Casa de las TiasvsHotel Grano de Oro
Both hotels are rated very highly by those who travel for a living. On balance, Hotel Grano de Oro San Jose is preferred by most reviewers compared to Casa de las Tias. Hotel Grano de Oro San Jose ranks #2 in Costa Rica with recommendations from 2 reviews including The Telegraph, Lonely Planet.
Casa de las Tias
Apdo 295-1200, San Rafael de Escazu 33102, Costa Rica
From $72/night
- Free Internet
- Free Breakfast
- Free Parking
- Multilingual
- Breakfast included
- Breakfast buffet
Fodor's
"The full range of city services is at your doorstep here, but you're blissfully apart from them at this tranquil bed-and-breakfast at the quiet end of a short road." Full review
Lonely Planet
"In a quiet area of San Rafael, this yellow-and-turquoise Cape Cod–style house (complete with picket fence) has five immaculate, individually decorated rooms, all with private bathrooms." Full review
Hotel Grano de Oro
Calle 30, between avenida 2 y 4, San Jose 1007, Costa Rica
From $146/night
- Bar/Lounge
- Hot Tub
- Free Internet
- Room Service
- Laundry Service
- Concierge
The Telegraph
8.0
"This well-run, high-class heritage hotel is a favourite with international visitors looking for a characterful place to stop over in the capital before or after a tour of Costa Rica." Full review
Travel + Leisure
"Inside this converted Victorian mansion, guests will find 32 rooms with Italian tile work, wrought-iron beds, and whirlpool tubs." Full review
Frommer's
"The restaurant is one of the most reliably good places in town to dine and the chic rooftop patio with its two large Jacuzzi spas will almost make you forget you are in bustling San José." Full review
Lonely Planet
Top choice
"This elegant inn has 39 demure ‘Tropical Victorian’ rooms...boasts private courtyards with gurgling fountains, and a rooftop garden terrace offers two bubbling Jacuzzis." Full review
Travel + Leisure
"A 40-room boutique hotel on a quiet street...housed in a mansion from the early 1900s, the hotel feels like something from a bygone era with its elaborate wood paneling, handmade tiles"