If you’re looking for the best boutique hotels in Lamu, Kenya, away from beach resorts and crowded tourist trails, this guide is for you. Narrow alleys, traditional dhow boats on the water, carved Swahili doors and a town that has barely changed in centuries. That is Lamu!
Lamu, the ultimate ‘transport-me-to-another-time’ island, is incredibly aesthetic and one of these unique places that force you to slow down. It’s the tea you’re having on the pier during sunset with one of the locals, the traditional sweets shops that are in family hands for decades, the handicraft that gets passed onto the next generation.
This guide is for travelers who choose a dhow ride over a pool bar, and culture over cocktail menus. It focuses specifically on boutique hotels in Lamu, Kenya, across Shela Village, Lamu Old Town, and the more remote island stays nearby.
If you want to experience one of the most unique islands in East Africa while enjoying sustainable, modern, design-led stays by the coast, this is for you!
Best areas to stay in Lamu
Lamu splits into a few distinct areas, and the choice between them is more significant than on most islands.
Shela Village is the most popular base for boutique stays, with cleaner roads, direct beach access, and the most design-led properties on the island. Lamu Old Town is the cultural heart, a UNESCO World Heritage Site with no cars, carved Swahili doors, and centuries of living history. The remote coast and nearby private islands are for travellers who want total seclusion and are willing to work a little harder to get there.
First time in Lamu? Shela is the easiest introduction. Been before, or drawn specifically to culture and architecture? Old Town is where you want to be. Most visitors who have the time split their stay between both, which is genuinely worth doing.
Best Boutique Hotels in Shela Village, Lamu
Shela is the most popular base for boutique stays in Lamu, Kenya; it’s calm and open with direct beach access and ocean views.
Peponi Hotel: The Classic Lamu Waterfront Stay
Peponi is Lamu’s most iconic hotel and it earns it. Right on the Shela waterfront, lunches stretch into long afternoons, boats pass by constantly, and the social atmosphere is the kind you can’t manufacture. This is the best spot on the island to meet both travelers and locals over a long meal. Lively, warm, and full of character
Peponi is the right place if you want that timeless Lamu waterfront feeling with an easy social energy. Not the right choice if you came here for silence.
Jannah Lamu: The Private Contemporary Escape
Jannah feels more contemporary than traditional, which immediately sets it apart in Lamu. Clean minimal design, total privacy, and open living spaces that make space and silence feel like the actual luxury. It has an exclusive, quiet energy that’s hard to find anywhere on the island.
If you want a modern, design-forward stay with maximum privacy, go stay at Jannah. Not the right fit if you want Swahili character and cultural atmosphere around you.
Jua House: The Hidden Dunes Hideaway for Slow Travelers
Jua House sits quietly in the sandy backstreets of Shela and it’s one of my favourite stays in all of East Africa. I came for my birthday and left wishing I’d booked more nights. Mornings begin with homemade bread that people from across the island seek out. Afternoons belong to the sun terrace. And tea time, with their daily baked cakes, became something I genuinely looked forward to every day.
The ‘wow’ factor: the donkey sanctuary around the corner, the dunes five minutes away, and a level of personal service that makes you feel like the only guest.
Book Jua House if you want calm, design-led simplicity and a private hideaway away from the beachfront buzz.
Banana House: The Eco-Conscious Creative Retreat
Banana House feels more like a creative retreat than a hotel. Gardens, shaded courtyards, yoga spaces, and a communal energy that tends to attract guests who stay longer than planned. If you end up in a conversation with a stranger that lasts three hours, that’s a Banana House afternoon.
Book Banana House if you want a sustainability-focused, wellness-oriented base with real community feel. Skip it if you want privacy and full luxury service.
Marquezy House: For the Stylish Shela Hideaway
Marquezy is one of those boutique hotels in Lamu Kenya that feels intentionally understated. Polished Swahili architecture, breezy terraces, and a private-house atmosphere that works especially well for couples or small groups. Close to the beach and village life, but with enough personality to feel special.
Reserve Marquezy if you want boutique character, visual charm, and a stylish Shela base. Best for couples or small groups rather than solo travelers wanting a social scene.
