Stay Nivas
Where you dwell matters.
I stopped trusting hotel reviews the day I realized they were all answering the wrong question. Thread count, pool temperature, breakfast buffet variety. Useful, sure. But not why I remember the places I remember.
The hotels that stayed with me did something else. They changed the rhythm of my day. They made me notice things I normally walk past. They understood something about rest that goes deeper than a good mattress.
Stay Nivas is my attempt to write about that. Not what a hotel has, but what it does to you. The reviews here are personal, sometimes imperfect, and always honest. If a place earned my attention, I'll tell you why. If it didn't, I'll tell you that too.
— Yash Kothari
Reviews
Hyatt Regency The Churchill
Service that outpaces its own interiors
The Churchill doesn't dazzle. It does something harder: it makes a family with a toddler feel completely at ease in Mayfair. Juan and Guillaume set the tone before we arrived, and the service throughout was exceptional. What holds it back is the interiors, which feel a step behind the team that works in them. A property where the people are better than the building.
Andaz Peninsula Papagayo
Where the jungle decides what kind of guest you'll be
Five nights for a babymoon that set a new standard. The Andaz doesn't announce itself; it lets the Pacific and the dry tropical forest do that. What set it apart was the wellness program, genuinely woven into the property's identity, and a team led by Henrique, Paola, and Manolo who made hospitality feel personal rather than transactional. Even surpassed the nearby Four Seasons.
The Oberoi, Mumbai
The quiet authority of a hotel that has nothing left to prove
A staycation at Nariman Point where Marine Drive becomes your morning view and the staff know your room number before you tell them. Shradha, Akshit, and Chef Sahil embodied the Oberoi way. The service and vegetarian dining are exceptional, but the physical product feels a half-step behind newer competitors. Authority earned through decades, even if the interiors haven't kept pace.
Soho House Mumbai
The rooftop where Mumbai finally sits still
A babymoon in Juhu where the members' club DNA shaped everything for the better. The rooftop and Cecconi's carry the experience, but some common spaces show wear and the food beyond the Italian restaurant is uneven. A four-star stay inside a five-star setting. Soho House's strength is atmosphere over polish, and in Mumbai that trade-off is more visible than in their European properties.
The Beekman
A lobby that remembers New York
A staycation that cleared the high bar of being worthwhile for New Yorkers. The nine-story Victorian atrium is stunning, but it's the consistency of taste throughout, from the rooms to the restaurants to the elevators, that makes The Beekman more than a pretty lobby. Lauren, Justin, and Alex set the service tone before we even arrived.
Ca' di Dio
Beautiful design, but Venice isn't the place to feel squeezed
The Patricia Urquiola interiors are genuinely striking and the staff, led by Christophe, were warm and attentive. But the room was on the smaller side, and the property felt optimized for occupancy rather than experience. In a city where your hotel room should be a refuge from the crowds, Ca' di Dio's sizing left us feeling like one of many.
Faarufushi Maldives
A honeymoon that the hotel nearly ruined before it began
The spa was exceptional, the staff phenomenal, and the overwater villa looked exactly like the brochure. But a four-hour seaplane delay followed by management's refusal to take responsibility revealed a property where the front-line team delivers five-star service inside a three-star management structure. For a honeymoon, that gap is unforgivable.
Sujan Rajmahal Palace
A wedding night in a palace that earned its grandeur
Our wedding night in the Maharani Suite, with its own dining room, pool, and a bed that required footstools. Butler Neeraj made every request effortless. They set up a couples massage in the Maharaja Suite because no treatment room would do. Rose petals, champagne, and the kind of hospitality that treats a celebration as sacred. We chose Rajmahal over Rambagh. No regrets.