



A 16th-century former convent on Calle Nazarenas, Palacio Nazarenas is Cusco's only hotel with a heated outdoor pool at altitude — a detail that signals its wellness orientation as clearly as its World's 50 Best Hotels ranking (#87, 2025). Belmond's approach here favours oxygen-enriched suites, butler service, and preserved colonial fabric over scale, placing it in a tighter peer set than the city's larger luxury conversions.

Colonial Stone, Rarefied Air
Cusco's premium hotel market is built almost entirely on adaptive reuse: convents, palaces, and administrative buildings from the Spanish colonial period, layered over Inca stone foundations that predate them by centuries. The question for any property in this category is not whether the architecture is compelling — it almost always is — but how thoughtfully the conversion handles the tension between preservation and comfort at 3,400 metres above sea level. At Palacio Nazarenas, a Belmond Hotel Monasterio-adjacent property operating under the same Belmond group, that tension is resolved in a specific direction: toward wellness infrastructure positioned as the primary rationale for choosing this address over its neighbours.
The building itself dates to the 16th century, originally constructed as a convent on Calle Nazarenas, a short walk from Cusco's Plaza de Armas. What distinguishes the physical fabric here from comparable conversions , including the Inkaterra La Casona or the JW Marriott El Convento Cusco , is the cloister courtyard that anchors the property's wellness offer. The outdoor heated pool installed within that cloister is, by the commonly cited account, the only one of its kind among Cusco's luxury hotels. That single infrastructural detail shapes a stay here materially differently from the alternatives.
The shortlist, unlocked.
Hard-to-book tables, cellar releases, and concierge-planned trips.
Get Exclusive Access →Altitude and the Case for Oxygen-Enriched Rooms
High-altitude hospitality operates under a constraint that most luxury markets simply don't have to consider: acclimatisation. Cusco sits at roughly 3,400 metres, and for guests arriving from sea level , whether from Lima, London, or New York , the first 24 to 48 hours frequently involve headache, fatigue, and disrupted sleep. The standard hotel response is a welcome cup of coca tea. The premium response is architectural: oxygen-enriched suites, which Palacio Nazarenas provides across its room inventory.
Oxygen supplementation in hotel rooms at altitude is not a gimmick. At properties that deploy it seriously, the system raises the effective oxygen concentration in the sleeping environment, which measurably reduces the discomfort of altitude sickness for many guests. Heated bathroom floors and butler service, the other two comfort signals the property leads with in its positioning, matter less physiologically but contribute to the broader logic: this is a hotel that treats acclimatisation as a design problem, not an unavoidable inconvenience. That framing sits at the centre of why Palacio Nazarenas occupies a different tier in the Cusco market than properties of comparable architectural merit but more standard amenity sets, such as the Palacio del Inka, a Luxury Collection Hotel.
The Wellness Orientation in Practice
Globally, the segment of luxury travel built around restorative programming has expanded significantly over the past decade. Properties like Amangiri in Canyon Point have demonstrated that a wellness-first positioning can generate sustained demand at price points well above comparable properties in the same geography. In Cusco, where the underlying guest motivation is often a physical undertaking , trekking to Machu Picchu, visiting remote archaeological sites, navigating significant altitude changes , the wellness frame has a more direct operational logic than it does in, say, a city hotel.
Palacio Nazarenas applies that logic through the spa facilities and pool access embedded in the cloister, through the oxygen supplementation in suites, and through a service model built around butlers rather than a conventional concierge desk. The butler model, common at properties like Aman New York or Bvlgari Hotel Tokyo at the leading end of the global market, allows the property to customise itineraries, meal timing, and acclimatisation schedules at the individual guest level rather than through standardised programming. At altitude, that flexibility has a concrete value beyond its luxury signal.
For guests using Cusco as a base for the Sacred Valley , a pattern that also draws visitors toward Explora Valle Sagrado in Urubamba or, further afield, Inkaterra Machu Picchu Pueblo Hotel , the practical case for a recovery-oriented base hotel is direct. Days that include significant elevation gain and physical output benefit from a return environment with functional oxygen support, heated floors during cold Andean evenings, and the kind of on-demand service that can arrange a late dinner without a standard reservation window.
Where Palacio Nazarenas Sits in the Cusco Hierarchy
Cusco's luxury hotel market in 2025 occupies a clear two-tier structure. The broader tier includes brand-managed conversions with international loyalty programme access , the Marriott and Luxury Collection properties, and Tambo del Inka, a Luxury Collection Resort and Spa in the Sacred Valley. The upper tier is smaller, comprising properties where the conversion itself is the competitive asset: Belmond Hotel Monasterio, Inkaterra La Casona, and Palacio Nazarenas. Within that upper tier, Palacio Nazarenas positions itself through the wellness infrastructure rather than, say, the restaurant or bar programming that might distinguish a comparable urban luxury hotel.
The recognition that supports this positioning is concrete. In 2025, the property ranked 87th on the World's 50 Best Hotels list, a ranking that operates on a peer-voted methodology and tends to reflect consistent guest experience rather than a single exceptional season. La Liste's 2026 hotel rankings assigned 93 points, placing Palacio Nazarenas in the upper band of that publication's Peruvian coverage. Both signals confirm a peer set that extends beyond Peru: at this level of recognition, the relevant comparisons include CIRQA in Arequipa, Atemporal in Lima, and internationally, the kind of design-led, low-key-count properties represented by Casa Maria Luigia in Modena or Aman Venice.
Planning a Stay
Cusco's high season runs roughly from May through October, when dry weather makes trekking conditions most reliable and the Inca Trail's permit allocation fills months in advance. Palacio Nazarenas, given its ranking and the limited scale typical of converted colonial properties, warrants advance booking well ahead of that window. Guests arriving at any time of year should factor in a first-night acclimatisation buffer: the oxygen-enriched suite infrastructure is designed partly for this purpose, and scheduling any physically demanding activity for day two or later is standard advice at altitude. The address on Calle Nazarenas places the hotel within walking distance of the Plaza de Armas and the central archaeological sites, which reduces the need for transport on low-activity acclimatisation days. For those extending a Peru itinerary beyond Cusco, the regional options worth considering include Titilaka in Puno for Lake Titicaca access, Delfin Amazon Cruises in Iquitos for the rainforest corridor, and Hotel Paracas, a Luxury Collection Resort, Paracas on the Pacific coast. For a full picture of dining, drinking, and activity options in the city itself, see our full Cusco restaurants guide, our full Cusco bars guide, our full Cusco experiences guide, and our full Cusco hotels guide for how Palacio Nazarenas compares across the full range of options. You can also explore our full Cusco wineries guide and Sumaq Machu Picchu Hotel in Aguas Calientes for staging your onward journey to the citadel.
The shortlist, unlocked.
Hard-to-book tables, cellar releases, and concierge-planned trips.
Get Exclusive Access →Frequently Asked Questions
A Credentials Check
Comparable venues for orientation, based on our database fields.
| Venue | Awards | Cuisine | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Palacio Nazarenas | La Liste Top Hotels: 93pts | This venue | |
| JW Marriott El Convento Cusco | |||
| Palacio del Inka, a Luxury Collection Hotel | |||
| Tambo del Inka, a Luxury Collection Resort & Spa | |||
| Belmond Hotel Monasterio | |||
| Inkaterra La Casona |
Preferential Rates?
Our members enjoy concierge-led booking support and priority upgrades at the world's finest hotels.
Get Exclusive AccessThe shortlist, unlocked.
Hard-to-book tables, cellar releases, and concierge-planned trips.
Get Exclusive Access →