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Review: the Jumeirah Muscat Bay resort, Oman (plus some Muscat tips)

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This is my review of the Jumeirah Muscat Bay resort in Muscat, Oman.

We spent a week in Oman over October half term, split between beach and mountains. Whilst I don’t often write about family holidays, Oman is having a bit of a ‘moment’ at present. More importantly for HfP readers, Oman Air is due to join oneworld in 2024 and you will be able to redeem Avios on its flights.

In the meantime, you could do what we did and fly to Dubai on Avios – or elsewhere in the Middle East – and pay for a connection. You could even be driven from Dubai but at almost five hours I wasn’t keen. Muscat Airport is astonishing – imagine Heathrow Terminal 5 with two flights per hour and you’ve got it!

Jumeirah Muscat Bay

We paid cash for our Jumeirah Muscat Bay stay and the hotel did not know I would be covering it. The downside of this approach is that I didn’t see everything on offer.

We stayed here for four nights, after which we headed to the mountains for three nights at the Alila Jabal Akhbar resort, part of World of Hyatt. My wife will review Alila tomorrow.

A bit of background to Muscat and Jumeirah Muscat Bay

Muscat, and Oman in general, is nothing like the UAE or Qatar. With the law blocking tall buildings (10-12 stories seems to be the maximum), the majority painted white (the airport was the only glass walled building I saw all week) and the buildings tucked in amongst the mountains – Oman has a LOT of mountains – this certainly isn’t Dubai, Abu Dhabi or Doha.

The first luxury leisure hotel was the Al Bustan Palace, now run by The Ritz Carlton and part of Marriott Bonvoy. I reviewed Al Bustan Palace on an Oman Air review trip in 2019. The Al Bustan is fully refurbished and sits on an astonishingly wide bay, virtually alone, but the design and layout meant that it still felt dated to me. The rooms are also a little small.

It was that trip which encouraged me to return with my family, albeit the pandemic meant that it took four years to pull off.

I am a big fan of Jumeirah hotels, having stayed probably 100 nights across their Dubai and Abu Dhabi resorts over the years. As Jumeirah Muscat Bay is brand new (June 2022) it seemed an obvious choice. I also had £500-worth of points to redeem as well as Jumeirah One Gold status, although the value of that was limited beyond a free airport transfer.

Jumeirah Muscat Bay lobby

Location

Muscat Bay is a new leisure development just outside Muscat. Set in its own private bay, it comprises the hotel – which sits directly on the beach – plus a number of homes and apartments in the hills around it. This is very much still a work in progress, but didn’t interfere with our stay at all. There is nothing of interest in the Muscat Bay development apart from the hotel, except for a small Spar grocery store.

The Shangri-La complex of three hotels, which is the other key resort option, is just across the bay. I’ve never visited this but I know it has its fans, especially as the three hotels offer more facilities between them than the Jumeirah or Al Bustan.

Arrival

As a Jumeirah One Gold member I was entitled to a free one-way airport transfer, so we had a driver waiting for us in arrivals. There is no shortage of taxis if you don’t want to pay for a hotel car.

As you drive into the Muscat Bay development it isn’t entirely clear what to expect, with empty new-build properties all around. Suddenly you turn a corner and the hotel is in front of you.

The lobby is actually on the fifth floor, meaning that as you walk in you get the astonishing view above through the floor-to-ceiling windows. It’s an impressive way to start your holiday.

Our rooms at Jumeirah Muscat Bay

Because we were a group of four, and because we wanted a bit of space, we had booked a Panoramic Suite with a connecting Deluxe Ocean Room.

As is usual with Jumeirah, the rooms connected externally, not internally. This meant that we could close off a door which, when opened, gave you access to the doors of both rooms which we kept propped open at all times.

The suite had a particularly large balcony which overlooked the entire resort. The furniture design is modern and obviously everything is brand new. I will spare you photos of coffee machines etc – this is a new, expensive, luxury property and all the mod cons you would expect are here.

Jumeirah Muscat Bay deluxe ocean room

Deluxe Ocean Room at Jumeirah Muscat Bay

Above is our Deluxe Ocean Room, which was very spacious as you can see from this angle:

Jumeirah Muscat Bay deluxe ocean room

There was a very classy bathroom including, out of shot, a bath tub as well as a standalone shower:

Jumeirah Muscat Bay deluxe ocean room

To be honest, if I’d known how spacious these rooms would be then I might have saved a few pounds and not booked the suite, since we didn’t fully utilise the seating area.

