Pickalbatros Palais Des Roses, Agadir: An Honest Beachfront Resort Review
First-hand notes from the opening night, the before-and-after, and why I now rate it Agadir’s best all-inclusive
I knew Palais des Roses before it became Pickalbatros Palais Des Roses Agadir. That matters, because this is not a review written from a brochure or from a fresh set of hotel photos. I stayed at this building roughly five years before the Pickalbatros renovation, and I was also invited as a guest tour operator to the official reopening on 23 May 2025. I have seen both versions of this property — and honestly, the comparison is not even close.
The old Palais des Roses had location, scale and potential. It always did. The building sat on one of Agadir’s best beachfront positions, with the Atlantic in front, wide resort grounds and the kind of structure that could have been magnificent. But potential is not the same as quality. At the time, the hotel had real operational problems — the showers were not good enough, the air conditioning was not reliable enough, and the service level did not match what the building promised.
That is why the new version matters. After Pickalbatros took over and rebuilt the property, Palais Des Roses stopped being a hotel with potential and became a hotel with purpose. This is my honest first-hand review — from the opening night, through the before-and-after I personally witnessed, to where the hotel now sits in the Agadir all-inclusive market.
How I know this hotel personally
I attended the official reopening of Pickalbatros Palais Des Roses on 23 May 2025 as a guest tour operator. I’ve also stayed at the building in its previous incarnation roughly five years earlier — before the Pickalbatros takeover and the full renovation — so I have a direct before-and-after view that very few people in the UK travel trade have.
My direct contact at the property is Sara, the Sales Director of Pickalbatros Palais Des Roses (and also Sales Director of Pickalbatros White Beach Taghazout, the sister property along the coast). She fact-checked the property details cited in this review ahead of publication. The editorial line — pros, cons, recommendations — is entirely mine.
The 23 May 2025 opening night
I’ve been to a lot of hotel openings across the Mediterranean and North Africa over the past twenty-eight years. Some are elegant but cold. Some are loud but not organised. Some put more effort into the ribbon-cutting than into the actual guest experience. This one was different.
Pickalbatros went big. The whole pool area was set up for the reception, with lighting around the lagoons, music programmed through the night, the entertainment team in full Moroccan show mode, and senior leadership visible throughout the evening.
And then there was the buffet.
A long buffet running the length of the lagoon pools — themed Moroccan stations alongside international hot dishes, fresh seafood, a live carving station, dessert tables under the palms. It was not just an opening-night formality. It was a message. Pickalbatros was not treating Palais Des Roses as a simple rebrand — they were trying to bring a major Agadir asset back to life.
What stood out to me as a tour operator wasn’t the spectacle itself — it was the operational confidence behind it. You can tell within twenty minutes whether a newly-opened hotel is held together with sticky tape or whether the operating team has its act together. This one had its act together. Staff knew their stations, kitchens were producing volume without slipping standards, and the senior leadership was visible and engaged throughout the evening. That tells me a lot about how the property will run for a paying guest in week five or week thirty-five of its operating season — not just on opening night.
The renovation: what Pickalbatros actually changed
The Pickalbatros renovation isn’t a refreshed wallpaper job. They’ve gone through the building at a level that addresses the structural quality issues I personally experienced when I stayed here five years earlier. The rooms I saw on the opening night are a different product entirely:
- New bathrooms with proper rainshowers across the room categories — the single most visible improvement compared to the old Palais des Roses, where weak showers had been one of the consistent guest complaints.
- New HVAC throughout — air conditioning that actually copes with Agadir’s summer heat, which sounds basic until you remember it was the previous hotel’s biggest operational weakness.
- Redesigned lagoon pool zones — new layout with better deck-to-water ratio, proper sun-lounger density and a pool-bar service plan that works at high-season volume.
- Refreshed restaurant venues — new finishes across the main buffet and à la carte spaces, plus operational re-staffing aligned to the Pickalbatros chain’s all-inclusive playbook.
- Renewed public areas and beachfront zones — lobbies, corridors, garden walks and beach zones all consistent with the new Pickalbatros design language.
Renovation alone doesn’t make a good hotel — you can spend a lot of money and still get an underwhelming product if the operating team isn’t right. What makes this one different is that Pickalbatros has brought both the capital investment and the operating depth of a chain that’s been running multi-restaurant all-inclusive resorts for years. That’s the bit that’s hardest to fake. This isn’t a cosmetic touch-up — it’s a property reset.
