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Review: The Bodrum EDITION hotel, Turkey (Marriott Bonvoy)

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This is our review of The Bodrum EDITION hotel in Turkey, part of Marriott Bonvoy.

Our family summer holiday brought us to Istanbul and Bodrum this year, and as both hotels had a points and loyalty angle we decided to cover them. We started off at the Ciragan Palace Kempinski hotel in Istanbul for four nights – you can read my review here.

Hotelier veteran Ian Schrager started EDITION in 2008 as a luxury boutique hotel brand in partnership with Marriott International. Although it sits as part of Marriott Bonvoy’s portfolio, the EDITION brand is a bit of an exception in that Marriott does not have full control.

The chain is aiming for 30 properties by 2027, although that will probably be it as Schrager has announced that he wants to move on to new projects.

Review: The Bodrum EDITION hotel resort, Turkey

It was my first visit to an EDITION hotel although HfP has covered a number before:

20-something Rhys wrote those three reviews. Given the reputation of Bodrum and the EDITION brand I was curious as to how two mid-lifers with two teenagers would find it.

We paid for our stay using Marriott Bonvoy points with a cash upgrade. The hotel didn’t know I would be reviewing it.

I should probably mention at this early stage that rooms here start at around €1,750 per night in peak season. Bodrum is far from cheap. We paid 85,000 Bonvoy points per night, which makes a mockery of the HfP ‘0.5p per Bonvoy point’ target valuation.

The Bodum EDITION website is here.

Arrival

We took a one-hour Turkish Airlines flight from the new Istanbul airport to Milas-Bodrum Airport. From there we had arranged a hotel car pick-up, taking roughly 60 minutes to the hotel.

Arriving on the Bodrum peninsula, my first impression was that it felt very Greek. Most houses are white and not taller than two storeys. Greece is, of course, just a stones throw away with Kos being connected to Bodrum by daily ferries.

The coastal areas of the peninsula are heavily built up, albeit low rise. The Bodrum EDITION sits on a slim piece of land on the northern coast.

The resort map below shows the entrance on the left on top of the hill and the beach on the right. The land cascades down towards the sea, with the space used smartly to accommodate 110 rooms, restaurants, bars, a pool, a spa and boutiques.

You can literally walk across the entire plot in under a minute, and even reception to beach takes only five minutes (downhill!).

Bodrum Edition map

The lobby

The hotel entrance is directly off the main coastal road. The EDITION vibe is set immediately as a group of young and dressed-in-white staff rush out to welcome you.

Coming into the lobby is frankly stunning:

Bodrum Edition lobby 1

The abundance of light and the cool interior set you in the holiday mood straight away. No extended wind-down is necessary! The reception staff welcomed us with a free ice cream, which always goes down well, especially if it is 30°C+ outside.

Bodrum Edition  lobby 2

Stepping out of the lobby on the other side gives way to a wonderful view of the bay.

The rooms and facilities are arranged on terraces which wind down a steep slope until reaching the beach. Golf buggies can be ordered if required.

Bodrum Edition lobby 3

Our rooms at The Bodrum EDITION

We had originally booked two Deluxe queen guest rooms with no sea view.

Nearer to arrival, the hotel started to open up higher room categories for ‘cash and points’ redemptions. We ended up with one very large ‘Loft’ guest room without a sea view and one large Premier room with a sea view.

This is the Premier guest room with sea view. The room was, as you can see, minimalist in style with high quality natural materials used.

Bodrum Edition room 1

The room was very comfortable with plenty of space:

Bodrum Edition room 2

The bathroom was very much to my taste with marble and high quality fittings. The room was perfectly laid out and even with two people in there at once you were never in each others way.

It is really everything you need – natural light, a large shower, a separate bathtub, two sinks and a Japanese Toto (in the Loft room) toilet!

Bodrum Edition room 3

The room came with a small balcony with a table and two chairs and great views, especially at night when the coast is dotted with lights.

Bodrum Edition room 4

The second room we had was a Loft. Despite the name, these are on the ground floor of each villa.

The upside is that you get a lot more space than a standard room, including a very large patio terace. The downside is that you get people and buggies going past your window and the room is a little dark.

It’s worth noting that the ‘Loft’ rooms are cheaper than the Premier room I showed you above, despite being bigger, due to their lack of sea view. We were sea facing but planting obstructed virtually all of the bay.

Bodrum Edition room 5

The bathroom here had no natural light and, oddly (and not mentioned anywhere during the booking process), had a large steam room attached to the shower. American brand Le Labo provided the toiletries.