Panoramic Suite at Jumeirah Muscat Bay

Let’s pop next door into our suite. The key addition is this large living room with, as you can just about see behind the sofa, a dining table too – which became a storage area for the stuff we were taking out with us each day!

Jumeirah Muscat Bay panoramic suite

Because the bedroom was part of a suite, it was a smaller space than the Deluxe Room that the children had, but still very smart.

Jumeirah Muscat Bay panoramic suite bedroom

The bathroom was open to the bedroom, although could be closed off if required. Toiletries were the usual Jumeirah ‘Amouage’ brand and you have a range of extra amenities (shaving kits, toothbrushes etc) if you need them.

Jumeirah Muscat Bay Panoramic Suite bathroom

The bathroom included this H-U-G-E shower:

Jumeirah Muscat Bay panoramic suite shower

If I jump out onto the balcony you can see how the hotel is laid out:

Jumeirah Muscat Bay resort

This picture, taken from a public balcony a little further along, gives you a good impression of the beach and bay – the water view from our room wasn’t as good:

The white thing in the sea on the left is a floating pier, which you can swim out to if you wish. Snorkelling, turtle watching, cycling and other activities are available onsite if you are keen.

To the right of the photo above is a pier with a restaurant at the end – albeit a pier which doesn’t extend as far as the water! In the foreground is the adult pool, which you can see better in this photo I took from the top floor:

Jumeirah Muscat Bay main pool

Facilities

There were a few things about the hotel which felt a little odd. None of these factors were huge issues but I did keep getting a feeling of ‘why did they do this like that?’. Jumeirah is usually so slick that I was expecting everything to be perfect, and it wasn’t the case.

The first oddity is that the main restaurant, Peridot, where breakfast is also served, only has around six outdoor tables. For a location where you can eat outside virtually all year, this was weird.

The second is that there are only a couple of sets of steps to get you from the pool / garden level down to the beach, about six feet below you, and none were in an obvious place. It was only a 30 second diversion each time but you felt the inconvenience.

The third oddity is the main adult pool, pictured above. This is very deep at its narrowest point – where you can only splash around – but far too shallow in the widest point where it should be swimmable. Instead of surrounding it with sun loungers the hotel put in a handful of cabanas, which led to people getting up incredibly early to ‘reserve’ one with a book or towel.

(For clarity, there was no shortage of sun loungers on the beach, but I think many would prefer to sit facing the main pool instead.)

Food and drink

Jumeirah Muscat Bay has a range of places to eat – the lobby bar, the main Peridot restaurant, Zuka restaurant on the pier and a fine dining Mediterranean restaurant, Brezza, on the top floor which also has a rooftop bar. If you have a suite, there is an executive lounge with the usual impressive Jumeirah lounge food spread.

We had lunch at Zuka on the pier on the day we arrived, which offers outdoor seafood-based dining in a very pleasant environment overlooking the sea. Here is a PR picture:

Jumeirah Muscat Bay Zuka restaurant

We never made it to Brezza and we only ate in Peridot on one evening, where there was an impressive buffet on the scale that is common in the Middle East. On the other nights we headed to the lounge and sat on the balcony with a plate from the free buffet, having had a good breakfast and a good lunch and not feeling the need for another formal meal.

The Shangri-La and Al Bustan Palace are a 10 minute taxi ride away if you want to try something different but don’t want to take the 25 minute drive into central Muscat.

The lobby lounge is here:

Jumeirah Muscat Bay lobby lounge

The spa and kids club

As it usual with Jumeirah, there is a Talise Spa. We didn’t book any treatments here due to a lack of suitable timeslots but we know from our experiences in Dubai that the company runs a very impressive spa operation.

The hotel also has a kids club. I did pop in and it was definitely one of the better ones I have seen. The shallow kids pool is opposite (not pictured anywhere).

Things to do outside the hotel

We don’t normally write about life outside the hotels we review, but as we were on holiday and doing the sights I will run through the options.

You’ll need a taxi whenever you leave the hotel but that’s not a point against Jumeirah since it would be the same wherever you stay. Uber does not work in Oman but there are some local taxi apps.

The ‘must see’ sights in Muscat are the astonishing Grand Mosque (PR photo below, women can rent appropriate clothing on site if necessary):

Grande Mosque Muscat

…. and the new National Museum. There are a couple of niche museums near the National Museum which are also worth seeing.