My honest verdict, up front
In my view, Pickalbatros Palais Des Roses is now the strongest all-inclusive five-star in Agadir — full stop. That’s a personal opinion based on direct experience, not a paid endorsement. The reasoning is set out section by section below. If you only read one part of this article, this is the headline: it’s a different hotel to what was there before, and the new version is among the best beachfront all-inclusives in Morocco.
What kind of hotel is it now?
Pickalbatros Palais Des Roses is a large beachfront all-inclusive resort. It is not a riad. It is not a small boutique hotel. It is not a quiet hidden retreat. It is a proper resort hotel, built for guests who want facilities, convenience and a holiday that mostly works inside the hotel.
The location is a major advantage. Agadir is one of Morocco’s best beach destinations for UK travellers because it is easy, sunny, relaxed and practical. The seafront is long, the beach is wide, the climate is kind, and the city gives enough Moroccan character without overwhelming first-time visitors. The hotel fits that destination well — it gives Agadir the kind of all-inclusive product that many UK families already understand from Egypt and Turkey, but with Morocco’s Atlantic coast, Moroccan food and a softer North African rhythm.
Current TripAdvisor scorecard
Pickalbatros Palais Des Roses, Agadir
4 of 5 · 985+ traveller reviews since the reopening · reopened May 2025
What that means in context
Holding a top-five ranking in a 106-hotel competitive set within a year of reopening is unusually strong — most renovated properties take two to three seasons to settle.
A note on TripAdvisor positions: they move week to week, and a higher ranking doesn’t automatically mean a hotel sells more or operates better — rankings reflect review volume and sentiment within a moving competitor set. What matters for Pickalbatros Palais Des Roses is the trajectory. Coming out of a full renovation and a chain takeover, the property has built its current ranking from a standing start in its first operating season — that’s a meaningful signal of guest satisfaction at scale, not a marketing claim.
Location and getting there
| Pickalbatros Palais Des Roses, Agadir | |
|---|---|
| Address | Boulevard Abdelkrim El Khatib, Quartier Founty, Agadir |
| Agadir-Al Massira Airport (AGA) | ~12 miles / ~25 minutes by transfer |
| Agadir Beach (direct) | ~5-minute walk via private path |
| Agadir Marina | ~1.9 miles |
| La Grande Roue d’Agadir (Ferris Wheel) | ~1.4 miles |
| Paradise Valley | ~1.9 miles (then onward up into the Atlas foothills) |
| District | Founty — the upscale beachfront residential zone of Agadir Bay |
The Founty location matters. Agadir is a long bay city, and not every five-star sits in the same kind of neighbourhood. Founty is the quieter, residential beachfront end — close enough to the marina, the souk and the corniche for guests who want to explore, but set back from the louder city-centre noise. Twelve miles to the airport keeps the transfer short, which is a quiet but real benefit on a one-week beach break.
Property scale and accommodation
| Pickalbatros Palais Des Roses, Agadir | |
|---|---|
| Total rooms | ~288 rooms across the renovated property |
| Standard category | Standard Room — refreshed finishes, balcony, climate control, flat-screen TV, mini-bar |
| Ocean view options | Ocean View Rooms — balcony facing the Atlantic |
| Deluxe and direct-pool | Deluxe Rooms and Deluxe Rooms with Direct Pool Access (shared lagoon pool, ~3 ft depth) |
| Top suite | Prestige Suite — spacious layout with butler service and VIP lounge access |
| Family options | Family-sized rooms with interconnecting layouts on request |
| Architecture | Traditional Moroccan design language — arches, geometric tiling, garden courtyards |
The standard rooms are the workhorse of the property and are where I’d expect most UK package guests to book. They’re where the renovation lift is most visible compared to the previous incarnation — new rainshowers, proper HVAC, refreshed finishes, balconies that actually feel finished. The Deluxe Direct Pool Access rooms are a strong sweet spot for couples who want to step out of the bedroom into a shared lagoon pool without paying suite money. The Prestige Suite is genuinely special if you’re celebrating an occasion — the dedicated butler service is the kind of touch I rarely see executed properly in this category, and Pickalbatros does it well.
Pools, beach and Africa’s largest thalassotherapy centre
This is where the property earns its position in the Agadir market. Three things matter here, and the hotel does all three at a high standard.
