Sardinia – six luxury resorts compared honestly and in detail
You’ve decided on Sardinia. Smart choice. But Sardinia is not one destination – it’s half a dozen completely different luxury experiences in one island, and the difference between the right hotel and the wrong one is the difference between the holiday of your life and an expensive lesson in choosing too quickly. This guide compares six of the finest resorts on the island by the criteria that actually matter: sport, wellness, family infrastructure, golf and the honest question of who will feel at home and who won’t.
Why Sardinia – and why choosing the right hotel changes everything
Sardinia does not do mediocre. When it gets something right – and it gets a great deal right – the result is genuinely exceptional, whether that’s a stretch of coastline, a plate of culurgiones pasta or a resort hotel. But the island is large enough, and varied enough, that choosing a hotel based on photographs alone is a gamble that experienced travellers tend to lose.
The six resorts in this comparison represent the full spectrum of what Sardinian luxury looks like in 2026. One of them – the Forte Village – has been voted best family resort in Europe so many times that the description has become almost redundant; it simply is what it is. Another – the Cala di Volpe – was designed by Jacques Couelle for the Aga Khan in 1963 and has never needed to update its position at the apex of Mediterranean glamour. A third – the Is Morus Relais – is the kind of Relais and Châteaux property where the staff know your name by the second morning and the 18-hole course begins at the garden gate. They are all excellent. They are not interchangeable.
Sardinia luxury hotels 2026 – compare and book the right property for you
Forte Village – Cala di Volpe – Valle dell’Erica – Is Morus – Chia Laguna – Capo d’Orso
Sardinia is the island where the water colour stops you mid-conversation. Where a plate of bottarga tastes like the sea distilled into something solid. And where the right hotel feels less like a place you’ve booked and more like a place you’ve found.
Forte Village Resort – the resort that redefined what a family holiday can be
5-Star – World Travel Awards Best Family Resort Europe – 50 hectares – 21 restaurants – 8 hotels – Pula
Forte Village Resort
S.S. 195 km 39.600 – Pula – southern coast of Sardinia – 40 km from Cagliari Airport
There are resorts that claim to be the best family resort in Europe. Forte Village actually is. The property has been winning World Travel Awards for family excellence for so long that the judges might as well retire the category. Fifty hectares of white-sand coastline near Pula contain eight hotels of varying star ratings, thirteen private-pool villas, 21 restaurants and bars, a Real Madrid Football Academy, the Wonderland children’s kingdom, a Thalasso spa, a tennis academy, an aquapark and a water sports centre. The genius of the concept is that it doesn’t make everyone do everything together. Children aged 2 to 12 disappear into the Mini Club (free of charge). Teenagers have their own programme. Grandparents head to the Acquaforte Thalasso spa. Parents lie by the pool and hear actual silence.
Hotel Cala di Volpe – the architecture and the glamour are the same thing
5-Star – The Luxury Collection (Marriott) – private beach – Costa Smeralda – Porto Cervo
Hotel Cala di Volpe
Costa Smeralda – 07021 Porto Cervo – northern Sardinia – 30 min from Olbia Airport
Jacques Couelle designed the Cala di Volpe as if it had always been there – as if a Sardinian fishing village had grown, over centuries, into exactly this shape of whitewashed arches, stepped terraces and shaded loggias. The result is a hotel that feels simultaneously ancient and extremely current, in the way that only genuinely good architecture can. The setting – a private cove of the Costa Smeralda with superyachts moored at anchor in the bay – does the rest. This is not a resort you choose for its sports programme. You choose it for the experience of being in a specific place that exists nowhere else on earth.
The practical offer is strong nonetheless. A private beach with full service, tennis courts, a fitness and health centre, water sports from the jetty, and the Pevero Golf Club – one of the most scenic courses in Sardinia – a ten-minute drive away. The gastronomic offer has been significantly elevated in recent years. But the Cala di Volpe remains, at its core, a couples’ hotel and a place where people come to sit on a terrace, look at the sea and understand why the Aga Khan chose this particular cove.