Best Boutique Hotels in Lamu Old Town
Lamu Old Town is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Staying here means the culture is not something you visit. It’s something you live inside.
The Waterfront Heritage Stay with Front-Row Dhow Views
Forodhani House sits right on the waterfront edge of Old Town and waking up here is genuinely something else. Traditional dhows pass your window like a living painting. It’s intimate, quiet, and completely rooted in the atmosphere of old Lamu.
The ‘wow’ factor: a direct waterfront view from inside one of the most atmospheric UNESCO towns in East Africa.
Reserve Forodhani House early. Availability is limited, and it fills up. Perfect if you want waterfront Old Town heritage living. Not ideal if you need beach access from your door.
Lamu House Hotel: The Full Cultural Immersion Stay
Staying at Lamu House puts you directly inside the rhythm of Old Town. Donkeys, markets, carved doorways, and the call to prayer are not background details here. They are your daily experience. It’s the most immersive of all the boutique hotels in Lamu Old Town and has a fabulous restaurant on-site – great to work from!
Reserve Lamu House Hotel if you want complete cultural immersion and you’re ready to embrace the sensory richness of Old Town life.
Amu House: The Stylish Value Stay in the Heart of Lamu
I stayed here personally!
Amu House is one of the smartest stays in Lamu. I spent a week here and it punches well above its price point. Carved Swahili interiors, a beautiful rooftop, and a lounge where a proper Swahili breakfast is served every morning. Walking distance to the markets, the waterfront, and everything that makes Old Town worth staying in.
Book Amu House if you want design, character, and a central Old Town location without paying resort prices. One of the best value boutique hotels in Lamu, Kenya.
Andavelo House: The Soulful Boutique Stay for a Personal Connection
Andavelo is small in scale and all the better for it. It feels less like checking into a hotel and more like being welcomed into a home that happens to be beautifully designed. The hospitality is warm and personal in a way that larger properties simply can’t replicate.
Book Andavelo House if you want warmth, intimacy, and a stay that genuinely feels personal. Skip it if you want amenities at scale or a social atmosphere.
Remote Coast and Private Island Stays near Lamu
These are harder to reach and that’s exactly the point. Complete privacy, uninterrupted ocean views, and days that belong entirely to the sea. Ideal for honeymoons or anyone who wants genuine distance from everything.
Syngué Sabour: The Design-Led Island Escape for Total Seclusion
Syngue Sabour is one of the most private and design-driven boutique stays in the Lamu archipelago. Light, architecture, and silence are the experience. Nothing here competes for your attention because there is nothing else here. It’s for people who find genuine rest in emptiness.
The ‘wow’ factor: a level of seclusion where the landscape and the quiet become the entire itinerary.
Syngué Sabour is the ideal stay if you want total privacy and architectural beauty. Perfect for honeymoons and creative retreats. Skip it if you want easy access to the island or a social scene.
The Majlis Resort: The Full-Service Luxury Island Resort on Manda Island
The Majlis is the most structured luxury experience in the Lamu archipelago and the right choice if you want full-service comfort without compromise. Spacious, refined, with distinctive Italian-Swahili interiors and a long quiet beach. The views back toward Old Town at sunset are genuinely beautiful.
If you want to enjoy the 5-star amenities without committing to a stay, you can visit The Majlis Resort on a day pass. For 2800 KES (~22 USD) you can enjoy the infinity pool, sun chairs and relax at the at pool bar. I did this on the day of my birthday and loved it!
Book The Majlis if you want full-service luxury, space, and a more traditional resort experience in Lamu.
Manda Bay: The Barefoot Off-Grid Coastal Hideaway
Manda Bay exists at the edge of everything. Barefoot, remote, and genuinely off-grid. Days revolve around tides and the sea and not very much else. You’ll know immediately whether that sounds perfect or deeply uncomfortable, and that instinct is the whole decision.
Manda Bay is perfect if you want nature, real privacy, and zero agenda. Skip it if you need reliable connectivity or easy access to other parts of the island.