The lagoon pools
Two large lagoon-style outdoor pools sit at the centre of the property, fringed by Bali beds, daybeds and parasols. The pool layout was redesigned as part of the renovation — the water-to-deck ratio feels generous, you’re not fighting for a lounger at 9am, and the pool bar service is well-staffed. There’s an indoor pool and a heated outdoor option for the cooler months too — Agadir is warm year-round but evenings in December and January can drop, and a heated pool matters for the British half-term and Christmas market.
The beach
Agadir Beach is a five-minute walk from the property via a private path — sandy, wide, and part of the famous Agadir corniche that runs the length of the bay. The hotel maintains a private area with sunbeds and parasols for guests during the high season. The beach itself is public and busy in July and August — if you want a totally exclusive private beach experience, that’s a different product category, but for guests who like the energy of a real Atlantic coast resort beach with a quieter hotel zone to return to, this is the right balance.
The thalassotherapy centre
This is the hotel’s genuine differentiator. The thalasso centre at Palais Des Roses is one of the largest in Africa — not a small spa with a pool, but a full thalassotherapy operation with seawater pools, jet hydrotherapy, marine treatments, traditional Moroccan hammam, sauna and steam circuits. Agadir has historically been one of the leading thalasso destinations in Morocco, and Palais Des Roses sits at the top end of that segment. For guests booking a wellness-led week — couples on a relaxation break, post-illness recovery, or general wellness travel — this is a significant reason to choose this property over comparable beachfront five-stars in the city.
Restaurants and the all-inclusive experience
The all-inclusive board at Pickalbatros Palais Des Roses is where the chain’s operational depth really shows. Pickalbatros has been running multi-restaurant all-inclusive resorts in Egypt for years and has brought that operating playbook to Agadir.
| Restaurant category | What’s included |
|---|---|
| Main international buffet | Three-meal-a-day buffet operation — breakfast, lunch, dinner. Hot stations, cold stations, salad and bread bar, dessert station. Themed evenings rotating through the week. |
| Moroccan à la carte | Traditional Moroccan dining — tagines, couscous, pastilla, mezze. The dish I’d single out is the slow-cooked lamb tagine, which is excellent. |
| Mediterranean à la carte | Italian-leaning Mediterranean — pasta, grilled fish, antipasti. |
| International à la carte | Steaks, grills and broader international plates for guests who want a Western-style evening meal. |
| Pool, beach and lobby bars | Themed bars across the property, including a pool-side bar with all-day drinks service and a beach bar for daytime sun-loungers. |
| Breakfast options | Continental, full English, buffet hot stations, fresh juice bar. |
Standout points from a guest experience angle: the Moroccan à la carte is properly Moroccan — not a watered-down international interpretation. The main buffet keeps quality up at dinner volume, which is the real test of an all-inclusive operation. Halal options are standard across all venues, and the kitchen handles allergies and dietary requests well if you flag them at check-in. À la carte restaurants may operate seasonal capacity limits and may require advance reservations during peak periods.
Kids and families
Families are a serious part of the Agadir all-inclusive market — UK schools holidays, German half-term breaks and French Easter weeks all converge here. Pickalbatros Palais Des Roses caters for the family segment well:
- Kids Aqua Park — colourful slides, water games and splash zones designed for younger children.
- Kids’ club with daily activities run by the Pickalbatros entertainment team.
- Family-sized rooms and interconnecting options on request.
- Kid-friendly buffet at breakfast and dinner with familiar dishes and lower counter heights.
- Pool depth zones — shallower areas for younger children alongside the deeper main pool.
One honest note: this property works very well for families with school-age children. For families with babies and toddlers under two, you’ll need to confirm specific provision (cribs, baby food, pool supervision rules) at booking — standard infant provision is in place but the property positions more towards age 4+ for its kids’ programming.
Why I now rate this Agadir’s best all-inclusive
This is my view, and I want to be clear it’s a view — not an objective ranking. But here’s why I hold it:
- The renovation actually fixed the structural problems. A lot of Moroccan four- and five-stars have refreshed their lobbies and pool decks without addressing the underlying room quality issues. Pickalbatros has done the full job — bathrooms, HVAC, room finishes, pool zones, restaurant venues. The product is genuinely new.
- The all-inclusive operation is run by people who know how to run all-inclusive at scale. Pickalbatros has been doing this in Egypt for years. That operating depth shows up in food quality at peak volume, bar service consistency, and entertainment programming that doesn’t fall apart mid-season.