Bodrum Edition room 6

The large terrace is surrounded by shrubs with two sun loungers, one table and two chairs. As it was very hot during our stay (36°C in the last week of August, which was around five degrees higher than we expected) this was a pleasant area to chill and stay somewhat cooler.

Bodrum Edition room 7

Food and drink at The Bodrum EDITION

The hotel has five restaurants – two day restaurants and three evening places. The food here is at a VERY high level, far above what you may expect from a beach resort, and attracts a lot of diners from outside.

Everything we had was delicious, although you pay accordingly – the priciest meal we had was £400 for the four of us, with minimal alcohol. I made so many beautiful pictures of our food that it would make for a coffee table book frankly.

But let’s start in the morning.

Breakfast is served in Kitchen which doubles in the evening as a Michelin-starred fine dining Turkish restaurant.

All breakfast dishes are a la carte. Service is smooth and we had never a problem finding a table in the shade on the terrace.

On your first morning you are encouraged to take the ‘Traditional Experience’:

Bodrum Edition Turkish breakfast

We received a table full of small sweet and savoury dishes including Turkish bakery, grape molasses, stuffed wine leaves, Turkish cheese selection, Kaymak & Aegean honey comb etc.. It was a feast!

You are unlikely to want this every day, but once you know what you like you can order individual items. We also added in more ‘standard’ breakfast items like pancakes (below pic) and avocado on toast.

As an example of how slick the staff are here, someone clearly compiles a list – based on what is charged to your room, I suspect – of where each guest ate the previous evening. The staff will casually drop it into conversation – ‘ah, you ate at XXXXX last night didn’t you, how was it?’.

Bodrum Edition breakfast

On our first evening we had dinner at Inari which is a Japanese-inspired pop-up in collaboration with Istanbul’s Asian fusion concept, Inari Kujira. We loved it so much we came again on our last night.

This photo shows the restaurant in daylight close to the beach, although it has a different menu (and indeed a different name) during the day.

Bodrum Edition Inari 1

Here is the seabass ceviche I had – it tasted as good as it looks.

Bodrum Edition Inari 2

This was a mango cream hamachi:

Bodrum Edition Inari 3

On another evening we had dinner at ‘BRAVA by Stefano Ciotti’ which offers Italian cuisine. This restaurant is higher up on a terrace and has great views.

Bodrum Edition Brava

Here I had a beef carpaccio beautifully arranged on a “matching” plate.

Bodrum Edition Brava 2

This fish and seafood soup was delicious.

Bodrum Edition Brava 3

…. although nothing topped Inari for the creativity of the food and presentation.

The infinity pool

The pool is one level up from the beach and directly above it. It is large and from a certain angle you can’t distinguish between the pool and the sea beyond.

I should mention here that some room categories come with small private pools, but you do pay a substantial price premium for those.

There are many sun loungers as well as cabanas which can be booked separately. You will never struggle to get loungers by the pool or beach, even if you need four together as we did.

The service by the pool was slightly less full-on than by the beach – which I think we agreed was the most comprehensive beach service we’ve ever had, anywhere – but it was still impressive.

The only niggle is that we did feel that the sun umbrellas had been ordered deliberately small for aesthetic purposes. They look very smart when lined up but the amount of shade they offer isn’t huge.

Bodrum Edition pool

The spa and gym

I didn’t use the spa but it looked very slick and surprisingly large, tucked away under a villa block. A Turkish hamam and other treatments are available here.

Bodrum Edition spa

The gym was impressive with a wide array of machines.

Bodrum Edition gym

One of the terraces had a table tennis table for less energetic exercise. Despite the heat in summer the entire hotel has lush gardens, with many olive trees full of fruit and a wide variety of flowers and shrubs. There were gardeners constantly working.

Bodrum Edition table tennis

The beach

The beach is, to be honest, not very wide and is the neighbour of a small public beach used by inhabitants of the summer houses next door. Hotel guests can wander between these two beaches if they wish for some variety, although this doesn’t work in reverse.

On Saturday evening the beach was transformed into a dance floor with a bar, firepits and an impressive looking DJ system. The DJ was apparently a very high profile one flown in for the occasion and the hotel staff were super excited to have him.

Bodrum Edition beach 1

To the right of the beach are restaurants and a long pier. The entire length of the pier comprises cabanas which offer direct access to the deeper waters.

Bodrum Edition beach 2

Here is a better view of the cabanas on the pier – very lush!

