Mylome Luxury Hotel & Resort
Mylome Luxury Hotel & Resort punches well above Alanya's typical all-inclusive offering. Opened in 2023, it brings a modern, genuinely luxurious product to a destination better known for budget package holidays. The 9.6 Booking.com score is legitimate — the climbing wall, beach yoga, multi-floor swim-up rooms, and private pier DJ parties genuinely set it apart. The main caveats are the 90-minute airport transfer, spa treatments at extra cost, and a la carte restaurants that are not truly included for shorter stays. An excellent choice for couples and families who want Turkey luxury without Belek's higher prices.
Mylome Luxury Hotel & Resort Review: Alanya’s Newest Luxury All-Inclusive
If you have been looking at all-inclusive resorts in Turkey and noticed Alanya’s reputation for cheap-and-cheerful package holidays, Mylome Luxury Hotel & Resort is the property that should make you reconsider. Opened in 2023 and sitting on a private stretch of Mediterranean coastline in Okurcalar — a quieter pocket about 20 minutes east of central Alanya — Mylome has managed something rare: it brought genuine luxury to a budget destination and earned a 9.6 on Booking.com in the process.
With 454 rooms across a striking 13-story tower, six restaurants, six bars, three beach bars, an aquapark, a climbing wall, and swim-up rooms spread across multiple floors, this is a resort that clearly spent serious money getting the details right. But “ultra all-inclusive” comes with some fine print here, and that fine print matters. Let me walk you through exactly what you are getting — and what you are not.
Quick Verdict
Who it’s for: Couples wanting modern Mediterranean luxury without Belek’s price tag, and families who want a resort that genuinely caters to kids (aquapark, kids’ club, family rooms) without sacrificing adult sophistication.
Worth it? Yes — if you book 7 nights to unlock the included a la carte dinner and request a high-floor sea-view room. For shorter stays, the value proposition weakens because those specialty restaurants will cost extra.
Score: 8.6 / 10
Pros and Cons
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| 9.6 Booking.com score — genuinely earned | 90-minute transfer from Antalya Airport |
| Brand new (2023) — everything is pristine | A la carte dining costs extra for stays under 7 nights |
| Swim-up rooms on floors 1, 4, and 7 | Spa treatments are all extra cost |
| Climbing wall and beach yoga included | Closed November through March |
| Private pier with DJ parties | Not every room gets a clear sea view (13-floor tower) |
| Heated adults-only pool (16+) | Some guests report surprise extra charges |
| Quieter Okurcalar location | 130km from Antalya — far from excursion hubs |
The Resort at a Glance
| Detail | Info |
|---|---|
| Location | Okurcalar, Alanya — eastern Antalya Province, Turkey |
| Rooms | 454 across 13 floors |
| Restaurants | 6 (1 buffet, 4 a la carte, 1 teppanyaki show kitchen, plus snack bar) |
| Bars | 6 indoor bars + 3 beach bars |
| Pools | 5 outdoor (including aquapark) + 1 indoor |
| Beach | Private sand-and-pebble beach with pier |
| Airport | ~90 minutes from Antalya Airport (AYT) |
| WiFi | Free throughout |
| Year opened | 2023 |
| Season | Late March through mid-November |
Rooms and Suites
Mylome’s 454 rooms are spread across that 13-story tower, and your experience here depends heavily on which category you book. Every room comes with air conditioning, a 45-inch LCD TV, free minibar (refreshed daily), WiFi, and a balcony — but the view, size, and pool access vary dramatically.
Standard Rooms
The entry-level Standard Land View Room gives you 323 sq ft with a balcony overlooking the gardens. It is clean, modern, and perfectly functional — but you did not fly to Turkey’s Mediterranean coast to look at landscaping. The Standard Sea View Room is the same size but faces the water, and at roughly $480 per night in low season versus $430 for land view, the $50 upgrade is an absolute no-brainer. These rooms sleep two comfortably but feel tight for anything more.
The Standard Garden View Room splits the difference at 377 sq ft — slightly larger than both sea-view and land-view standards — with garden-facing balcony. At around $450, it is a decent middle ground if you want space over views.
Swim-Up Rooms
This is where Mylome genuinely innovates. Most resorts with swim-up rooms only offer them at ground level. Mylome has engineered shared pools on floors 1, 4, and 7, meaning you can step from your terrace directly into a pool on an elevated floor. The Superior Swim-Up Sea View Room (377 sq ft, from $600) is the sweet spot — request floors 4 or 7 for the elevated view combined with pool access. The Garden View swim-up version starts at $560 and sacrifices the sea panorama but still gets you that direct pool step-out.
