Aman announced its first Mexico property, location unspecified but confirmed for the Riviera Maya corridor. The brand that made $2,000 nightly rates acceptable for sparse minimalism in Bhutan and Utah now enters a market where Rosewood Mayakoba commands $1,400 per night and still runs 78% occupancy year-round. The move arrives without fanfare or a timeline, which is the method: Aman does not open hotels, it curates scarcity.
The announcement came alongside Conrad Tulum's pivot to an all-inclusive model, a format Aman has never touched and likely never will. Conrad's shift signals Hilton's acknowledgment that Tulum's $600-$900 nightly independent villa market has hit saturation. Aman operates in a different altitude. Its 34 properties worldwide average 40-60 keys each. Mexico's ultra-luxury hospitality market sees 18-22% annual revenue growth in the $1,000+ segment, per STR data through Q3 2024. That growth has been captured almost entirely by independents and small groups. Aman's entry is the first time a brand synonymous with $3,000+ nightly rates and single-digit occupancy targets has committed to the region.
The second-order effects are immediate. Rosewood Mayakoba, which pioneered the $1,200+ Riviera Maya category in 2008, now faces a brand that taught Chinese private-equity principals and Gulf family offices to associate price with curated absence. Four Seasons Punta Mita, 320 kilometers northwest, has held the Pacific Mexico ultra-luxury anchor for 22 years. Aman's Caribbean arrival suggests the brand sees higher density of its core client in the Tulum-Playa del Carmen airlift than in Punta Mita's jet-charter-dependent model. Worth noting: Tulum International Airport opened in December 2023 with 12 international routes. Aman does not chase infrastructure; it waits for infrastructure to validate demand it already identified.
Conrad's all-inclusive conversion is the countermove. Hilton is acknowledging that the $600-$900 traveler now expects bundled value, not itemized luxury. The all-inclusive model, long dismissed by ultra-luxury operators as a cruise-ship concession, has been reengineered by Auberge, Belmond, and Six Senses into a $1,500+ daily format that removes friction without removing margin. Conrad's execution will test whether Hilton's operational scale can compete with boutique groups in a segment where staff-to-guest ratios above 2:1 are table stakes. Aman, meanwhile, operates at ratios closer to 3:1 and has never disclosed food and beverage revenue separately, suggesting those costs are embedded in nightly rates so high they obviate the all-inclusive question entirely.
Operators should watch Aman's site selection, expected to surface within 6-9 months based on the brand's historical announcement-to-disclosure pattern. The property will likely sit on 20+ beachfront acres with fewer than 50 keys, a formula that has worked in Turks and Caicos and the Dominican Republic for smaller brands but never at Aman's price point in Mexico. Allocators eyeing Caribbean hospitality development should note that Aman's presence will bifurcate the market: properties above $1,500 nightly will see halo lift; properties at $800-$1,200 will face new pressure to justify their positioning. Conrad's all-inclusive pivot is the first visible strain.
Aman has opened 4 properties since 2022, including Rosa Alpina in Italy's Dolomites and a New York urban flagship. Mexico is the first true beach market the brand has entered in 8 years. The Riviera Maya had 47 luxury hotel openings between 2020 and 2024, per Lodging Econometrics. Aman will be the first where occupancy below 40% is considered operational success.
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