Los Cabos’ luxury glow-up is nowhere near finished. In fact, it’s about to hit another level.
According to new reporting, at least nine high-end hotels and resorts are scheduled to open in Los Cabos between now and 2030, adding roughly 1,000 new rooms to an inventory of about 21,700 rooms across 185 properties today. By the end of the decade, that takes Cabo to 194 hotels and resorts—still small compared to mega-destinations, but packed with some of the biggest luxury names on earth.
Here at The Cabo Sun, we’ve been tracking this wave for years, and the message is clear: Cabo isn’t chasing size. It’s doubling down on quality over quantity—and these nine new openings prove it.

Cabo’s Next Chapter: 9 New Resorts, Same Boutique Feel
On paper, “1,000 new rooms” doesn’t sound huge. That’s kind of the point.
Los Cabos has already been crowned a super-luxury capital for Latin America, with brands like Ritz-Carlton, Four Seasons, Waldorf Astoria, and Nobu anchoring the scene. Instead of building wall-to-wall towers, the destination is layering in low-density, high-touch properties that match its dramatic landscapes.
The new class includes:
- Park Hyatt Los Cabos at Cabo del Sol – Openings are finally underway, with 163 rooms and suites, five pools, and a massive 59,000-square-foot wellness complex along the scenic corridor less than 7 miles from Cabo San Lucas.
- Soho House Los Cabos – A highly exclusive members-focused outpost at Cabo del Sol with just 15 casas/casonas plus residences and villas.
- St. Regis Los Cabos at Quivira – A long-awaited 120-room resort with 60 residences on Quivira’s Pacific bluffs, now tracking for a 2026 debut.
- Amanvari (Costa Palmas, East Cape) – An ultra-intimate Aman retreat with only 18 stilted casitas and projected nightly rates around US $3,000, set inside the Costa Palmas development on the East Cape.
- Grand Hyatt Los Cabos at Oleada – A 300-room resort built around a new Ernie Els golf course on the Pacific coast, expected by late 2026.
- Conrad Los Cabos at Oleada – A 130-room, 40-residence Hilton luxury entry designed by famed firm Arquitectos Legorreta, due by 2027.
- SIRO Palmilla – A performance-and-recovery focused wellness brand from Kerzner (One&Only’s parent), bringing a 120-room “Recovery Lab” resort to Palmilla Reserve in 2027.
- Delano East Cape – A design-forward lifestyle resort with 117 guestrooms, 60 residences, and 100 meters of Sea of Cortez beachfront, targeting 2029.
- Raffles Estera East Cape Resort & Residences – Raffles’ first North American resort, slated for 2029 on the East Cape, with 80 guestrooms and 46 residences.
If you’ve been feeling like Cabo is everywhere in luxury travel news lately, this is why.

Where The New Luxury Is Landing (And How Each Area Feels)
For travelers, the most helpful way to look at this boom is by coastline rather than by brand. Each cluster has a very different vibe.
Cabo del Sol (Tourist Corridor)
Park Hyatt and Soho House are turning Cabo del Sol into one of the corridor’s hottest upscale enclaves. Park Hyatt has already been flagged by Forbes as one of the world’s most anticipated openings, a sign of how global the buzz has become.
If you want modern architecture, serious spa time, and quick access to both Cabo San Lucas and San José del Cabo, this stretch is going to be prime real estate.

Quivira & Oleada (Pacific Coast)
On the Pacific side, St. Regis at Quivira plus the twin Grand Hyatt and Conrad resorts at Oleada will create a golf-and-sunset powerhouse. Think Jack Nicklaus and Ernie Els courses, clifftop views, and more ballrooms and event spaces for weddings and groups.
We’ve already shown how these luxury names are choosing Cabo over other Mexican beach hubs in our deep dive on why six luxury brands are debuting in Los Cabos first, and this Pacific cluster is a big part of that story.

Palmilla Reserve
Just over a mile from the iconic One&Only Palmilla, SIRO Palmilla will lean hard into fitness, biohacking, and recovery—cryotherapy, vibroacoustic beds, infrared and oxygen therapy, and chef-led nutrition.
If your perfect Cabo trip is sunrise workouts, spa days, and early nights, this is the one to watch.
East Cape (Costa Palmas & Beyond)
Then there’s the East Cape—the quiet superstar of this entire list.
Amanvari, Delano East Cape, and Raffles Estera will deepen what we’ve already called the “new center of gravity for ultra-luxury” in Los Cabos, anchored by Costa Palmas and the existing Four Seasons.
This is your zone if you want swimmable, calmer Sea of Cortez water, yacht marinas, and serious privacy instead of nightlife. Just know that roads are more remote, and you’ll want to plan transfers and day trips carefully.

What This All Means For Your Cabo Vacation
So, how does any of this actually help you plan your trip? A few big takeaways from our team:
1. Expect prices to stay premium—but also more choice.
With ultra-lux brands entering, Cabo is firmly positioned as a luxury destination first. That said, more competition can mean softer shoulder-season deals and “new-opening” offers, especially in the first year of a resort’s life. Our piece on why Forbes is watching Park Hyatt already hinted at this pattern, and we expect it to repeat.
2. Book early for 2026–2029 if you want the shiny new toys.
Aman, St. Regis, Raffles, Delano, and SIRO all fall into the “bucket list” category, and prime dates will vanish fast—especially holidays and long weekends. In our coverage of Los Cabos beating Cancun for luxury debuts, we’ve already seen how demand spikes around big openings.
3. Don’t sleep on the existing icons.
While everyone chases the newest resort, long-established favorites often keep quietly winning the “most booked” charts. We’ve already analyzed which resorts dominate Cabo bookings for 2025, and that list isn’t going out of style anytime soon.
If you’d rather not gamble on a soft-opening, those proven properties are a smart play.

4. Match the coast to your travel style.
With so much inventory coming online across different areas, step one is deciding which side of Cabo fits you best—Corridor convenience, Pacific drama, or East Cape seclusion. If you’re stuck, we built a dedicated vibe tool and guide to help you figure out which area of Los Cabos you should stay in and then match you with a resort in seconds.
Bottom line:
Los Cabos is getting nine new high-end resorts by 2030, but this isn’t a Cancun-style hotel explosion. It’s a carefully curated wave of Park Hyatt, St. Regis, Aman, Raffles, Delano, and more that will give travelers more ways than ever to do Cabo their own way—whether that’s cliffside butler service, holistic recovery labs, or a stilted casita on a quiet East Cape bay.
And we at The Cabo Sun will be here on the ground, checking them out for you as the doors open.
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Duke Noor
Sunday 16th of November 2025
NOT GOOD at all. Los Cabos infrastructure is already strained and all this will make the area even more crowded and uncomfortable for visitors. The Corridor is a nightmare as it is, with many accidents, deaths and traffic snarls. It's a very dangerous road, especially at night, and by adding 9 more resorts will be a nightmare. Adios to the "Real Baja" of Cabo that most of your longtime visitors remember. Hasta la Vista !!!