Primasol Miramar Hammamet
Rooms at this large hotel are big and nicely decorated...
Rooms at this large hotel are big and nicely decorated...
It's a bit of a surprising sight, this beautiful looking faux palace hotel, one of the classiest in the ...
The five-star Palm Beach is not nearly as unique or elegant as the Dar Charait, but it has all the facil...
This is no Disney-like Alladin hotel...
This is up to the usual luxurious standard of the Abou Nawas chain, beachside, with green grounds, attra...
This small, well-maintained three-star hotel has plain rooms with satellite TV...
Part of the Golden Yasmin hotel chain, the Sun Palm looks like an imposing fort from the outside but a s...
The ashtray architecture of the chandelier sets the scene at this glitzy, refurbished business-oriented ...
The flashy Sinbad gets good reviews...
A bit out of the way, the White House has a rare amount of character: elaborate furnishings in light, br...
A 10-room designer hotel, with furnishings by Starck and Arad, and some wonderful North African contempo...
Typical of four-star hotels in Tunisia, room décor receives little attention compared to the time it mus...
More luxurious than its neighbour the Sun Palm, the el-Mouradi boasts an enormous glitzy domed lobby and...
Once you pass through the entrance of the imposing fortress façade, the Mehari Douz opens up onto a wond...
Formerly part of the Novotel chain, this hotel 2km west of the medina on the way to the airport is a rap...
With attractive, spacious, unfussy rooms with balconies, this is a great choice...
The Paris has small and sparse rooms with shared facilities, which is a shame since the sunny terrace ha...
Hôtel Novelty This establishment, very centrally located, has 26 bright and airy rooms, all of them simply furnished but neat and clean. Watch out for the low ceiling over the staircase.
Don't judge this hotel by its stars - four are too many and the rates are high for rooms that are far from posh.
Hôtel Mamia The windows of the simple, clean rooms open onto a plant-filled courtyard, where you'll find the showers. The management may make you feel as if you're inconveniencing them.
Easily the best choice in Gabès, the Rahma has small, modern, well-kept rooms with cable TV. The only downside is not much natural light makes it into the rooms.
In a shady location in the palmeraie of Petit Jara, this government-run youth hostel provides typical bare-bones accommodation with, on average, seven to nine beds a room. There's a large canteen that will serve up grub for groups.
Dramatically framed by two towering palm trees that reach to the 5th floor rooftop, the Atlantic's ornate colonial façade is best seen at night when, like an aging movie star its flaws are harder to see.
Hôtel de la Paix The bottom of the barrel as far as accommodation in the Ville Nouvelle goes, La Paix is well located and cheap.
This place has 20 light and airy rooms - the better ones have pretty tile floors and high ceilings, the cheaper ones are spartan and have an old-fashioned feel.
The Chems is a better choice than the next door Oasis though it too suffers from grandiose ambitions, maybe best exemplified in its very own small bowling alley.
This hotel doesn't have much going for it besides its central location and cheap price tag but for many that's enough. It's been around since the ‘20s and it shows in the chipped paint and less-than-comfortable beds. Bathrooms are shared.
Hôtel La Plage Clean, small and central, the nicest rooms here have balconies overlooking the street. The entrance has some crazy fibreglass seashell action but otherwise the reception is dour.
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