas are large and child-friendly with a dedicated play area. The location is quieter than central hotels but requires a short drive to major attractions. Room service runs late and the kitchen handles family-sized orders without issue.
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Bam Grand Hotel
Bam Grand Hotel is the most upscale accommodation option in the Bam area, positioned close to the UNESCO-listed Arg-e Bam citadel. The design draws from local desert architecture with high ceilings, carved plasterwork, and a central reflecting pool. Suites are genuinely spacious with premium bedding and excellent air conditioning systems. The hotel restaurant focuses on regional southeastern Iranian cuisine and does it well. It is the only property in the area that feels truly luxurious.
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Rayen Caravanserai Boutique Hotel
This is a converted historic caravanserai in the old town of Rayen, near the stunning Rayen Castle. The restoration is exceptional, with original adobe walls, arched ceilings, and hand-painted decorative details preserved throughout. Each room is individually designed and uses locally sourced textiles and ceramics. The central courtyard with its fountain is the main gathering point at dusk. It is the most atmospheric place to stay in the entire Kerman province and worth every rial of the premium.
Check AvailabilityWhere to Stay in Kerman
The neighborhood you pick matters more than the hotel.
Staying near Ganjali Khan: Worth It or Overhyped?
Hotel Jahangardi sits right by Ganjali Khan Complex, one of Iran's finest Safavid-era urban squares. You're 5 minutes on foot from the hammam, the caravanserai, and the bazaar entrance on Moshtagh Street. That location alone justifies the $115-160/night price tag.
The honest downside: street noise picks up early, especially on the northern lane toward Vakil Mosque. Ask specifically for a courtyard-facing room. We've seen this mistake dozens of times. travelers book online without noting which side of the building they're on, then complain about the 6am street vendors. One question saves the whole trip.
Bam vs. Kerman City: Where Should You Actually Sleep?
Stay in Kerman city if your trip is primarily about the bazaar, the Jabalieh Dome, and the Kaluts Desert day trip. City hotels are 30-60 minutes from Kaluts by car, and the $45-210/night range gives you real options. Bam is a detour, not a base.
But if Arg-e Bam is the reason you're here, Bam Grand Hotel near the Citadel changes the whole experience. You get the site at magic hour before the tour buses arrive. It's $255-330/night and genuinely earns it. Don't treat the price as a reason to commute from Kerman. the 2-hour drive each way will exhaust you.
The Rayen Caravanserai: Not Just a Hotel
Rayen Caravanserai Boutique Hotel in Old Town Rayen is the most distinctive stay in the entire Kerman province. The building itself is a restored caravanserai, 5 minutes walk from Rayen Castle. At $275-380/night it's the priciest pick in our list, and it's also the most memorable by a significant margin.
Book a courtyard room, not a street room. The inner courtyard at night, with the castle lit up in the background, is the kind of thing people post on walls. Breakfast here is exceptional. local pomegranate jam, fresh bread baked on-site, and a spread that takes 45 minutes to work through properly.
Kerman on a Budget: What $45-90/Night Actually Gets You
Akhavan Hotel in City Center is the most honest budget option in Kerman. Rooms are clean, staff speaks basic English, and you're 15 minutes walk from Ganjali Khan Complex. At $45-70/night, nothing else in the city center comes close for the price.
Pars Hotel near Azadi Square steps it up slightly at $60-90/night. The location is better for transit: taxis to the bus terminal, the train station, and the road south to Mahan are all easy from Azadi. If you're moving between cities often, Pars makes more logistical sense than Akhavan.
Where Not to Stay (And Why)
Avoid anything that advertises itself as near 'Kerman Station' without specifying the neighborhood. The area south of Shahab Street around the bus terminal is noisy, short on decent food, and disconnected from the sights. You'll spend $10-15 each way in taxis just to reach Ganjali Khan Square.
Also skip the cluster of cheap guesthouses on the western edge past Imam Khomeini Boulevard. They exist because the land is cheap, not because the location makes sense. Kerman's interesting districts. Ferdowsi Street, Motahari Boulevard, Tohid Boulevard. are all on the opposite end of the city.
How Kerman's Hotel Scene Has Changed
Five years ago, your choices in Kerman were basic. International sanctions meant no global chains, limited investment, and very few boutique properties. That's shifted. Shahr Hotel on Ferdowsi Street and Aria Hotel on Motahari Boulevard are genuinely polished operations now, with design and service that'd hold up in any regional capital.
The Rayen and Bam properties have also matured significantly. Domestic Iranian tourism has grown fast, and local operators responded. What this means for you: there are now real options at every price point, and the $130-210/night mid-luxury bracket is competitive. You're not overpaying for mediocrity anymore.