Family Rooms
The Family Sea View Room at 538 sq ft is the largest standard category, with separate sleeping areas that give parents and kids some actual privacy. From $650 per night, it sleeps four. The Family Swim-Up Garden View Room (also 538 sq ft, from $700) combines the family layout with pool access — it is the most expensive standard category, but families who book it rave about the convenience.
Our Pick
The Superior Swim-Up Sea View Room on the 7th floor. At $600 per night in shoulder season, it delivers the resort’s most distinctive feature — multi-floor swim-up access — combined with elevated Mediterranean views that standard sea-view rooms three floors lower simply cannot match. It is one of the most interesting room concepts on Turkey’s coast.
Food and Dining
Mylome brands itself “ultra all-inclusive,” and the dining lineup is solid — but you need to understand the fine print before you book.
Main Buffet Restaurant
The open-all-day buffet is your included workhorse. Breakfast runs from 7:00 to 11:00 AM with live cooking stations, fresh pastries, and a reasonable international spread. Lunch follows a similar format. Dinner brings themed nights — Turkish night, Italian night, seafood night — with halal-certified options and gluten-free selections clearly labeled. The buffet is above average for Turkey’s all-inclusive scene: the live cooking stations elevate it beyond the standard steam-tray experience. That said, guest reviews are mixed on consistency. Early in the season (May, early June), the variety and execution tend to be sharper than during peak July-August crowds when the kitchen is serving 900+ people.
A la Carte Restaurants
Here is where it gets complicated. Mylome has four a la carte restaurants — Dragon (Far Eastern/Asian), La Gustosa (Italian), Octopus (Seafood), and a Turkish Restaurant — plus a Teppanyaki show kitchen. All require reservations. And here is the catch: they are not included in your rate unless you stay 7 nights or more, at which point you get exactly one complimentary a la carte dinner. For stays under 7 nights, every a la carte meal is an additional charge.
For a property marketing itself as “ultra all-inclusive,” this feels restrictive. Competitors like Rixos Premium Belek or Maxx Royal include a la carte dining for all guests regardless of stay length.
That said, the restaurants themselves deliver. Dragon is the standout — the sushi and Asian dishes are well-executed and a refreshing change from the Turkish-Mediterranean baseline. Octopus is worth it for the panoramic sea views alone; the seafood is fresh and the setting is genuinely romantic for couples. La Gustosa does competent Italian without reinventing the wheel. The Turkish a la carte is solid but, ironically, the buffet’s Turkish nights often cover similar ground.
If you book 7+ nights, use your one free dinner at Dragon or Octopus. Both justify the reservation effort.
Bars and Drinks
Nine bars across the property — six indoor lounges and three beach bars — keep drinks flowing from morning coffee to last-call cocktails. The beach bars are the highlight, with sunset views over the Mediterranean that rival any bar on Turkey’s coast.
The “ultra all-inclusive” label covers local spirits and standard international brands. Do not expect Grey Goose or Hendrick’s without a potential surcharge. Turkish raki and local beer flow freely; mid-range international spirits are included. Verify premium brand coverage at check-in to avoid surprises.
Food Quality Verdict
The buffet is solid — above Alanya’s average but not world-class. The a la carte restaurants are genuinely good, which makes their exclusion from shorter stays frustrating. For a resort scoring 9.6 on Booking.com, the food earns about an 8 out of 10 — reliable, occasionally excellent, but not the reason you book Mylome.
Beach and Pools
The Beach
Mylome’s private beach is a mixed sand-and-pebble stretch along the Okurcalar coastline. The Mediterranean water is clear, turquoise, and warm from June through October — it is gorgeous to look at and swim in. Sun loungers and beach umbrellas are included, and the resort has added beach cabanas for a more sheltered setup.
The private pier extending into the sea is Mylome’s signature feature. During the day it is a diving platform and photo spot. In the evenings, it transforms into an open-air DJ venue with music sessions over the water — genuinely atmospheric and unlike anything at neighboring resorts. The Okurcalar location means the beach is significantly less crowded than Cleopatra Beach in central Alanya or the packed strips around Side.
One note: this is not the powdery white sand of the Caribbean. The pebble mix is typical for Turkey’s eastern Mediterranean coast. Water shoes are helpful.
Pools
Five outdoor pools plus one indoor pool give you real variety here.
The Main Pool Complex is the social hub — swim-up bar, plenty of loungers, animation team running poolside games. It gets busy in peak season, especially around midday. The Heated Adults Pool (16+ age restriction) is the escape valve — genuinely quiet, heated for shoulder-season comfort, and blissfully free of cannonballing teenagers. If you are a couple without kids, this pool is your sanctuary.
