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Six Senses Rome vs Six Senses Fiji

Six Senses Fiji takes the higher Fat Score, 16.5/20 to 16.5/20 — but it's a genuine choice: pick Six Senses Fiji for service, Six Senses Rome for dining.

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

Scoreboard

DimensionSix Senses RomeSix Senses Fiji
TierFat ApprovedFat Approved
Overall Fat Score
16.5/20
16.5/20Wins
Service
16.0
18.0
Design
15.5
16.5
Location
17.5
18.0
Dining
16.0
13.5
Wellness
18.0
17.0

The Verdicts

Six Senses Rome

Six Senses Rome does something genuinely rare in this city: it imports the brand's wellness DNA into a centuries-old noble palace on Via del Corso and largely makes it work, anchored by a two-floor Roman Baths experience that stands alone among luxury hotels in Rome. The location is as central as it gets — Trevi Fountain around the corner, the Forum walkable, the Pantheon minutes away — and the hotel's deliberately calm, biophilic interiors feel like a genuine antidote to Rome's street chaos. The design divides opinion sharply: devotees love the travertine surfaces, abundant greenery, and quiet restraint; critics find it contextually disconnected from Roman grandeur, more global wellness minimalism than Eternal City. Rooms are a legitimate concern — Classic categories at roughly 300 square feet are genuinely tight and should be avoided; suites and signature rooms with private terraces are where the property earns its rates. Service is warm and often exceptional but uneven enough — across recent reviews, a handful of significant lapses in special-occasion execution and front-desk attentiveness — that it doesn't yet match the best-in-class standards of an Aman or Four Seasons at similar price points.

Six Senses Fiji

Six Senses Fiji trades on two things nobody disputes: a genuinely gorgeous Malolo Island setting and staff who seem to mean it when they call you by name. Review after review — honeymooners, three-generation families, solo surfers chasing Cloudbreak — circles back to the same GEMs, nannies, and servers (Marika, Toni, Sala, Isaac, Bubu) delivering the kind of warmth that's hard to fake at scale. Where it stumbles is consistency: food is the recurring soft spot, ranging from 'daily highlight' to 'worst I've had at a five-star property,' and a cluster of maintenance complaints — underfilled pools with screws left in them, dirty mattresses, weak AC, mosquito-riddled rooms — suggests upkeep lags the hospitality. The mandatory private speedboat transfer (roughly $1,840 FJD round trip) is a real tax on the experience that guests resent, and this is unmistakably a family-first resort, so anyone expecting adults-only serenity should look elsewhere. At its best it's a heartfelt, barefoot-luxury family retreat with excellent surf and reef access; at its worst, a very expensive resort having an off week.

Strengths & trade-offs

Six Senses Rome

Strengths

  • Roman Baths spa with sauna, steam, and three-temperature plunge pools — best wellness offering in the city
  • Unrivaled historic-center location with the Trevi Fountain, Pantheon, and Vatican all walkable
  • Notos rooftop restaurant delivers genuinely good cocktails, Mediterranean cooking, and sweeping city views
  • Sustainability program with Earth Lab activities (olive oil tastings, natural dye classes) that feel authentic rather than performative
  • Ancient baptismal fountain visible through a glass lobby floor — a quietly extraordinary architectural detail

Trade-offs

  • Classic rooms at ~300 sq ft feel undersized for the price tier; no bathtub in entry categories
  • Service inconsistency — inspired highs from individual staff members alongside documented lapses in special-occasion coordination and front-desk attentiveness
  • Design aesthetic polarizing — travertine wellness minimalism reads as contextually disconnected from Roman heritage to architecturally literate guests
  • Rooftop restaurant and spa require advance booking; hotel does not reserve blocks for in-house guests

Six Senses Fiji

Strengths

  • Staff warmth and personalization consistently singled out by name across dozens of reviews
  • Secluded, postcard-worthy beach and reef often described as having entirely to yourself
  • Strong surf program (Cloudbreak, Wilkies, Namotu) and marine biology/coral gardening activities
  • Genuinely excellent, well-run kids club and nanny program for families
  • Spa consistently praised, including sound healing and couples treatments

Trade-offs

  • Food quality inconsistent, with several detailed reviews calling it the weakest five-star dining they've had
  • Recurring maintenance lapses — unclean pools, bugs, dirty mattresses, weak AC in some villas
  • Mandatory paid private speedboat transfer adds significant unadvertised cost
  • Not suited to travelers wanting an adults-only, low-key atmosphere given its heavy family/kids focus