



Perched on the clifftops of Miraflores above the Pacific, this Belmond all-suite property scored 93.5 points in the 2026 La Liste Top Hotels ranking. The 87 suites range from 484-square-foot Junior Suites to Presidential Pool Suites with ocean-view plunge pools and butler service. Tragaluz restaurant, the rooftop infinity pool, and pisco sour masterclasses make it a credible base for serious Lima itineraries.

A Clifftop Position That Shapes Everything
The Malecón de la Reserva is one of Lima's defining urban edges: a manicured clifftop corridor where the Miraflores district meets a sheer drop to the Pacific. Hotels have competed for position along this stretch for decades, and the address carries its own logic. From the Malecón, you can watch paragliders launch from the cliff face at eye level, track surfers on the breaks below, and read the sunset directly over open water. Miraflores Park, a Belmond Hotel, occupies this position at Malecón de la Reserva 1035, and its glass façade was designed to make that geography the central architectural argument. The cliff isn't scenic backdrop here; it's structural premise.
Belmond, now part of LVMH, has positioned this property as its Lima anchor for long enough that the hotel has become part of the neighbourhood's identity rather than simply a guest within it. That relationship between institution and district is worth noting: Miraflores itself is Lima's wealthiest residential quarter, close to the city's financial and cultural centres, and the hotel's all-suite format, rooftop pool, and executive lounge have attracted both business travellers and leisure guests who want the city without sacrificing the view. The 2026 La Liste Leading Hotels ranking placed it at 93.5 points, positioning it inside the upper tier of South American urban luxury.
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Get Exclusive Access →What the Belmond Era Built Here
The hotel's heritage as a business-class property from an earlier era of Lima luxury is still readable in its infrastructure. Multiple phone lines per room, meeting spaces with audio-visual capability, and Club Class suites with 24-hour executive lounge access on the 10th floor reflect a building that was wired, in every sense, before most Lima hotels were thinking that way. The Club Class lounge is open around the clock and runs complimentary hot breakfast, lunchtime snacks, afternoon tea, and evening tapas, which makes it function more like a private club floor than a hotel amenity. Mac computers with printing capabilities and dedicated showers for pre-check-in and post-checkout use are details that signal a considered approach to the business traveller's actual schedule.
The redecorations completed in 2014 shifted the Club Class suites toward lighter furniture and cleaner lines, pulling the interiors away from the heavy European styling that defined the property's earlier identity. The standard Junior Suites, at 484 square feet, are on record as the largest entry-level hotel room in Peru, which says something about the scale Belmond set as its baseline here. Neutral classic décor and large marble bathrooms characterise the entry tier; ocean, city, or garden views depend on orientation.
One suite detail that has become something of an inspector's reference point: the City-View Deluxe Suite contains a Roman marble tub described as large enough to accommodate a group. The Presidential Pool Suites add private plunge pools overlooking the Pacific alongside butler service and personal saunas. These aren't amenity lists for their own sake; they define where the hotel sits in Lima's competitive set relative to properties like the Country Club Lima Hotel, the design-forward Hotel B, or the newer Atemporal.
The Rooftop as Editorial Argument
The 11th-floor rooftop is where the hotel makes its clearest case. The heated outdoor infinity-edge pool looks directly down over Miraflores and straight out to the Pacific, and sharing that elevation is the Observatory Restaurant, where the hotel's breakfast spread runs through the morning. Facing west, the Observatory Restaurant gives a front-row position for sunset, with surfer silhouettes on the water below. This isn't the kind of rooftop pool that exists to photograph well in promotional materials; the orientation and the operational continuity from dawn through evening make it genuinely functional as a place to spend time rather than simply a feature to check off.
Tragaluz, the hotel's primary restaurant, works a different register: Asian-Peruvian cuisine in art-filled interiors, with a terrace and gardens that function as a pre-dinner space. Lima's Nikkei and Chifa traditions, which fuse Japanese and Chinese cooking with Peruvian produce and technique, have made Asian-Peruvian a serious category in the city, and Tragaluz's position inside a hotel of this tier means it competes against a demanding local dining standard. Belo Bar has a separate following among Lima residents for cocktails, which is the more significant social credential for a hotel bar in a city with a strong independent bar culture. Pisco sour masterclasses run in-house, and market tours with the chef are available as organised activities, both of which reflect the city-embedded programming that distinguishes Belmond's approach at this property from a self-contained resort model.
Afternoon tea with a pianist in the lobby is a daily fixture, and the spa operates through a relationship with Spa Concierge, drawing on ingredients sourced from the ocean and the rainforest, which are the two dominant ecosystems within Peru's ecological range. Yoga and cardio sessions in the fitness centre are led by bilingual instructors, a practical detail for international guests.
