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Side-by-side

Deplar Farm vs Amanfayun

Deplar Farm and Amanfayun land neck-and-neck at 17.5/20 — Deplar Farm leans stronger on service, Amanfayun on dining.

Scored across five dimensions — Service, Design, Location, Dining, and Wellness — from signals across luxury travel communities, editorial publications, and verified guests.

Scoreboard

DimensionDeplar FarmAmanfayun
TierFat FavoriteFat Favorite
Overall Fat Score
17.5/20
17.5/20
Service
18.5
17.0
Design
17.0
18.0
Location
18.5
18.5
Dining
15.0
16.5
Wellness
18.0
17.5

The Verdicts

Deplar Farm

Deplar Farm is Chad Pike's Eleven-brand flagship, a converted turf-roofed sheep farm in a remote Troll Peninsula valley that guests keep comparing to Aman for its intensity of service — with one crucial difference: staff here aim for 'part of the family' warmth rather than silent anticipation. The formula is genuinely singular in Iceland: 16 rooms, roughly 75 staff, all-inclusive pricing that folds in a private guide, most alcohol, and a rotating slate of heli-skiing, e-biking, horseback riding and whale watching against a backdrop of glaciers and lakes. The geothermal pool with its swim-up bar is the property's signature image for good reason, and the spa, sauna, and cold plunge sequence draw consistent praise. The communal dining table is the hotel's most polarizing feature — many guests come around to loving it, but couples seeking privacy resent being charged extra to opt out, and a persistent wine-upselling habit at a supposedly all-inclusive property has irritated repeat visitors. Heli-skiing, the marquee winter draw, is notoriously weather-dependent, with Iceland's brutal winds meaning powder days are far from guaranteed despite heli-ski pricing. At $5,000+ a night this is not for everyone, but for those who want adventure-lodge intensity married to genuine five-star execution, it has few rivals anywhere in the world, let alone Iceland.

Amanfayun

Amanfayun remains one of Aman's most distinctive properties precisely because it refuses to behave like a conventional hotel — this is a reconstructed Longjing tea village threaded along a stream beside Lingyin Temple, and the sense of arriving somewhere ancient rather than merely luxurious is real and consistently reported. The setting does the heavy lifting: monk-led chants at Yongfu Temple at dawn, tea gardens, a footpath to the temple gate that lets guests beat the tourist crowds, and a stream-lined pool framed by centuries-old stone walls that reviewers repeatedly call transformative. Dining is genuinely a highlight, with Hangzhou House and the vegetarian restaurant both earning consistent praise, though a handful of recent guests found the Michelin-starred Hangzhou House overpriced and underwhelming on a given night — worth tempering expectations there. Service is the property's most polarizing element: the overwhelming consensus is warm, attentive staff who go out of their way for families and elderly guests, but there's a persistent minority thread of poor English, unhelpful front-desk interactions, and one alarming 2024 report of serious lapses that reads like an outlier rather than a pattern given the volume of praise since. Rooms are atmospheric but genuinely dark — this is the single most consistent structural complaint across years of reviews — and the property's traffic-controlled access and long transfer from Hangzhou East station require planning. For travelers who want cultural immersion over conventional five-star polish, this is arguably the most soulful Aman in China.

Strengths & trade-offs

Deplar Farm

Strengths

  • Personal guide paired with every room for the full stay
  • Geothermal pool and swim-up bar set against dramatic valley peaks
  • Staff cultivate a genuine 'part of the family' warmth rather than formal distance
  • All-inclusive structure covers meals, most alcohol, and guided activities
  • Remote Troll Peninsula setting delivers a sense of total escape

Trade-offs

  • Communal dining is a forced experience some guests resent, with steep fees to opt out
  • Wine upselling persists at an all-inclusive property despite repeated complaints
  • Heli-skiing conditions are weather-dependent and powder days aren't guaranteed
  • Extreme wind can shut down or diminish planned outdoor activities

Amanfayun

Strengths

  • Reconstructed ancient village setting beside Lingyin Temple creates unmatched atmosphere
  • Hangzhou House and vegetarian restaurant deliver some of the best hotel dining in China
  • Stream-side pool and spa consistently cited as transcendent, meditative spaces
  • Staff widely praised for warmth, especially with families, elderly guests, and children
  • Access to monk-led temple chants and tea gardens offers genuine cultural immersion

Trade-offs

  • Rooms are consistently reported as too dark, even by fans of the property
  • Service quality is inconsistent — English proficiency and front-desk helpfulness vary by encounter
  • Public footpath access means non-guests wander the grounds, diminishing exclusivity
  • Traffic-controlled West Lake area and long transfers complicate arrival logistics