Mövenpick Resort & Spa

Top choice in Dead Sea


This pleasantly green haven boasts a river that ambles through the village-style complex of rustic two-storey apartments. Wooden screens and balconies allow guests to enjoy sea or garden views in private, while secluded seating areas around a superb infinity pool add to the ambience. The Zara Spa is particularly well-regarded.

Culinary high points include the Al Saraya buffet restaurant, a Thursday night barbecue and a prodigious Friday brunch. The Mövenpick charges nonguests JD50 for access to the pools, beach and buffet (couples and families only) and an extra JD50 for access to the spa.


Lonely Planet's must-see attractions

Nearby Dead Sea attractions

1. Amman Beach

1.22 MILES

This public facility goes under the full title of Amman Beach Tourism Resort, Restaurant & Pools. The beach, 2km south of the main resort strip, gives…

2. Oh Beach

2.6 MILES

This private beach, stepped down the hillside in a series of landscaped terraces and infinity pools, is a great way to enjoy the Dead Sea in comfort…

3. Dead Sea Museum

6.03 MILES

For a solid introduction to the geology, history and environment of the Dead Sea, spare an hour for this museum.

4. Dead Sea Panoramic Complex Lookout

6.04 MILES

Walk among cacti to this lookout, high above the Dead Sea, and then watch raptors wheel in the wadis below, and you will have to pinch yourself to think…

5. Qumran National Park

7.66 MILES

World-famous for having hidden the Dead Sea Scrolls for almost 2000 years, Qumran was the site of a small Essene settlement around the time of Jesus –…

6. Ein Feshkha

7.9 MILES

Fed by crystal-clear springs, this lush oasis stretches for 6.5km along the base of the escarpment that forms the western edge of the Dead Sea valley…

7. Wadi Jadid Dolmen Field

7.92 MILES

More terraced fields than wadi, Wadi Jadid is locally renowned for its remarkable collection of early Bronze Age burial chambers and stone memorials…

8. Tell Elias

8.24 MILES

Tell Elias is where Elijah is said to have ascended to heaven, although there is little to see here. The rebuilt arch marks the 5th- to 6th-century…