Kerman's best neighborhoods
Stay in City Center or near Ganjali Khan Complex if you want to walk to everything. Bam and Rayen are worth the drive. but only if you plan to spend real time at Arg-e Bam or Rayen Castle.
Kerman City Center 4 vetted hotels The historic core. walk to the bazaar, the hammams, and the best tea houses.
The historic core. walk to the bazaar, the hammams, and the best tea houses.
This is where you want to be for a first visit to Kerman. Ganjali Khan Complex, the Grand Bazaar entrance on Moshtagh Street, and Vakil Mosque are all within a 15-minute walk from each other. Hotels here range from budget to upper mid-range, so it suits most travelers.
Ferdowsi Street is the quieter, slightly more upscale pocket of the center. Shahr Hotel sits here and it earns its Hidden Gem badge. most tourists don't know this street, which means fewer crowds outside your door. The tradeoff is it's 10 minutes further from the bazaar than Hotel Jahangardi.
Avoid booking on the fringe of the center near Shohada Square's southern exits. The address looks central on a map but the surrounding streets are commercial and loud with zero character. The 5-minute difference in location matters more here than in most cities.
Motahari Boulevard & Azadi Square 2 vetted hotels Modern, connected, and better for business than for romance.
Modern, connected, and better for business than for romance.
Motahari Boulevard is Kerman's most functional hotel corridor. Aria Hotel anchors the top end at $160-210/night, and the street has the kind of infrastructure that business travelers need: good taxi access, nearby banks, and proximity to government buildings on Taleghani Boulevard.
Azadi Square is slightly more budget-oriented. Pars Hotel here is solid value at $60-90/night. The square is a major transit hub, so leaving the city for Mahan, Bam, or the Kaluts Desert is straightforward. Shared taxis congregate at the square's north and east sides from 7am.
The neighborhood isn't Kerman's most atmospheric. this is modern Iran, not Safavid-era streets. But if you want reliability over charm, Motahari and Azadi deliver. Rated travelers who've done the romantic Ganjali Khan stay before often prefer this area on return trips for sheer convenience.
Bam 1 vetted hotel UNESCO heritage, rebuilt city, and the best sunrise in southeastern Iran.
UNESCO heritage, rebuilt city, and the best sunrise in southeastern Iran.
Bam is 185km southeast of Kerman and it's worth the journey. Arg-e Bam is one of the largest adobe structures on earth and a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Bam Grand Hotel puts you 10 minutes walk from the Citadel entrance, which means early mornings before the day visitors arrive.
The city was devastated in the 2003 earthquake and has been rebuilding since. The hotel infrastructure is now genuinely solid. Bam Grand at $255-330/night is the clearest sign of that recovery. Don't be deterred by outdated accounts of the city.
There's no mid-range alternative in Bam that we'd recommend. It's either Bam Grand or a guesthouse that won't clear our standards. If the price isn't workable, base yourself in Kerman and do Bam as a long day trip, accepting you'll miss the magic hour light on the Citadel walls.
Rayen 1 vetted hotel One castle, one exceptional hotel, and a reason to stay two nights.
One castle, one exceptional hotel, and a reason to stay two nights.
Rayen is a small town about 100km southeast of Kerman, and there's essentially one reason to come here: Rayen Castle, one of the best-preserved mud-brick castles in the world. Rayen Caravanserai Boutique Hotel in Old Town Rayen sits 5 minutes walk from the castle entrance. The whole point of staying here is experiencing the site without day-tripper crowds.
At $275-380/night it's the priciest property in our list. It earns it. The building itself is centuries old. sleeping inside a restored caravanserai in a town with no traffic noise and no tour buses after 5pm is a genuinely rare experience. The rating of 9.1 is the highest of any hotel we list.
There's no real dining scene in Rayen beyond the hotel restaurant and one or two local spots. That's part of the appeal for some travelers, but if you need variety and nightlife, it'll frustrate you. Two nights is the right amount of time. first day the castle, second day the surroundings and the drive toward Jiroft.
South Kerman 1 vetted hotel Quieter, more residential, and best suited for families with cars.
Quieter, more residential, and best suited for families with cars.
South Kerman doesn't have the historic atmosphere of the city center, but it offers something different: space. Kerman Tourist Hotel here has larger rooms and quieter surroundings than anything near Ganjali Khan. At $185-230/night it caters explicitly to families, and the Family Friendly badge is genuinely deserved.
You're about 20 minutes by taxi from Ganjali Khan Complex and the Grand Bazaar. That's manageable if you have a car or don't mind taxis, but it does mean you're not walking to the sights. Budget around $15-20/day for local transport if you're basing here.
The neighborhood itself is residential and calm. Kerman's best local kebab spots are actually more common in this southern stretch than in the tourist-heavy center. Ask at the hotel for recommendations on Imam Ali Boulevard. the places near Shahid Bahonar Square are especially good.