The Aquapark with waterslides requires guests to be 7+ and gives families a dedicated zone of high-energy fun. A separate Children’s Pool with shallow water and smaller slides handles the under-7 crowd.
The Indoor Pool is a smart addition for early and late season when Mediterranean evenings cool down. A separate children’s indoor pool means families do not need to cut their pool time short when the outdoor temperature drops.
Activities and Entertainment
Daytime Activities
The climbing wall is Mylome’s most unexpected inclusion. It is rare for any Turkish all-inclusive to offer one, and it is genuinely fun — not just a token installation but a multi-route wall that will challenge even experienced climbers. Beach yoga classes run on the private beach and add a wellness angle that sets Mylome apart from the animation-heavy, drink-focused culture of most Alanya resorts.
Beyond those standouts: mini golf, beach volleyball, darts, table tennis, poolside games, and non-motorized water sports (snorkeling equipment and windsurfing gear included) round out the daytime lineup. Motorized water sports like jet skis cost extra.
Evening Entertainment
The resort has a genuine nightclub with live shows and concerts — not just a lobby bar with a guitarist. Pier DJ parties on select evenings are the highlight: dancing above the Mediterranean with the coast lit up behind you is a memory you keep. Themed nights, karaoke, and live music rotate through the weekly schedule.
This is not Ibiza, but it is considerably more polished than the average Alanya resort entertainment program.
Kids’ Club
MiniLome is the dedicated children’s club, offering structured activities, a games room, and supervised play. It is included in the rate and covers a reasonable age range. Combined with the aquapark, children’s pools, and family rooms, Mylome handles the family demographic well — better than most Alanya competitors, though it lacks the scale of dedicated family mega-resorts like Rixos Sungate.
Spa and Wellness
The spa facilities include a traditional Turkish hammam, multiple sauna types, a steam room, Jacuzzi, salt room, and private VIP massage rooms with aromatherapy treatments. Thai massage is specifically featured. The salt room is worth trying — it is a distinctive addition.
Here is the downside: nothing in the spa is included in your ultra all-inclusive rate. No complimentary hammam experience, no basic treatment, nothing. At Turkish competitors like Regnum Carya or Calista Luxury Resort in Belek, at least the wet facilities (hammam, sauna, steam room) are typically included. Mylome’s approach feels like a missed opportunity to live up to the “ultra” billing.
Pre-book treatments before arrival — the private rooms fill quickly during peak season.
What’s Included vs. Extra
| Included | Costs Extra |
|---|---|
| All buffet meals (breakfast, lunch, dinner) | A la carte restaurants (free once for 7+ night stays) |
| Local and standard international drinks | Premium spirit brands |
| 9 bars including 3 beach bars | Spa treatments and massages |
| 24-hour room service | Motorized water sports |
| Free minibar (refreshed daily) | Excursions |
| 5 outdoor pools + indoor pool | Bingo (reported by some guests) |
| Aquapark and waterslides | Meeting room hire |
| Private beach with loungers and umbrellas | |
| Non-motorized water sports | |
| Beach yoga and climbing wall | |
| MiniLome kids’ club | |
| Evening entertainment and nightclub | |
| 24-hour fitness center | |
| WiFi throughout |
Pricing and How to Book
Price Ranges by Season
| Season | Dates | Price Range (Per Night) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Low Season | May – June | $430 – $550 | Best value; warm sea, fewer crowds |
| Shoulder Season | September – October | $430 – $580 | Excellent weather, quieter resort |
| Peak Season | July – August | $600 – $900 | Highest prices, busiest pools |
| Closed | Mid-November – Late March | N/A | Resort is shuttered |
Prices are per room per night, ultra all-inclusive. Family rooms and swim-up categories command a premium of $100-250 above standard rates across all seasons.
Best Time to Book
Book 3 to 4 months ahead for July and August — Mylome’s 9.6 rating means it sells out faster than typical Alanya properties. For May-June or September-October, last-minute deals are realistic and can save 15-20% off published rates. Shoulder season delivers the best combination of value, weather, and pool availability.
Where to Book
Booking.com consistently shows competitive rates and allows free cancellation on most room types. The resort’s own website (mylomehotels.com) occasionally runs direct-booking perks. UK-based tour operators like Thomas Cook and On the Beach package Mylome with flights from British airports, which can undercut room-only pricing when flights are included. Secret Escapes runs flash sales on Mylome periodically — worth watching if your dates are flexible.
