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The Deluxe City View Room offers stunning views of the city or Jeddah fountain. It has a spacious layout with a desk and sofa, perfect
The Deluxe Sea View Room offers a splendid view of the sea from its high floor. It features a king-sized bed and can accommodate up
The Executive Sea View Suite offers a luxurious experience with its stunning ocean view. This spacious 1-bedroom suite features a king-size bed and two bathrooms.
The Club Deluxe City View Room offers a city view and includes access to the Club lounge. It features a guest room with two Twin/Single
The Junior City View Suite is located on a High Floor - 10th and above and offers a comfortable and spacious one-bedroom space with a
The Executive City View Suite offers a luxurious and spacious 1-bedroom layout with stunning city views. With two bathrooms, including a marble one with a
The Royal Club Suite offers a residential-style layout with two separate living rooms. It has a balcony that overlooks the Jeddah fountain. The suite includes
The Ritz-Carlton Jeddah stands on Al Hamra Corniche, facing the Red Sea and the King Fahad Fountain. The hotel has a stately presence, with arches, grand interiors, marble, high ceilings, and a formal sense of arrival that suits its waterfront setting. It is a large luxury hotel shaped by Saudi hospitality, sea views, event spaces, and a location that connects business travel, family stays, and journeys through Jeddah toward Makkah.
The location gives the hotel much of its character. Al Hamra Corniche is one of Jeddah's most recognizable waterfront areas. It has views toward the Red Sea and the fountain that has become a symbol of the city. The water, evening lights, and broad roads along the coast create a different mood from the denser inland districts.
From the hotel, guests can reach business addresses, shopping malls, cultural sites, and the historic area of Al Balad with a clear plan. Jeddah is a gateway city, shaped by trade, pilgrimage routes, family life, and the Red Sea. The Ritz-Carlton sits within that mix as a polished base for guests who need both comfort and access.
The Corniche also gives the stay a slower evening rhythm. Guests can return from meetings or city visits and still feel close to the water. That coastal setting helps the large hotel feel less enclosed.
The building has a palatial tone. Its exterior and public rooms draw on classical forms and Arabic detail. Large volumes feel ceremonial rather than casual. The lobby gives the first strong impression: polished floors, arches, decorative patterns, and a sense of scale that matches the hotel's role as a major Jeddah address.
Inside, the atmosphere is formal but warm. Service is attentive and measured. The rhythm suits business guests, families, events, and travelers spending time in the city before or after religious or regional journeys. The hotel does not feel small or intimate. It is built for space, privacy, and a sense of occasion.
Rooms and suites look toward the Red Sea, King Fahad Fountain, or the Jeddah cityscape. The design draws on Middle Eastern detail, with rich fabrics, warm tones, carved patterns, and polished finishes. Large windows bring in light and make the view part of the stay, especially in sea-facing categories.
Rooms are spacious and classic in style. Beds are generous. Seating areas are comfortable. Desks make the rooms practical for business travel. Bathrooms continue the formal mood with marble, deep finishes, and a sense of space. The rooms are not minimal. They are designed to feel grand, calm, and rooted in the local setting.
Suites add more room for living, dining, and hosting. Many layouts include separate sitting areas and larger bedrooms, which suit families, longer stays, or guests who want a more residential rhythm. The strongest suites are those that frame the sea or fountain. In those rooms, the view becomes the quiet center of the stay.
Reyhana is one of the hotel's main dining rooms, with a menu that draws on Saudi, Moroccan, Mediterranean, and regional flavors. The restaurant works for breakfast, lunch, dinner, and seasonal gatherings. Buffet settings and live cooking stations add energy to the room.
The food reflects Jeddah's position as a coastal and trading city. Guests can move from Arabic mezze to Mediterranean dishes, grilled items, salads, and desserts. During Ramadan and Eid, the restaurant becomes especially important. Meals are shaped around family, tradition, and the social rhythm of the season.
Saltz brings a more refined dining mood, inspired by the Red Sea and by the role of salt, seafood, and regional ingredients. The room has a polished tone and suits a slower dinner, a business meal, or a formal evening inside the hotel. Its menu focuses on seafood, meat, and carefully prepared dishes with a clear sense of place.
Karamel Lounge softens the experience with afternoon tea, pastries, cakes, coffee, and conversation. It is one of the hotel's most relaxed public spaces, useful for meeting family, pausing between appointments, or ending the day with dessert. Bab Al Bahr adds an outdoor Corniche mood, with a setting designed for evening air, drinks, shisha, and views near the waterfront.
The spa is reserved for gentlemen and uses a calm, traditional design language. Treatments draw on ingredients such as Taif rose and Red Sea salt, giving the wellness experience a local identity. The setting includes treatment rooms, relaxation areas, and a quiet atmosphere that contrasts with the scale of the public spaces.
The fitness center supports a more active stay, with dedicated times and spaces shaped around local customs. Wellness at the hotel is not presented as a destination resort experience. It works as a composed pause within a large city hotel, especially after business meetings, travel, or time outside in Jeddah's heat.
The Ritz-Carlton Jeddah is also a major events address. Its meeting rooms, ballrooms, and convention spaces are designed for conferences, weddings, corporate gatherings, and formal celebrations. The scale is one of the hotel's defining features, and it helps explain the grand public rooms and ceremonial sense of arrival.
This event focus gives the hotel a lively public rhythm. At one moment it may serve business travelers moving between meetings. At another, it may host a family celebration or a large seasonal gathering. The rooms and suites provide the quieter counterpoint, while the restaurants and lounges connect guests to the social life of the property.
Jeddah is a Red Sea city with deep trading history, a changing skyline, and a strong connection to Makkah. Al Balad brings old coral-stone houses, narrow lanes, and heritage texture. The Corniche brings sea air, public art, and evening walks. Modern Jeddah adds malls, offices, restaurants, and new cultural projects.
The Ritz-Carlton Jeddah fits this layered city through scale, formality, and location. Its strongest qualities are its Corniche address, sea and fountain views, grand interiors, dining range, event capacity, and calm rooms. It gives guests a polished place to return to after moving through a city shaped by water, commerce, family gatherings, and pilgrimage routes.
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