Best Areas by Vibe
Tell us how you travel and we'll point you to the right part of Kerman.
Romantic
Old Town Rayen around the Caravanserai is the pick. No traffic, a medieval castle lit up at night, and a hotel that's been hosting travelers for centuries.
Culture & Heritage
Base yourself near Ganjali Khan Complex and don't move. The Safavid-era square, hammam, and bazaar are all walkable, and the Jabalieh Dome is 15 minutes by taxi.
Family
South Kerman near Shahid Bahonar Square gives families the space and quiet they need. Kerman Tourist Hotel has the biggest rooms in our list and zero tourist-crowd chaos outside.
Budget
City Center around Akhavan Hotel is your base. You're $45-70/night, 15 minutes walk from the bazaar, and surrounded by cheap local tea houses and bakeries.
Foodie
Ferdowsi Street and the lanes around the Grand Bazaar are where Kerman's best food is concentrated. Ash-e-reshteh, chelo kebab, and local date sweets are all within a short walk.
Desert Explorer
Azadi Square is the logistics hub for Kaluts Desert and Shahdad trips. Shared taxis and private cars depart from here, and mid-range hotels keep costs manageable for multi-day desert routes.
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 Kerman
When to visit Kerman and what to pay.
Spring (March-May)
This is the right time to visit. Shazdeh Garden in Mahan peaks in April, the Kaluts Desert is bearable at 20-28°C, and Rayen Castle looks spectacular in spring light. Nowruz (Persian New Year, around March 21) spikes domestic tourism hard. book 3-4 weeks out for anything near Ganjali Khan. Post-Nowruz April is honestly the sweet spot: crowds thin, prices drop 10-15%, and the weather is perfect.
Summer (June-August)
Kerman city hits 38-42°C in July and August. Bam is even hotter. The Kaluts Desert becomes genuinely dangerous for unprepared visitors at this time of year. Domestic travelers still come, which keeps hotel prices high, but the experience suffers. If summer is your only option, stick to air-conditioned city hotels and plan outdoor activities for before 9am or after 6pm.
Autumn (September-November)
October is the quietest good month in Kerman. Temperatures in the city drop to 15-25°C, and Bam cools enough that Arg-e Bam is comfortable to explore for hours. Hotel prices across the board run 10-20% lower than spring peak. Rayen Caravanserai is easiest to book in November. fewer competing reservations and the mountain air around Rayen Castle is sharp and clear.
Winter (December-February)
Kerman city gets cold, especially at night. January regularly dips to 2-5°C. But hotel prices drop significantly, with budget options near Azadi Square running as low as $55/night. Bam and Rayen are drier and slightly milder in winter. The Kaluts Desert is actually beautiful in January if you can handle cold nights. some travelers specifically plan this for the photography. Just pack properly.
Booking Tips for Kerman
Insider tips for booking hotels in Kerman.
Book Nowruz accommodations at least a month out
Persian New Year falls around March 21 and Iranian domestic tourism floods Kerman for 2 weeks. Hotels near Ganjali Khan Complex and the Grand Bazaar fill up 3-4 weeks in advance. Rayen Caravanserai, which has fewer than 20 rooms, books out even faster. Set a reminder in early February if you're planning a March visit.
Use Azadi Square as your transit base
Shared taxis to Mahan (Shazdeh Garden), Bam, and Shahdad (Kaluts Desert) all congregate around Azadi Square. A shared seat to Mahan costs 100,000-150,000 IRR. Private taxi to Shahdad runs around 800,000-1,200,000 IRR depending on your negotiation. Pars Hotel is literally on the square. useful if you have an early departure planned.
Request courtyard-facing rooms explicitly
Kerman's historic hotels around Ganjali Khan and Old Town Rayen have street-side and courtyard-side rooms, and the difference is substantial. Street-side rooms on the Ganjali Khan lanes get market noise from 6am. Courtyard rooms in both Hotel Jahangardi and Rayen Caravanserai are quieter, better lit, and often cost the same. Ask when you book. don't assume.
Carry cash for everything outside the main hotels
International banking sanctions mean your foreign Visa or Mastercard will not work in Iran. Bring USD or EUR and exchange at certified exchange offices (sarafi) near Ganjali Khan Square or on Taleghani Boulevard. Rates at sarafi shops beat hotel exchange desks by 5-10%. Budget $30-50/day per person for food, local taxis, and entrance fees in Kerman city.
Don't underestimate the Bam to Rayen distance
Bam and Rayen are both southeast of Kerman but they're not close to each other. it's over 2 hours by road. Don't plan a trip that does Bam Grand Hotel and Rayen Caravanserai on consecutive nights without a car. Rent a vehicle in Kerman city from a local operator near Imam Khomeini Boulevard, or hire a private driver for the full circuit at around 3,500,000-5,000,000 IRR per day.