Valle dell’Erica Thalasso and Spa – where the sea is genuinely part of the treatment
5-Star – Thalasso and Spa – 4 pools – 7 restaurants – Santa Teresa di Gallura – Green Resort certified
Resort Valle dell’Erica Thalasso and Spa
Via Valle dell’Erica – 07028 Santa Teresa Gallura – northern tip of Sardinia – facing Corsica – 50 min from Olbia Airport
The Valle dell’Erica sits at the northernmost point of Sardinia, looking across the Straits of Bonifacio to Corsica. The Delphina Hotels group – Sardinia’s most thoughtful luxury operator in terms of environmental stewardship and regional authenticity – runs the property as a Green Resort, powered substantially by renewables, with a food and beverage programme built around Sardinian producers. The thalasso centre draws seawater from the Strait and uses it across a full range of Thalassotherapy treatments that are among the most medically sophisticated available in any Italian resort. The children’s and family programme is extensive without dominating the property.
Is Morus Relais – Sardinia’s finest address for the serious golfer
5-Star – Relais and Châteaux – 18-hole golf – private beach – 70 rooms – quiet atmosphere
Is Morus Relais
Via Is Morus – 09010 Santa Margherita di Pula – southern Sardinia – 35 min from Cagliari Airport
Is Morus is the hotel that Sardinia’s most discerning regular visitors tend to choose when asked where they actually stay when they’re not showing off. It is a Relais and Châteaux property with 70 rooms – small by the scale of many competitors on this list – with a private beach, a genuinely good restaurant, an elegant spa. The scale creates an intimacy that larger resorts cannot manufacture. The staff-to-guest ratio is high. The mood is one of considered quiet rather than managed entertainment.
Chia Laguna Resort – the resort where nature is the main event
5-Star – lagoon – dune landscape – protected natural area – water sports – family and sports focus
Chia Laguna Resort
Località Chia – 09010 Domus de Maria – south-west Sardinia – 50 min from Cagliari Airport
Chia is where southern Sardinia gets genuinely wild. The landscape around Chia – a system of dunes, a flamingo lagoon, juniper scrubland and some of the most dramatically beautiful coastline on the island – is protected by a nature reserve, and the Chia Laguna Resort has been built in sensitive adjacency to it rather than on top of it. The result is a resort where the view from the breakfast terrace includes flamingos if the light is right, where the dunes are a ten-minute walk from the pool, and where the water sports on offer match the quality of the conditions: consistent wind for windsurfers, clear water for divers, waves for body-boarders.
Capo d’Orso Hotel Thalasso and Spa – the northern luxury address that doesn’t shout about itself
5-Star – Thalasso and Spa – private beach – Baja Sardinia – 20 min from Porto Cervo – adults-focused
Capo d’Orso Hotel Thalasso and Spa
Via Capo d’Orso – 07021 Palau – northern Sardinia – 45 min from Olbia Airport
The Capo d’Orso is, in the clearest possible sense, a hotel for people who want the best of the Costa Smeralda without the crowd of Porto Cervo. It is twenty minutes from the most famous address on the island and feels, in high season, completely different – quieter, more personal, with a guest profile that leans toward couples, professionals on a genuine break and anyone who finds the social theatre of Porto Cervo slightly exhausting. The thalasso spa is the operational centrepiece, the private beach is exceptional, and the water in the cove below the hotel is the same translucent blue as everywhere else on this coastline. The Maddalena Archipelago – one of the most beautiful areas of open water in the Mediterranean – is accessible by boat from Palau, ten minutes away.
The comparison table – what each resort actually delivers
| Resort | Families | Couples | Sports | Golf | Tennis | Water sports | Spa / Wellness |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Forte Village | ★★★★★ | ★★★ | ★★★★ | – | ★★★★ | ★★★★ | ★★★★ |
| Cala di Volpe | ★★ | ★★★★★ | ★★★ | ★★★★ | ★★★ | ★★★★ | ★★★ |
| Valle dell’Erica | ★★★★ | ★★★ | ★★★ | – | ★★★ | ★★★★ | ★★★★★ |
| Is Morus Relais | ★★ | ★★★★★ | ★★★ | ★★ | ★★ | ★★ | ★★★★ |
| Chia Laguna | ★★★★ | ★★★ | ★★★★ | ★★ | ★★★★ | ★★★★★ | ★★★★ |
| Capo d’Orso | ★★ | ★★★★★ | ★★★ | ★★★ | ★★★ | ★★★★ | ★★★★ |
Who should stay where – six clear answers
Families with children of any age
First choice: Forte Village
No resort in Europe – not just in Sardinia – provides the breadth and quality of children’s infrastructure that the Forte Village delivers. Real Madrid Football Academy, free Mini Club from age 2, the Wonderland children’s kingdom, an aquapark, Thalasso spa for parents and 21 restaurants. The critical point: children under 13 stay free. If you are travelling as a family, there is no meaningful competition.
