All Hotels

Best luxury hotels in

the Southeast Asia

10 properties in our curated the Southeast Asia collection — ranked by Fat Score and distilled from signals across luxury travel communities, editorial publications, and verified guest reviews.

Fat Score17.6/20avg. score

At the top of our the Southeast Asia list sits Como Shambhala Estate with a Fat Score of 18.5/20.

The Siam — Bangkok, Thailand
Fat Favorite

Independent

The Siam

Bangkok, Thailand

Bill Bensley's Bangkok magnum opus reads less like a hotel and more like the private museum of an obsessive, deeply cultured collector — antiques, vinyl records, a boxing ring, a cinema room, all wrapped around a bend of the Chao Phraya far from the tourist crush. The consensus across dozens of recent stays is remarkably consistent: this is one of the most distinctive luxury properties in Southeast Asia, anchored by butler service that guests describe as intuitive rather than performative, and a low room count (under 40 keys) that makes the whole experience feel residential. The riverside setting is both the hotel's signature and its most debated trait — some guests find the private boat shuttle and pier cocktail hour the highlight of their trip, while a vocal minority flags the location as genuinely inconvenient for exploring the city, with unreliable pickup logistics and real transit time to central Bangkok. Recurring operational cracks show up too: understaffing during banquet-heavy weekends, occasional loose fixtures, a cramped pool deck, and inconsistent spa execution compared to the rest of the experience. None of this dents the core magic — Chon Thai restaurant draws consistent praise, the Deco Bar and its jazz add real atmosphere, and the property has held onto three Michelin Keys and a top-30 world ranking for good reason. This is a hotel for travelers who want immersion and story over convenience and polish — book it for the design and the sense of escape, not for easy access to Sukhumvit nightlife.

SaveCompare
Raffles Singapore — Singapore, Singapore
Fat Favorite

Raffles

Raffles Singapore

Singapore, Singapore

Raffles Singapore is one of those rare hotels where the mythology actually holds up. The 2019 restoration by Aedas — which stripped the property back to its 1887 bones before rebuilding it as a fully all-suite hotel — struck exactly the right balance: soaring ceilings, Frette linens, and period furnishings that feel lived-in rather than museumified, paired with iPad room controls and Dyson hairdryers. The service is the real story here, with butlers, doormen, and breakfast teams operating at a level of genuine warmth and recall that few properties in Asia match — staff learning your drink order by day two, paying your cab fare without being asked, providing hot honey-lemon water unprompted when a guest's voice goes hoarse. The dining landscape is strong, anchored by an outstanding breakfast buffet and the Tiffin Room (though some find Tiffin's dinner service inconsistent), with the Writers Bar delivering excellent cocktails in one of Singapore's most storied rooms. Two persistent criticisms are worth flagging: pre-arrival communication is sluggish for a hotel of this caliber, and a handful of guests — particularly younger or more casually dressed ones — have reported being questioned about their right to be on property, a pattern that speaks to overzealous tourist-vetting that occasionally catches actual guests in the net. For the traveler who cares about provenance, architecture, and the kind of intuitive hospitality that can't be manufactured, this is still the clear choice in Singapore.

SaveCompare
Six Senses Krabey Island — Krabey Island, Cambodia
Fat Approved

Six Senses

Six Senses Krabey Island

Krabey Island, Cambodia

Six Senses Krabey Island is a genuinely modern, design-forward private island escape where the GEM (guest experience manager) system produces some of the most consistently praised, personalized service in Cambodia — staff names like Kumpheak, Vechaka, and Namchhun surface again and again across independent reviewers, which is the kind of consensus that's hard to fake. The villas, with their private plunge pools, jungle seclusion, and glass-enclosed bathrooms, are repeatedly called among the best hard product in Southeast Asia, and the sustainability ethos (solar power, on-site farming, no imported salmon) is woven into everything rather than performative. Where it stumbles is the value equation: transfers routinely run $100-300, spa treatments hit $500 for a couple's massage, and the alternating single-restaurant rotation means guests staying more than three nights start repeating meals and getting restless — this isn't a property with much to do beyond kayaking, snorkeling, and the excellent spa, so it rewards a shorter, more deliberate stay over a long one. Rocky, urchin-strewn beaches and unheated villa pools are real, recurring gripes rather than outliers, and a few guests found the isolation (10-minute speedboat to the mainland, golf-cart-dependent hilly terrain) claustrophobic after 48 hours. Still, when the team is on — and by volume of praise, they usually are — this is barefoot luxury done with real warmth, closer in spirit to a boutique One&Only than a cookie-cutter five-star, and it earns comparisons to Aman and Datai from travelers who've done both.

SaveCompare