- The thalasso is a real differentiator. Most Agadir five-stars have a spa. Few have a thalasso operation at this scale. For wellness-led travel, this is a category leader, not a category participant.
- The location works for the type of guest who books Morocco from the UK. Founty is the right neighbourhood — quiet, beachfront, walking distance to the corniche and the marina, short transfer to the airport.
- The leadership is engaged. Having Sara as a direct sales contact for both this property and Pickalbatros White Beach Taghazout means we get straight answers, fast pricing, and proper handling of group bookings. That’s a tour operator’s perspective, but it translates directly into how well a property looks after individual guests too.
Could a different five-star in Agadir win on one specific axis? Of course — you can find pricier ultra-luxury options, you can find adults-only properties, you can find resorts with bigger water parks. But on the combination of renovation quality + all-inclusive operating depth + thalasso + location + price point, this is the strongest combined proposition I see in the Agadir market right now.
Useful booking notes — honest caveats
Every hotel has trade-offs. Here’s what I’d want to know before booking, as a paying guest:
- Beach access is via a short walk, not direct steps from the pool deck. Five minutes is genuinely five minutes, but if you specifically want a hotel where you step from the lounger straight onto sand, this isn’t that.
- The hotel is large. Around 288 rooms, full all-inclusive operation, multiple pools and restaurants — if you prefer small, boutique, twenty-room properties, this is the wrong category for you.
- Agadir Beach is public. The hotel maintains a private area with sunbeds, but the beach itself is part of the wider Agadir corniche. In July and August it’s busy. That’s part of the destination — not a hotel issue — but worth knowing if you’ve mainly stayed at fully private-beach resorts in other destinations.
- À la carte restaurants may carry advance reservation requirements during peak weeks — book in early at check-in if you have specific evenings planned.
- Atlantic Coast weather is cooler than the Mediterranean. Agadir is warm year-round but the Atlantic breeze keeps it temperate — mid-30s °C in summer rather than the high-30s you get inland or in the Eastern Mediterranean. Brilliant for a beach holiday where you want to be active. Worth knowing if you’re comparing directly with Hurghada or Antalya for July heat.
- Pets are not accepted.
Strong fit for
- Families wanting an Agadir beach all-inclusive — with pools, beach access, the Kids Aqua Park, and children’s facilities working alongside the wider resort programme.
- UK travellers who like Egypt-style resort convenience but want Morocco — the same all-inclusive logic you know from Hurghada or Sharm, transplanted to Morocco’s Atlantic coast with a softer climate and a different cultural texture.
- Winter-sun travellers — Agadir is one of the most reliable November-to-March beach destinations for UK travellers, and this hotel is set up to operate properly in that low season.
- Wellness-led guests — one of Africa’s largest thalassotherapy centres on site makes this a destination property for thalasso travel, not just a hotel with a spa.
- Couples wanting beachfront resort comfort — Deluxe with Direct Pool Access and Prestige Suite categories give couples meaningful product differentiation without going to villa pricing.
- Multi-generation family bookings — the all-inclusive structure plus child-focused facilities give grandparents, parents and children different things they each want.
Less suitable for — honestly
Where this hotel won’t be the right pick:
- Guests wanting a small, intimate property. This is a 288-room operation. The energy and pace fit a confident traveller who wants the buzz of a full resort — not someone seeking quiet seclusion.
- Adults-only buyers. Pickalbatros Palais Des Roses is a family-and-couples mixed property. If you want an adults-only environment, you’ll want a different category of hotel.
- Guests who want completely private beach with no public access nearby. The beach is a public Agadir Beach — the hotel zone is private within that but the wider beach is the city’s public corniche.
- Wellness travellers who want a destination spa with no resort noise. The thalasso is excellent, but it sits inside an active all-inclusive resort — if you specifically want a stand-alone wellness retreat with library silence, that’s a different product.
- Marrakech-riad seekers. If your Morocco trip is built around medina walks, courtyard hotels and small-house Moroccan atmosphere, this is the wrong category — it’s a beachfront resort, not a cultural city stay.
How I would book it
- Book the room category carefully. Ocean View and Deluxe with Direct Pool Access categories are worth the upgrade — the Atlantic setting and the lagoon pool concept are part of why this hotel works as a product. Standard rooms are good, but the upgraded categories are where the experience moves from “nice resort holiday” to “genuinely special.”