There is a souk on the corniche which is worth a visit although it’s not on a par with, say, Marrakech or Istanbul. There is little shopping of note – the only upscale mall we found was attached to the new Opera House and it wasn’t full. You’re in the wrong country if you want to visit a Louis Vuitton or similar.

Further afield, we booked a guided tour to Wadi Shab and the Bimmah Sinkhole, both of which offer unique swimming opportunities. You need to be in decent physical shape for Wadi Shab, which involves an hour long walk – partly along narrow unfenced cliff faces, partly through water – to a spectacular cave with its own waterfall.

The entrance to Wadi Shab is via a small local ferry boat:

Wadi Shab Oman

Compared to Wadi Shab the Bimmah Sinkhole (a big hole in a park where an underground cave was exposed) is a far easier swimming option:

Bimmah Sinkhole Oman

Conclusion

Jumeirah Muscat Bay sits on a lovely spot, with such a level of privacy being very rare in the Middle East. Even when all of the residences in Muscat Bay are sold I doubt it will make the beach noticeably busier day to day. If you are only used to Jumeirah properties in Dubai then this is on a far smaller scale, but large enough to have a range of eateries to keep you busy.

As with the Al Bustan Palace and the Shangri-La, Jumeirah Muscat Bay stands alone, needing a taxi to get around. Wherever you stay you can’t avoid that.

As I said above, there are a few quirks about the design of the outside areas which frustrated me. It was also cooler than I expected, but I think this was just bad luck – I’d be surprised if Oman was noticeably cooler than the UAE next door in late October.

Muscat itself is well worth a few days of your time although the list above is pretty much it in terms of key sites. It’s absolutely somewhere that you should visit, especially if you are more used to the UAE, although I’m not sure that it justifies repeat trips.

In terms of the hotel, I preferred Jumeirah Muscat Bay to the Al Bustan Palace because of the small rooms at the latter. You can read my Al Bustan Palace review here if you want to compare.

The way to ‘do’ Oman, however, is to combine a few days on the beach with a few days in the mountains. This is why we left Jumeirah Muscat Bay and headed off to Alila Jabal Akhdar – review to follow.

You can learn more about Jumeirah Muscat Bay on its website here.

Molly Burgess Jumeirah Muscat Bay swing

Earning points at Jumeirah Muscat Bay

Jumeirah has its own loyalty scheme, Jumeirah One, which we reviewed here.

If you are booking direct you might as well sign up. It is a revenue based scheme, meaning that you will receive points worth just under 4% of your ex-tax spending.

These can be redeemed against a cash discount at check-out on your next Jumeirah stay. If you are London based, another option is to use them towards the cost of a meal at the Jumeirah Carlton Tower or Jumeirah Lowndes in Knightsbridge. You can also transfer out your points to Emirates Skywards, albeit at a very poor rate.

Your points are valid for two years. You can extend them every two years by popping into either of the London hotels and buying a cup of coffee!

How to book

I’ve not given detailed pricing examples in this review because, frankly, it is all over the place depending on the time of year. It is more useful to say that you will pay less than at a comparable resort in Dubai but more than you’d pay in Ras Al Khaimah.

Go next Friday 15th December and a Deluxe Ocean Room will cost you £517. A similar room at Jumeirah Al Naseem in Dubai will cost £938, whilst the InterContinental in Ras Al Khaimah is £235.

Jumeirah has an exclusive booking programme for luxury travel agents called Passport To Luxury. Our partner Emyr Thomas (contact him here) is a Passport To Luxury approved agent.

If you book via Emyr, your booking comes with free breakfast, $100 of hotel credit, late check-out / early check-in if available and an upgrade if available. You will usually pay the same as the flexible rate on the Jumeirah website, although on some previous Jumeirah stays Emyr has been offered a better rate.

I can say, based on past experience, that if you have any special requests such as connecting rooms then it is substantially better to book via Emyr than book direct. Jumeirah loves to say ‘if available on check-in’ for special requests and will rarely commit, but ‘Passport To Luxury’ agents have direct contacts in the hotels who can ensure these things are done and are prepared to put it in writing.


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Comments (53)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • masaccio says:

    On the things to do list, Jumeirah Muscat Bay also has a dive shop so snorkelling and scuba are available.

  • Rjn21 says:

    What were the offerings in the lounge like?
    The last time I went (just post Covid) it was open daily from 12:00 till 20:00, and they had afternoon tea (a few cakes), evening canapés (fine but definitely only canapés) and soft drinks. No alcohol and no breakfast. It was ok but based on the offering at the time not worth paying for a “club” room above a normal room.

