Stone Town — the old quarter of Zanzibar City — is a UNESCO World Heritage Site of extraordinary cultural complexity, its labyrinthine streets of carved wooden doorways, coral rag walls, and Arab, Persian, Indian, and African architectural influences reflecting Zanzibar's position as the most important trading city of the western Indian Ocean for centuries. The Old Fort, the Sultan's Palace Museum, and the former slave market at Christ Church Cathedral narrate the island's complex history. Hotels in Stone Town are in some of the most atmospheric and historically layered accommodation in Africa.
Occupying a beautifully restored colonial mansion on the Stone Town seafront, the Park Hyatt Zanzibar is the island's finest historic hotel — 67 rooms blending Swahili heritage with contemporary luxury and a dhow harbour panorama from every sea-facing room.
A refined resort of private pool villas on the south-east coast — 66 villas in a coconut grove leading to a pristine beach, with one of the island's best spa programmes and a restaurant that draws guests from across the island.
A spectacular Arabic-Zanzibar palace resort of 30 private pool villas — Baraza is defined by extraordinary architectural beauty, with carved plasterwork, Arabic arches, and a beach terrace that looks like a film set.
A design-driven resort of treehouse-style chalets scattered through a forest of palms and baobabs above Kendwa Beach — Zuri's rustic-meets-chic aesthetic and beach club make it Zanzibar's most Instagram-photographed property.
Zanzibar's most characterful boutique hotel occupies a beautifully restored 19th-century merchant house in the heart of Stone Town — 11 individually decorated rooms and the famous rooftop tea house with its three-storey Stone Town views.
Kilindi's 15 sculptural sphere-domed villas set in botanical gardens above Kendwa Beach make it one of Africa's most architecturally remarkable resorts — adults-only, intimate, and genuinely extraordinary.