- Don’t compare it directly with Turkey ultra all-inclusive. Morocco runs at a different rhythm. Judge this as a strong Moroccan beachfront all-inclusive, not as Antalya or Belek. The food, the bar service and the entertainment programme are excellent for the destination — just calibrated to Morocco, not to Turkey.
- Families should confirm bedding and connecting-room setup at booking. Make sure the room works properly for the number and age of children travelling — this is worth ten minutes on the phone with our team before you book, especially for travel parties of five and above.
- Use the hotel as a resort base, not just a place to sleep. The pools, beach, thalasso, dining and family facilities are part of the value — if you barely use them and only sleep in the room, you’re overpaying for the category. Pick a different hotel for a city-explorer trip.
- Pre-book your thalasso treatments. Africa’s largest thalassotherapy operation is a real draw, but treatment slots in peak season can book up. Talk to our reservations team about pre-booking specific therapies alongside the room.
Why this hotel matters for Agadir — beyond just one property
Hotels like this matter beyond their own four walls. When a major group takes a tired property and brings it back properly, the destination benefits. Agadir gains stronger beds in the five-star inventory. Tour operators get a better product to sell. UK guests get more genuine choice in a market that needed it. That’s why I think Pickalbatros deserves credit here — they didn’t just add a sign to the building, they brought an important Agadir hotel back into serious circulation.
Agadir has always been one of Morocco’s most accessible beach destinations — warm year-round, easy three-and-a-half-hour flight from the UK, no language barrier in tourist zones, and a culture that’s open and welcoming. What it has historically lacked is enough confidently-run all-inclusive five-stars that UK families can book without research anxiety. Pickalbatros Palais Des Roses changes that. It’s a property UK guests can book on a clear category understanding — family-friendly five-star beach resort, all-inclusive board, thalasso on site — without needing to investigate ten different operating standards first.
A thank-you to Pickalbatros and Mr Kamal Abu Ali
A note from me personally as a tour operator: properties like the old Palais des Roses can sit in a tired state for years if no one steps in. What Pickalbatros has done here matters for two reasons.
First, they’ve given us — GoToBeach and the wider European travel trade — a genuinely good product to sell to our customers. That’s not a small thing. There aren’t many fully-renovated, well-run five-star all-inclusives in this category in Agadir right now.
Second, they’ve brought a previously underperforming property back into the active Moroccan tourism inventory. That’s good for Agadir, good for the local employment around Founty, and good for the broader Morocco tourism positioning.
So a sincere thank-you to Pickalbatros Hotels & Resorts and to the group’s chairman Mr Kamal Abu Ali — both for the quality of the renovation itself and for the operating standard the team is now holding day-to-day. We’re proud to sell this hotel to our UK guests.
Frequently asked questions
Is Pickalbatros Palais Des Roses Agadir really worth booking?
In my view, yes — and I say that as someone who stayed at the building in its previous incarnation and saw the difference first-hand. The Pickalbatros renovation has addressed the structural quality issues the property used to have, and the all-inclusive operation is run by an experienced chain. For couples and families looking at a five-star Agadir beach holiday with thalasso, this is currently my top recommendation in the city.
1. When did Pickalbatros Palais Des Roses Agadir open?
The property reopened under the Pickalbatros chain on 23 May 2025 following a full renovation. The building itself existed previously as Palais des Roses but operated to a noticeably lower standard before the takeover and rebuild.
2. Is Pickalbatros Palais Des Roses on the beach?
The property is on the Founty stretch of Agadir Bay with private guest access to Agadir Beach via a short five-minute walking path. It is a beachfront property in the broader sense — the beach is within walking distance — but the pool deck does not sit directly on the sand. The hotel maintains a private guest area on Agadir Beach with sunbeds and parasols during the high season.
3. How far is Pickalbatros Palais Des Roses from Agadir Airport?
Approximately 12 miles from Agadir-Al Massira Airport (AGA) — around a 25-minute transfer by road. This is a short and easy transfer compared to many other North African and Mediterranean beach destinations, which is one of the quiet advantages of choosing Agadir over more remote resort locations.
4. Is Pickalbatros Palais Des Roses good for families?
Yes, particularly for families with school-age children from around age 4 upwards. The Kids Aqua Park is a genuine highlight, the kids’ club programme runs daily activities through high season, family-sized and interconnecting rooms are available, and the buffet operation handles family dining well. For babies and toddlers under two, standard infant provision is in place but I’d recommend confirming specific cribs, baby food and pool supervision rules at the time of booking.