    • Rob says:

      Only there in the evening. Lots of booze (not self pour), decent hot and cold food selection. Wouldn’t have paid for a club room based purely on a free evening snack though given Emyr got us free breakfast.

      As usual in the Middle East, lounges work best for drinkers given the cash cost otherwise. We rarely drink on holiday due to the kids.

  • Richmond_Surrey says:

    I stayed in Shangri-la and liked it. I’m sure Jumeirah is nice too. Regarding attractions, Opera is worth guided tour and Palace is also very nice. I really liked Oman.

  • Chris W says:

    Never really understood why Oman isn’t a more popular destination than it is. Do they not do enough marketing? Are they not bothered to attract tourists?

  • Blindman67 says:

    What a refreshing change for one of HfPoints reviews.

    One where Rob actually paid for the stay so could be critical where needed and also there were tips and costings.

    Now if ALL reviews were l ike this I would be an avid reader.

    • Rob says:

      You can have this. It’s called the Gallivanters Guide, it is £650 per year and you get a 12 page hotel review newsletter each month. Do you pay for this? Thought not, because you’re unwilling to pay for the thing you claim you want.

      This is a review which I would reject if the stay had been comped and a staffer had written it. No info on other room types, no review of the spa, no review of the formal restaurant, no visit to the bar, no visit to the lobby lounge (don’t even know what it offers), no mention of the retail, no visit to the gym (don’t even know where it is), no hotel tour (as noted in another comment I didn’t even know it had a dive shop) etc ….

      I’m also amused you think it’s unbiased, when we specifically plug Emyr at the end. If a reader spends £10,000 to book their family in for a week he and I split a decent chunk of that and it requires literally zero work on my behalf. Yet somehow you think a £200 free room in Berlin or wherever (which Emyr can’t book and gets us no long term income) makes us more biased in what we write …..

      • Chris says:

        Or try the flip flop traveller on YouTube. He goes out of his way to say he is paying for all his stays and the hotels have no idea who he is.

      • daveinitalia says:

        “you’re unwilling to pay for the thing you claim you want”

        Head for Points is all about points, in other words not paying (cash) for the things you want. I doubt anyone would read a blog called ‘Turning left for the full fare’ for example

        I liked this review too, it provided inspiration to consider a new destination and when Oman Air enters oneworld it’s now on my list of places to go.

      • Stu_N says:

        This does get very tedious doesn’t it? Could you argue that because Rob has shelled out his cold hard cash he’s more likely to gloss over faults and deficiencies to make himself feel better about the purchase….

        Of maybe you could consider that Rob and team are professionals with integrity and put more value on their reputation for fairness and honesty than a free hotel night or free flight – which would soon dry up if the page views fell away anyway.

        • Rob says:

          It also ignores the relative value of money. Take Tom’s private island reviews – he spends £10,000 per night and isn’t too bothered if it’s rubbish or not (it’s peanuts to him) but I’d be a lot more fussed at that level. What you and I would expect for £650 per night may be two different things.

          Take my BA First review yesterday. I basically said ‘it’s a bit rubbish but its only £4k so I’d think about doing it’. If you’re wealthier then you’ll think I’m too soft and you’ll pay £7,000 for Emirates First instead. If you’re not wealthy you’ll take the idea of paying £4k for an airline seat which officially offers ‘a bag of crisps’ as your midflight snack as a joke, especially as Wizz Air can get you from the UK to the Middle East for under £150.

          • Stu_N says:

            Oh to be in a situation where you can pay £10k a night, find it is disappointing and just think “how annoying”… Fair play to Tom, I’m not there yet.

    • TGLoyalty says:

      If he was paid to do this review they wouldn’t be very happy. As Rob mentions so much I don’t know about that would be important to me like the gym etc

      Personally I prefer the look and feel of Al Bustan and it had lots of outside breakfast seating which was literally a great start to the day, just a couple hours soaking in the sun having a long leisurely breakfast while not worrying about anything. The staff were great too.

      • Rob says:

        We’re not paid to do any reviews. Even when the room is free we are on the hook for flights, transfers etc. It’s rare we can get something done for under £500 of out of pocket expenses and that’s before you factor in the inefficient use of staff time. My Eurostar to Paris next week to do Lutetia is £370 on its own.

