Guatemala

In Guatemala, neither clocks nor calendars seem to matter, as the country remains untouched by the passage of time. From its weathered colonial buildings to its untouched jungles, from its crystal-clear lagoons to its ancient Mayan ruins and pyramids, it is the diversity of its landscapes and culture that makes it truly one-of-a-kind.

tejido de alfombra de pascua en Guatemala
“Ouch! Guatemala, just saying your name brings me back to life…”

The marks of time undoubtedly point to it. The final home of the Mayan people, Guatemala, the most diverse country in Latin America, breathes freely, knowing that its essence lives on in the soul of its people and the heart of its powerful volcanoes.

Vista del lago Atitlán en verano
The fire of the Mayans continues to shine...

No matter what you’re searching for or what you expect, Guatemala always offers exactly what you need.

Ash and water

temporada

The best time to unwind on Guatemalan beaches and explore the country’s highlands is between January and April.

Tropical hot

Average 32°C

January to April

Warm days and cool nights

experiencias NUBA

Guatemala Semuc Champey

Adventure in the Guatemalan jungle

Cross the dense Guatemalan jungle in an unstoppable 4×4 to reach the natural monument of Semuc Champey, spectacular tiered pools of turquoise waters. Take a refreshing swim before entering the nearby caves to discover their secrets by torchlight.
Guatemala ciudad maya

Learning from the Mayas

Follow the teachings of the ancient Maya and gaze at the sky from the ruins of Uaxactún, an archaeological complex where the oldest astronomical observatories of this people are located.
Guatemala paraje recóndto

Profound discovery

Reaching the most remote and remote areas of Guatemala, where only a lucky few have been able to go. Travel by foot or helicopter to the Mayan city of El Mirador, drive by jeep to Rio Azul and Hol Mul or camp next to the local communities of Alaska and Quiché.

Historias de BITÁCORA

In Japan, luxury doesn’t speak. It listens. It lives in the pause between movements, in the scent of cedar after rain, in a cup of tea poured without a word. For centuries, the ryokan has embodied that quiet perfection — hospitality as ritual, simplicity as sophistication, and nature as architecture. Today, a new generation of ryokans is reimagining that heritage for the modern traveler. Some preserve the old ways untouched; others reinterpret them through design, gastronomy, and architecture that feel both timeless and entirely new.

Paradise isn’t one-size-fits-all. The same turquoise that soothes in the Maldives might thrill in Fiji or mesmerize in Bora Bora. For travelers in search of serenity, connection, or discovery, these islands promise beauty—but in very different forms. Choosing between them isn’t about geography. It’s about identity.

Paradise isn’t one-size-fits-all. The same turquoise that soothes in the Maldives might thrill in Fiji or mesmerize in Bora Bora. For travelers in search of serenity, connection, or discovery, these islands promise beauty—but in very different forms. Choosing between them isn’t about geography. It’s about identity.

There’s a new Mexico emerging—one that exists beyond the postcards and the predictable. For the modern traveler, Mexico is not just a destination but a state of mind: creative, layered, and alive with contrasts. It’s a country where design meets tradition, where centuries of culture coexist with a generation that’s redefining what modern luxury feels like.

For years, travel was measured by quantity—how far, how fast, how many stamps in a passport. But the new luxury traveler is unlearning that rhythm. Slow travel isn’t about distance or duration; it’s about presence. It’s the art of staying long enough to listen, of letting a place unfold instead of consuming it.

Luxury yachting is no longer about the yacht itself—it’s about what it allows you to experience. Privacy, rhythm, and perspective. A return to travel where time bends to your will and the horizon becomes your only itinerary. Across the Mediterranean, the Indian Ocean, and the Pacific, a new generation of vessels is redefining what it means to explore the world by sea.

Guatemala