A Stay on the Water: The Dhow Experience
NaiSabah Dhow Voyage: The Ultimate Bucket-List Lamu Experience
This isn’t a boutique hotel in Lamu. It’s something else entirely. NaiSabah is a restored 75-foot traditional Omani dhow sailing the Lamu Archipelago with three air-conditioned cabins, a full crew, and a chef on board. You wake up somewhere different every morning. Sandbanks, mangroves, remote beaches, snorkeling spots. You explore by wind and sea and sleep under the stars on deck if you want to.
The ‘wow’ factor: a completely different paradise every morning and a way of seeing Lamu that no hotel on land can come close to.
If you want the bucket-list Lamu experience and love being on the water – make sure to stay at NaiSabah Dhow. Skip it if you get seasick easily or need a fixed base.
Some of the boutique hotels in Lamu listed here can’t be booked directly online, and if you’re planning a bigger Kenya trip around the island, it’s worth having someone who knows the region handle it properly. Get in touch with Pinto Africa (available in German and English) or Alluring Africa and mention the code ‘ChristinLamu‘ for a little surprise from the team.
Things to Do in Lamu: Tours Worth Booking
The best way to arrive in Lamu is with almost nothing planned, but one thing worth booking in advance is a locally-led Old Town and dhow cruise tour. The island’s mix of Arab, Indian, and Chinese influences created one of the most distinct cultures in East Africa, and the hidden alleys, carved wooden doors, and centuries-old architecture tell that story better on foot with someone who knows it. Even Mick Jagger found his way here eventually.
End the afternoon on a traditional dhow at sunset and you’ll understand immediately why people keep coming back. Book the Lamu Old Town and Dhow Cruise Tour here.
I use Wise for spending abroad without hidden fees, it’s the easiest way to handle Kenyan shillings without getting hit at the exchange.
How to Get to Lamu
Lamu is easy to reach independently. The standard route is a short domestic flight from Nairobi to Manda Island airstrip, about 90 minutes, followed by a five-minute boat transfer across the channel to the island.
Flights run daily with Jambojet, Air Kenya, and Skyward Express. Once you’re on the island, there are no cars, so everything is on foot, by boat, or by donkey. No rental cars, no transfers to arrange. Just show up and slow down.
For the full picture on how to combine Lamu with the rest of Kenya, my Ultimate Kenya Itinerary: 10 Days of Culture, Coast and Hidden Gems covers everything.
Lamu, Kenya Essentials to Know
Which is better, Lamu or Diani? Diani is a beach resort destination with watersports and a lively nightlife scene. Lamu is more cultural and unlike anywhere else. If you want a beautiful turquoise beach with plenty of amenities, Diani is easier. If you want something you’ll remember for a different reason, choose Lamu. Ideally, combine them!
Which is better, Zanzibar or Lamu? Zanzibar has better flight connections, more hotels at every price point, and a more developed tourism infrastructure. Lamu is smaller, more intimate, and still feels genuinely lived in. Stone Town in Zanzibar is impressive but heavily touristic. Lamu Old Town still belongs to the people who live there. Both are worth visiting. They’re not really competing!
Is it safe to travel to Lamu? Lamu Island itself, including Shela and Old Town, is considered safe for travelers. Check your government’s current travel advisory before you go, as historical advisories refer to mainland border regions rather than the island itself. On the island, the car-free streets and small community atmosphere make it one of the easier places to navigate independently.
For travel insurance, SafetyWing covers most travel scenarios including medical, and it’s what I use across all my Africa trips.
What is the best time to visit Lamu? The best months for visiting boutique hotels in Lamu Kenya, are July to September and January to February, when it’s dry and the trade winds make conditions on the water ideal. The Lamu Cultural Festival in November is worth timing your trip around. Avoid April and May for the heavy rains.
Can I wear shorts in Lamu? On the beach and at your hotel, yes. In Lamu Old Town and around the local community, dress modestly out of respect. The island is predominantly Muslim. Light trousers or a long skirt and a top covering your shoulders is the standard approach in town and it quickly becomes second nature.
Map of Lamu, Kenya
Here you can find my favorite restaurants, cafes, places to go shopping and some of the must-visit sights!
Lamu rewards the travelers who show up without a packed itinerary and leave without fully wanting to. If this guide helped you find your stay, I’d love to hear where you ended up.
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