        • Bob says:

          From Paris (or Lutèce the old name of Paris, so the name Lutetia for the hotel you are going to review) Gare du nord, take bus number 39 and you will be at the Lutetia hotel later.
          (I am not sure but the bus might depart from the bus station above the suburban train station, but there is probably another stop at ground level not far from the station)

        • TGLoyalty says:

          The point is doesn’t matter if you’re paid, just the room is comp’d or you pay yourself. Either the reader believes your editorial style is to be fair and accurate regardless or they don’t and should read something else.

        • Londonsteve says:

          Rob, curious why when considering all of the below, you’d rather pay through the nose to take Euro* from STP?
          – BAEC Gold accessing TFW
          – Notional price of £130 for a LHR-CDG rtn if booked as a reward
          – You live in west London
          – Lounge access before both flights
          I know the train is a business expense but it’s also 100s at year end you can’t then take out as a dividend so it’s hardly ‘free money’.

          • Rob says:

            I like Eurostar, that’s why. I can effectively travel when I want given the 60 minute frequency. On the outbound I can drop the kids at school and still get the 9.30 train. The extra cost over a flight is immaterial to me and I spend too much time at Heathrow anyway.

  • Xmenlongshot says:

    How long do the Jumeirah points stay valid for – does another stay extend the validity period? Thank you

    • Rob says:

      A stay extends them, yes. AwardWallet shows a 2 year expiry on mine if I don’t stay so let’s assume that is correct. Buying a coffee in the London hotels also gets you another 2 years.

  • Worcester woman says:

    We are currently at Jumeirah muscat bay, having previously stayed at Al husn 3 times (adults only at Shangri-La).
    It’s a lovely new hotel, v modern and great rooms, but agree with Rob that there are a few things which are a bit ‘odd’. The lack of outside seating at main restaurant is a shame (ok for us, tables all set for 2 – but v few options if you’re with family), the strange layout to get from hotel down to beach (shower is back up at pool level, steps not where you’d expect them). The gym has fab new equipment, but no windows…

    We opted to upgrade on arrival to club room with lounge benefits but have actually now downgraded (kept room with lovely view and balcony) as we really didn’t like the lounge. Afternoon tea (2-4pm) was a good spread, but we already had breakfast included, and although there’s alcohol 6-8pm we found the lounge itself a bit poked away (2nd floor, dark corner, only overlooking kids pool) with the only seating being at ‘proper’ tables and chairs – no relaxed sofas / comfy seating.

    We ate at Brezza last night – excellent meal- and the 6th floor rooftop bar was great…lovely views and much more appealing seating!

    Yes alcohol is expensive, but not prohibitively so (we’ve just come from Salalah where a bottle of peroni cost £12 so this feels very reasonable!) and we don’t feel c£100 a day was worth it for club lounge when we already had a rate with breakfast. Plus we didn’t want to base our day around lounge timings for tea/evening drinks.

    But having a lovely relaxing time, views are amazing and fabulous to be in warm sun in December! Jury still out on Al husn v Jumeirah!

  • NorthernLass says:

    The landscape looks stunning and the scuba diving bears further investigation. What are other flights options in the absence of the defunct BA service? MAN-DOH-MCT on QR?

    • Rhys says:

      Oman Air!

    • Rob says:

      Oman Air used to fly direct from Manchester pre-covid, not sure if that will return. Flydubai has lower cost options out of Dubai than Emirates. Realistically most Middle Eastern gateways offer connections but there are fewer flights than you think – even from Dubai it’s not the hourly shuttle service I imagined. I think Emirates only does two per day.

      What we did, which was quite cool, was book a 787 service from Dubai to Muscat on Oman Air for cash, and then used the ‘bid for upgrade’ service to upgrade to their flat bed business seats for an hour. Arguably a splurge for 75 minutes (I think we paid £400 in total to upgrade the 4 of us) but this included the Ahlen First Class lounge in Dubai and their business class cabins are beautiful. The 787 only operates occasionally though, on the day we flew back it was a 737.

      • The real Swiss Tony says:

        Oman Business Class is a very, very good product. Used it on a cheap one way fare back from Bangkok just over a year ago. The airport at Muscat was empty, the lounge was lovely and the crew a delight. Food & drink was great and it genuinely felt like a boutique airline. Sadly their fares from the UK just to Oman are eye popping but at times they have good deals further afield (KUL, CMB & BKK) that allow a free stopover.

        • NorskSaint says:

          Couldn’t agree more. Managed to book Oman air last year when our Edelweiss flight got cancelled (thanks to this site and the forum for EU261 help).

          Very good product indeed… although wish it was something other than brown pyjamas.

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