Check latest prices on Booking.com →
Compared to Nearby Resorts
Granada Luxury Resort Okurcalar is Mylome’s closest neighbor and direct competitor. Granada scores an 8.4 on Booking.com versus Mylome’s 9.6 — a significant gap. Granada has been around longer and has a larger, more established footprint, but Mylome’s 2023 freshness and design quality put it in a different class. If budget is tight, Granada delivers a solid Alanya all-inclusive at a lower price point; if you want the newer, more polished experience, Mylome justifies the premium.
Maxx Royal Belek Golf Resort is the next level up and located in Belek, about 90 minutes west. It is widely considered one of Turkey’s finest all-inclusive resorts, with championship golf, a private beach club, and a food program that genuinely competes with standalone restaurants. It also costs roughly double what Mylome charges. If money is no object and you want Turkey’s absolute best, Maxx Royal wins. Mylome offers roughly 70% of that experience at 50% of the price.
Calista Luxury Resort in Belek is another comparison point — comparable luxury, strong spa, golf-adjacent. Calista has more polish in its dining program and includes more in its base rate. But Mylome’s beach location in Okurcalar offers a quieter, more intimate coastal experience than Belek’s long hotel strip.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Mylome Luxury Hotel & Resort truly all-inclusive?
It is marketed as “ultra all-inclusive,” and the base package is generous — meals, drinks, activities, pools, beach, WiFi, room service, and minibar are all covered. However, a la carte restaurants cost extra unless you stay 7+ nights, spa treatments are entirely extra, and some premium drinks may incur charges. For a property using the “ultra” label, there are more carve-outs than you would expect.
How far is Mylome from Antalya Airport?
About 90 minutes by road. Alanya is 130km east of Antalya, making it one of the longer airport transfers on Turkey’s southern coast. Most resorts arrange private transfers, or you can book a shared shuttle for less. The drive along the coast is scenic, but after a long flight it can feel like a slog.
Is Mylome good for families with kids?
Yes. The MiniLome kids’ club, aquapark, children’s pools, and 538 sq ft family rooms with separate sleeping areas make it one of Alanya’s better family choices. The aquapark requires children to be 7+ for the main slides, but smaller slides and a separate shallow pool handle younger kids. The resort manages the balance between family-friendly and couples-friendly better than most — largely thanks to the heated adults-only pool.
What is the beach like?
Mixed sand and pebble — typical for Turkey’s eastern Mediterranean coast. The water is clear and turquoise, warm enough for swimming from June through October. Water shoes are recommended. The private pier is great for snorkeling, jumping, and evening DJ events. Compared to Cleopatra Beach in central Alanya, it is significantly quieter.
Are the swim-up rooms worth the upgrade?
If pool access from your room matters to you, absolutely. Mylome’s multi-floor swim-up concept (floors 1, 4, and 7) is unusual and well-executed. Request floors 4 or 7 for the elevated sea view combined with pool access. The premium of $120-170 per night over a standard sea-view room buys a genuinely distinctive experience.
When does Mylome close for winter?
The resort closes in mid-November and reopens in late March. For the 2025-26 season, closure was November 16 through March 29. Exact dates shift slightly year to year — confirm with the hotel when booking shoulder-season stays.
Final Verdict
Mylome Luxury Hotel & Resort scores 8.6 out of 10 — and earns every fraction of that.
This is the resort that proves Alanya can do luxury. For a full rundown of the country’s best options, see our Turkey destination guide. The 2023 opening date means everything is immaculate. The swim-up rooms on multiple floors are a genuine innovation. The climbing wall and beach yoga set it apart from the animation-and-buffet formula that dominates Turkey’s all-inclusive scene. And the private pier — transformed into a DJ venue over the Mediterranean on summer evenings — is the kind of detail that turns a good resort into a memorable one.
The deductions are real. That 90-minute airport transfer is tedious. The “ultra all-inclusive” label overpromises when a la carte restaurants and spa treatments are not included in the base rate. And seasonal closure means you cannot visit between November and March.
But at $430-600 per night in shoulder season — with meals, drinks, activities, and a pristine modern resort included — Mylome delivers extraordinary value compared to comparable luxury properties in Belek, the Maldives, or the Caribbean. For couples who want a romantic Mediterranean escape with genuine style, or families who want a resort that does not force them to choose between kid-friendly and grown-up sophistication, Mylome Luxury Hotel & Resort is one of Turkey’s smartest bookings.
Book it if: You want a modern, fresh Turkish luxury all-inclusive without paying Belek prices, and you are staying 7+ nights to unlock the full dining program.
Skip it if: You need a short airport transfer, want year-round availability, or expect every spa treatment included in your rate.