Getting Here and Planning the Stay
Jorge Chávez International Airport sits roughly 45 minutes by road from Miraflores under normal traffic conditions. The hotel's address on the Malecón puts it within walking distance of the six-mile coastal boardwalk and the neighbourhood's retail and cultural offerings. Lima's dining and cultural scene is accessible by short taxi or app-based transport from the front door; this is not a property that requires guests to stay inside it. Room rates are documented at approximately $610 per night at the entry level, which positions the hotel clearly within Lima's premium tier alongside the JW Marriott Hotel Lima and above the mid-range city offer. Guests considering Lima as part of a broader Peru circuit will find Belmond's network extends to Belmond Las Casitas and, further afield, to Palacio Nazarenas in Cusco.
One logistical note worth flagging: from 21 April to 4 November, the hotel is updating its glass façade. The operational programme continues during this period, but guests sensitive to construction presence should factor that window into their planning. Room categories, lounge access, and rooftop facilities remain active throughout.
For those building a longer Peru itinerary beyond Lima, the country's property landscape extends from Inkaterra Machu Picchu Pueblo Hotel in Machu Picchu and Sumaq Machu Picchu Hotel in Aguas Calientes to the Amazon-focused Delfin Amazon Cruises in Iquitos and Refugio Amazonas Lodge in Puerto Maldonado. Wellness-oriented properties include Willka T'ika Essential Wellness in Urubamba and the lakeside Titilaka in Puno. The full picture of Lima's hotel and restaurant options is covered in our full Lima restaurants guide.
For LVMH-era Belmond in other contexts, comparable properties that share the group's approach to location-led positioning include Aman Venice and, at the high-design end of the urban spectrum, Bvlgari Hotel Tokyo. Other high-credential urban hotels in different markets include Aman New York, The Fifth Avenue Hotel in New York City, Badrutt's Palace Hotel in St. Moritz, and Amangiri in Canyon Point.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What room should I choose at Miraflores Park, A Belmond Hotel, Lima?
- The Junior Suite at 484 square feet is the entry point and the largest standard room in its class in Peru, so there is no pressure to upgrade for space alone. For ocean views and lounge access, Club Class suites are the logical step, having been redecorated in 2014 with a cleaner contemporary finish. The Presidential Pool Suites add private plunge pools and butler service for guests who want the full Pacific-facing experience; the 93.5-point La Liste ranking reflects a property operating at a level where the top-tier suites are the most complete expression of that score.
- What makes Miraflores Park, A Belmond Hotel, Lima worth visiting?
- The clifftop position on Malecón de la Reserva is the primary argument: a heated rooftop infinity pool at the 11th floor with direct Pacific views, a restaurant oriented west for sunset, and a bar with a following among Lima residents rather than solely hotel guests. The 93.5-point La Liste 2026 score places it inside the top tier of South American urban hotels, and the all-suite format at approximately $610 per night means the baseline room is considerably larger than most Lima competitors at a similar price.
- Can I walk in to Miraflores Park, A Belmond Hotel, Lima?
- The hotel is set within Miraflores, one of Lima's most accessible and walkable districts, so the surrounding neighbourhood is easily reached on foot. As a property at this price point (approximately $610 per night) and with La Liste recognition, the hotel's restaurants and bar operate at a standard that draws Lima residents, but reservations are advisable for Tragaluz and Belo Bar, particularly at peak dining hours. For hotel stays, advance booking through official channels is the reliable approach given its standing in the city's premium tier.
- Is Miraflores Park, A Belmond Hotel, Lima better for first-timers or repeat visitors?
- First-time visitors to Lima benefit from the Miraflores address, which puts them close to the city's commercial, cultural, and dining core, and from in-house programming like pisco sour masterclasses and chef-led market tours that provide structured entry points to the city. Repeat visitors tend to have a clearer view of which tier of suite justifies the upgrade, and the Club Class executive lounge on the 10th floor is a detail that earns more value on longer stays. The 93.5 La Liste score at approximately $610 entry rate makes it a credible base regardless of visit number.
- What is the dining reputation of Tragaluz at Miraflores Park, and how does it compare to Lima's broader restaurant scene?
- Tragaluz operates within the Asian-Peruvian category, a cuisine that draws directly on Lima's Nikkei and Chifa traditions, both of which have roots going back more than a century in Peru. For a hotel restaurant, its position at a Belmond property scoring 93.5 on La Liste means it competes against a demanding local standard in a city that consistently ranks among South America's most serious dining destinations. Guests wanting to map Tragaluz against the broader Lima scene can consult our full Lima restaurants guide for comparative context across the city's restaurant categories.
City Peers
A quick peer list to put this venue’s basics in context.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Miraflores Park, A Belmond Hotel, Lima | This venue | ||
| Country Club Lima Hotel | |||
| Hotel B | |||
| Belmond Las Casitas | |||
| Atemporal | |||
| JW Marriott Hotel Lima |
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