This Toes-in-the-Sand Hotel on Belize’s Placencia Peninsula Has Beachfront Suites, a Private-Pool Villa, and Rooms From $110

By: - June 1st, 2026
maya beach belize
It's right on the sand.

The Maya Beach Hotel might be the best boutique value on Belize’s Placencia Peninsula.

A small, beachfront boutique hotel on one of the most beautiful stretches of coast in Belize. A villa with its own private pool. Rooms with names like “Flip Flop Palace” and “Dreamsicle House.” And direct walk-out access to the sand.

That’s the Maya Beach Hotel — a small, design-forward beachfront resort on the Placencia Peninsula in southern Belize, and one of the more distinctive boutique values on Central America’s Caribbean coast right now.

It’s also sitting at a notable rate. The Maya Beach Hotel currently has rooms starting at $110 per night, according to what we found on Google Hotels — a remarkable price point in a destination where comparable boutique properties on the Placencia Peninsula typically run $250 to $500 per night, and where the better-known luxury resorts in the area can push past $1,000 per night during the peak winter season.

That’s for a property that has become one of the more interesting small-format hotels in Belize, set directly on the beach at the mile-15 mark on the Placencia main road, midway down the peninsula in the quieter Maya Beach stretch of coast.

The hotel is small by design, with a range of room categories including beach-standard rooms, apartment-style suites, beachfront suites and a three-bedroom villa — all built around the relaxed, barefoot, beachfront feel that has made the Placencia Peninsula one of the more talked-about emerging destinations in Belize. Most rooms come with direct beach access, ocean views, private balconies or terraces, air conditioning, smart televisions and complimentary wireless internet. The atmosphere across the property leans toward an unhurried, off-the-grid feel that has become increasingly hard to find in the wider Caribbean.

We particularly like the property’s named room categories — including the Flip Flop Palace beachfront suites, the Dreamsicle House, and the Turtle Tide Villa, which has its own private pool and is one of the more distinctive accommodations on the peninsula. The villa categories in particular punch well above the property’s overall price point, with the kind of expansive layouts and dedicated outdoor space that travelers normally pay several multiples of this rate for elsewhere on the Placencia Peninsula.

The pool, the beach bar and the casual common areas have a similarly relaxed feel, with the kind of small-property, owner-operator attention to detail that travelers familiar with Belize’s boutique hotel scene will recognize. The on-property restaurant, The Bistro, is a useful addition, serving meals throughout the day on the beach and by the pool.

The location works particularly well for a quick Belize trip because the resort is just five miles from Placencia Airport (PLJ), with a roughly 15-minute drive between the runway and the property. That makes it possible to land and be at the beach within an hour of arrival — a meaningful advantage on the Placencia Peninsula, where the alternative route from Belize City by ground can otherwise run four hours or more. Most travelers connect into Placencia Airport via a short hop from Belize City’s Philip S.W. Goldson International Airport, which is served by nonstop flights from across the United States on American Airlines, United Airlines, Delta Air Lines, Southwest Airlines and others.

The Placencia Peninsula itself is one of the more interesting stretches of coast in Belize — a narrow, 16-mile spit of land that runs south from the mainland along a calm, west-facing strip of the Caribbean Sea, with the lively, walkable village of Placencia at its southern tip, a stretch of mid-peninsula boutique hotels and beachfront villas through the middle, and a quieter, more residential stretch at its northern end. The peninsula’s combination of accessibility, beach, dining and proximity to one of the most celebrated reef systems in the world has made it one of the most-talked-about emerging destinations in Central America.

The Maya Beach Hotel sits in the heart of the peninsula’s middle stretch — quiet enough to feel like a real escape, close enough to the rest of the peninsula to make day trips easy. Placencia Village, at the southern end of the peninsula, is a 15-minute drive away, with its lively dining scene, weekend markets, dive shops, art galleries and waterfront bars. The slightly artier village of Seine Bight, just to the south, is even closer.

Beyond the peninsula, the property is within easy reach of some of the best diving, snorkeling, fishing and inland adventures in the country. The Belize Barrier Reef, a UNESCO World Heritage Site and the second-largest barrier reef in the world, sits just offshore, with a string of small offshore cayes including Laughing Bird Caye, Silk Cayes and the increasingly buzzy Ranguana Caye all reachable by day-trip boat from the peninsula. The Cockscomb Basin Wildlife Sanctuary, the world’s first jaguar preserve, sits inland about an hour from the property. And the Maya ruins of Lubaantun and Nim Li Punit are within a similar drive.

Summer has become one of the most underrated times to be in Belize, with warm water, lighter crowds and rates at small-format boutique hotels that drop well below peak-winter pricing. The wet season in Belize is more measured than in some other parts of the Caribbean, with most of the rain falling in brief afternoon bursts that leave the rest of the day clear. The water temperature stays warm year-round, the snorkeling and diving on the reef stay strong, and the destination’s signature wildlife experiences — including the famous whale shark season at Gladden Spit, which runs from March through June — line up well with the early-summer travel window.

At the Maya Beach Hotel, the rooms have a relaxed, residential, distinctly Caribbean feel — natural materials, walk-out access to the sand, big balconies and the kind of laid-back atmosphere that has made the Placencia Peninsula one of the most-talked-about emerging destinations in Central America.

The pricing makes the property especially attractive as a base for the destination’s broader appeal — diving, fishing, snorkeling, jungle expeditions, Maya ruins, beach time and a barefoot peninsula lifestyle that punches well above the rate.

If you’re looking for a quick trip to Belize this summer, this is one of the more compelling boutique values on Central America’s Caribbean coast right now.

About the author

Caitlin Sullivan began her career with Caribbean Journal as Arts and Culture editor before shifting to travel full time. She writes frequently on the Caribbean cruise industry, flight networks and broader travel news. Her most frequent Caribbean destination? Nassau.
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