5. What is the thalassotherapy centre like?
The thalasso centre at Pickalbatros Palais Des Roses is one of the largest of its kind in Africa — not a small spa with a pool, but a full thalassotherapy operation with seawater pools, jet hydrotherapy, marine treatments, traditional Moroccan hammam, sauna and steam circuits. Agadir has long been one of Morocco’s leading thalasso destinations, and this property sits at the top end of that segment. It’s the single biggest reason wellness-led travellers should consider this hotel specifically over other Agadir five-stars.
6. What is the all-inclusive board like?
The all-inclusive plan covers breakfast, lunch and dinner across the main buffet, à la carte dinners at the Moroccan, Mediterranean and international restaurants, plus pool, beach and lobby bar service throughout the day. Themed evenings rotate through the week. Halal options are standard. The slow-cooked lamb tagine at the Moroccan à la carte is excellent. À la carte restaurants may carry advance reservation requirements at peak times.
7. Is Pickalbatros Palais Des Roses suitable for couples?
Yes. The Deluxe Rooms with Direct Pool Access are a particularly good sweet spot for couples who want a step-out-of-the-bedroom-into-the-pool experience without paying suite rates. The Prestige Suite, with butler service and VIP lounge access, works well for occasion travel — anniversaries, honeymoons, milestone birthdays. Just note that the property is a mixed family-and-couples resort, not adults-only.
8. What is Agadir weather like compared to Antalya or Hurghada?
Agadir benefits from a cooler, more temperate Atlantic climate than Antalya or Hurghada — mid-30s °C in peak summer rather than the high-30s and 40s you can get in the Eastern Mediterranean or Red Sea coast. Year-round it’s warm, with very rare cool spells in winter evenings. For UK guests who find peak Antalya or Hurghada summer heat oppressive, Agadir is genuinely more comfortable in July and August.
9. Can I book Pickalbatros Palais Des Roses Agadir with flights and transfers?
Yes — the hotel is available through GoToBeach as an ATOL-protected flight-inclusive package holiday under licence 11211, trading as Caria Holidays Ltd. Packages include flights to Agadir-Al Massira Airport, accommodation and resort transfers. Cabin baggage is usually included with most fares but allowance varies by airline and route; hold luggage typically carries an additional charge. For group bookings — families, couples travelling together, wellness groups — we coordinate the bookings on the same itinerary where possible.
10. What is GoToBeach’s deposit and payment structure for this hotel?
The standard GoToBeach booking structure applies: a £30 per person deposit plus the cost of your flights at the time of booking (flights are dynamically priced and seats are secured immediately at booking). The remaining balance — covering the hotel stay, transfers and any extras — is split into instalments leading up to your departure date. We’ll set out the exact instalment schedule on your booking confirmation.
11. Why does GoToBeach recommend this hotel specifically?
Two reasons. First, I’ve been at the property both before and after the Pickalbatros renovation and the lift is genuine — this is now one of the strongest five-star all-inclusive products in Agadir. Second, we have a direct working relationship with Sara, the property’s Sales Director, which means we get accurate pricing, fast confirmation, and real handling of any guest issues during travel. That direct line is part of how GoToBeach’s focused five-destination specialism (Turkey, Greece, Malta, Morocco, Egypt) works in practice.
Book Pickalbatros Palais Des Roses, Agadir through GoToBeach
Talk to our Morocco product team. We’ll quote your exact dates, room category and board basis — ATOL-protected flight-inclusive packages under licence 11211, with the direct property relationship that lets us confirm bookings cleanly.
Call +44 208 211 00 01 Email info@gotobeach.co.ukGoToBeach is a Mediterranean and North African holiday specialist focused on five destinations we know personally: Turkey, Greece, Malta, Morocco and Egypt. ATOL-protected flight-inclusive packages under licence 11211, Caria Holidays Ltd. Trading address: 12 Savoy Parade, Southbury Rd, Enfield EN1 1RT. Hotel facilities, room categories and TripAdvisor rankings are subject to change — please confirm at the time of booking. This article was written by Thomas Kaplan, Product Manager at GoToBeach, based on direct first-hand experience of the property both before and after the Pickalbatros renovation.