Go to the Kaluts Desert at dawn or dusk only
Shahdad and the Kaluts (Lut Desert) are about 90km northeast of Kerman city. The formations are extraordinary but midday visits in any season above May are punishing. Sunrise trips mean leaving your hotel by 4:30-5am. Several Kerman hotels, including Aria Hotel on Motahari Boulevard and Hotel Jahangardi, can arrange drivers for desert excursions if you ask at reception the night before.
Hotels in Kerman — FAQ
Everything you need to know before booking hotels in Kerman.
What's the best area to stay in Kerman?
Near Ganjali Khan Complex is the sweet spot. You're within a 10-minute walk of the Grand Bazaar, Vakil Mosque, and Ibrahim Khan Bathhouse. Hotels here run $115-160/night, which is fair for what you're getting. Skip the southern end of Shohada Square. it sounds central but it's mostly traffic and noise.
How much do hotels in Kerman cost?
Budget places on the city center fringe start around $45-70/night. Mid-range options near Tohid Boulevard or Azadi Square land at $60-150/night. Once you get to Laleh International or Aria Hotel on Motahari Boulevard, you're looking at $130-210/night. Bam and Rayen run higher. $255-380/night. but the properties there are genuinely special.
Is it safe to stay in Bam after the 2003 earthquake?
Yes. The city has been substantially rebuilt since 2003, and Arg-e Bam itself was restored with UNESCO support over nearly two decades. Bam Grand Hotel sits right near the Citadel and operates at full capacity. Most travelers who visit feel perfectly comfortable, and the local hospitality is exceptional.
When is the best time to visit Kerman?
March through May is the best window. Temperatures in Kerman city sit around 15-25°C, the Shazdeh Garden in Mahan is in bloom, and hotel prices haven't hit summer peak yet. October and November are a close second. Avoid July and August. it regularly hits 38°C and the Kaluts Desert near Shahdad is genuinely brutal.
How do I get from Kerman city to Bam?
Shared taxis from Azadi Square run to Bam for roughly 200,000-300,000 IRR per seat. The drive is about 2 hours on the main road toward Zahedan. Private taxis charge 3-4x that but leave on your schedule. There's also a daily bus from Kerman Bus Terminal that takes closer to 3 hours.
Do Kerman hotels serve breakfast?
Most mid-range and luxury hotels include Persian breakfast: flatbread, white cheese, honey, butter, walnuts, and tea. Budget picks like Akhavan Hotel usually charge extra. around $5-8 per person. If your hotel doesn't include it, the tea houses around Ganjali Khan Square serve breakfast from 7am for under $4.
Can I visit Rayen Castle as a day trip from Kerman city?
Technically yes. Rayen is about 100km southeast of Kerman, roughly 1.5 hours by private car. But honestly, staying at Rayen Caravanserai Boutique Hotel overnight is worth every extra rial. the castle is stunning at dusk and at dawn with no crowds. Day-trippers always leave wishing they'd stayed.
What neighborhoods should I avoid in Kerman?
The area directly around Kerman Bus Terminal (southern end of Shahab Street) is chaotic and has very limited restaurant options after 9pm. It's fine for a budget transit stop but don't base yourself there. The western outskirts past Imam Khomeini Boulevard also have accommodation that looks cheap online but adds 40+ minutes of taxi rides to everything you want to see.
Are there family-friendly hotels in Kerman?
Kerman Tourist Hotel in South Kerman is the best family option, with larger rooms and quieter surroundings. It's about 20 minutes from Ganjali Khan Complex by taxi. Expect to pay $185-230/night, but the extra space and calmer street noise make it worthwhile with kids. Laleh International in Central Kerman also has family suites.
What's the deal with Kerman's business hotel scene?
Laleh International Hotel on Central Kerman's main commercial strip is the go-to for business travelers. Meeting rooms, reliable Wi-Fi, and proximity to government offices near Taleghani Boulevard make it practical. Rates run $130-185/night. Aria Hotel on Motahari Boulevard is a step up in comfort if your company card allows it.
How far is Shazdeh Garden from Kerman city hotels?
Shazdeh Garden is in Mahan, about 35km southeast of Kerman city center. From most city hotels near Ganjali Khan or Azadi Square, it's a 45-minute drive. Shared taxis to Mahan leave from near Azadi Square for around 100,000-150,000 IRR. Go in spring when the gardens are actually green. winter visits are a letdown.
Do I need to book Kerman hotels in advance?
For spring travel (March-May) and during Nowruz (Persian New Year, around March 21), book at least 3-4 weeks ahead. Domestic Iranian tourism fills Kerman fast during holidays. Rayen Caravanserai and Bam Grand Hotel have limited rooms. single digits in some categories. so those need the most lead time. Off-season from June to August, you can usually book 48 hours out.