Couples without children
First choice: Cala di Volpe or Is Morus
For the most glamorous, architecturally extraordinary experience on the Mediterranean: Cala di Volpe. For the most intimate, personal and genuinely quiet luxury: Is Morus Relais. For thalasso wellness in a completely adult atmosphere in the north: Capo d’Orso. All three are exceptional; the choice depends on what you value most.
Golfers
Water sports enthusiasts
First choice: Chia Laguna or Forte Village
For the most varied and demanding water sports in the best natural conditions: Chia Laguna, where the wind in the south-west cove is consistent and the water is exceptional. For multi-sport (wakeboarding, water-skiing, tennis, football): the Forte Village has the most complete sports infrastructure of any resort in the comparison.
Wellness and thalasso focus
First choice: Valle dell’Erica or Capo d’Orso
Valle dell’Erica offers the most medically serious thalassotherapy programme in the north, with a family dimension. Capo d’Orso offers a more exclusively adult thalasso experience in a quieter setting. Both use genuine Sardinian seawater and both have excellent treatment menus. The Acquaforte at the Forte Village is also outstanding but sits within a large family resort environment.
Multi-generational groups
First choice: Forte Village
Grandparents, parents and children simultaneously – the Forte Village is the only resort on this list explicitly designed around this dynamic. Grandparents at the Thalasso spa, parents at the pool, children in the Wonderland – and everyone at the same dinner table. No other property in Europe manages this as well.
Getting to Sardinia – the airport question that every traveller should ask first
Sardinia has three international airports, and choosing the wrong one adds a significant transfer to a journey that doesn’t need one. The airport decision should be made at the same time as the hotel decision, not after.
Airport to hotel – the correct pairings
- Cagliari Airport (CAG): Use for Forte Village (40 km – 30 min), Is Morus Relais (35 km – 25 min) and Chia Laguna (50 km – 45 min). All southern coast properties.
- Olbia Costa Smeralda Airport (OLB): Use for Cala di Volpe (30 km – 30 min), Capo d’Orso (45 km – 45 min) and Valle dell’Erica (50 km – 50 min). All northern coast properties.
- Alghero Fertilia Airport (AHO): Useful for west coast properties and for budget connections – 2 to 3 hours from Cagliari or Olbia, so less practical for most itineraries in this guide.
- Direct flights from the UK: London (multiple airports), Manchester, Edinburgh to Cagliari and Olbia – approximately 2.5 hours – Ryanair, EasyJet, British Airways, Jet2.
- From the US and Middle East: No direct flights to Sardinia – connect via Rome (FCO), Milan (MXP/LIN), London or Frankfurt. Rome to Cagliari or Olbia takes approximately 1.5 hours.
- Car hire: All three airports have full car hire facilities – strongly recommended for all properties on this list.
When to visit Sardinia in 2026
- May and early June: The best-kept secret in Sardinian luxury travel. Temperatures 24–28°C, sea temperature rising, no crowds, significantly lower rates and better room availability. Ideal for golfers, thalasso guests and couples.
- July: High season in full swing – 28–32°C – all facilities operating – excellent choice for families and water sports.
- August: Peak of everything – maximum prices, maximum activity, maximum atmosphere. Book the Forte Village and Cala di Volpe at least 6 months ahead. The most memorable month to visit if you can afford it.
- September and October: The connoisseur’s choice – 26–30°C, warm sea, quiet, lower rates and the kind of unhurried pace that July and August can never offer. The best month for Is Morus, the Valle dell’Erica and Capo d’Orso.
Best Luxury Hotels in Sardinia 2026 – Golf, Tennis, Wellness and Water Sports
Sardinia has six exceptional resorts. One of them is yours.
Forte Village for families. Cala di Volpe and Is Morus for couples and golfers. Valle dell’Erica and Capo d’Orso for thalasso wellness. Chia Laguna for nature and water sports. Sardinia has the right five-star hotel for every kind of traveller. Choose carefully. Book early for 2026.
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