Bodrum Edition beach 3

On the opposite side of the pier was an area for watersports and boats. The turquoise water buggy in the front was the most popular although we could never persuade the kids to try anything.

Bodrum Edition beach 4

The sea, in late August, was exceptionally warm and spending time in the water was the high point of the trip. The water is very clear – little grey fish are swarming around you!

Conclusion

We weren’t quite sure what to expect at The Bodrum EDITION and initially thought that five nights may be too much. (Marriott Bonvoy offers ‘5 nights for the points of 4’ on redemptions, so staying for four nights made no sense.) We were wrong.

We also thought that the resort wouldn’t necessarily be ‘right’ for us. However, after a day the permanent background music – which is suprisingly well curated – gets tuned out and you slip into the vibe.

The team of staff were genuinely on a par with the best we have ever experienced and took a real interest in their guests. It helps, of course, that the staff to guest ratio is very high. I don’t know the other five-star resorts in the area but the staff always made us feel that The EDITION was THE place to be.

Who is The Bodrum EDITION for? It feels very hip with young, enthusiastic and very friendly staff. I wouldn’t say that it is especially a place for families with young children, although there were some small kids. There were also some people who were clearly at the older end of the scale.

In truth, whilst the staff may have an average age under 30, there aren’t many potential guests of that age who can afford €1,750+ per night and it was an older crowd than we expected. The beach party on the Saturday night was an outlier but many of the guests had come from outside.

After five nights we were talking about coming back on our own in a few years once the kids do their own thing, and I wasn’t expecting to be saying that when we arrived.

PS: For sightseeing, local taxis are plentiful and cheap. We went to Bodrum town and visited the underwater archaeological museum in Bodrum castle which is outstanding – it is basically a collection of items rescued from ancient shipwrecks in the area. The hotel concierge team had played this down (they admitted that very few guests ask about cultural sites) but you should definitely go.

One evening we went to Yalikavak Marina which is ludicrously posh (huge Vuitton, Dior, Gucci etc etc boutiques) and had dinner there in a ‘fine’ kebab restaurant. This is only around 10 minutes away by taxi. On another evening we went to Gűsműslűk (circa 20 minutes taxi ride) for dinner. It’s tricky to explain but it is basically a one street village, with the street running along the edge of a picturesque lagoon and every spot taken by restaurants. It feels like you are in a scene from “Mamma Mia!” and was utterly charming.

Booking

Bodrum likes to think it is on a par with St Tropez, Capri etc and this is reflected in the prices. In peak season you won’t get change from €2,000 per night if you want a sea view. The Mandarin Oriental in Bodrum costs even more.

We used 425,500 Marriott Bonvoy points per room, so an average of 85,000 points per night. Given that we normally value 85,000 Bonvoy points at £425 (0.5p each) you can see that using points really paid off here. This books into an entry level Deluxe, no sea view, room.

The cash upgrade element was €1,960 in total for five nights for the Premier sea view room and €1,680 for five nights for the Loft room.

We tried to upgrade further using Marriott Bonvoy Nightly Upgrade Awards but the hotel was full over the weekend nights we were there and the upgrade did not clear.

The Bodrum EDITION is a seasonal property, open from April to November. Prices drop rapidly later in the season – for early October our Premier sea view room is down to €850 per night whilst the Loft room is €800.

If you are booking for cash, you will get a better deal if you use our luxury hotel booking partner Emyr Thomas. He is a Marriott ‘preferred partner’ agent and bookings through him come with:

  • Upgrade on arrival, subject to availability
  • Complimentary breakfast for two daily for duration of the stay
  • $100 equivalent Food & Beverage credit once per stay
  • Up to 15% discount on stays of 3+ days
  • Early check-in / late check-out, subject to availability 

You pay the Best Flexible Rate shown online and pay on departure as usual. You can contact Emyr by using the form on this page of HfP.

The Bodum EDITION website is here if you want to learn more.


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Comments (78)

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

  • NotGrumpy says:

    For that amount a night I’d expect the sofas in the room to not look like Ikea’s cheapest offering. Just looking the wrong way at the arm rests I fear would make them snap off.

    • meta says:

      Yes, I avoid Edition hotels as the furniture looks cheap even if they are custom made at high cost. Also apart from bathrooms there is really nothing luxurious about these rooms. The wood panelling looks most 3-star hotels on the Mediterranean. But that’s not a popular opinion!

      • TGLoyalty says:

        completely agree they aren’t luxurious looking they are just the “super modern” look people seem to like for their homes and hotels.

        But edition has always meant to have been about the public spaces the rooms aren’t for hanging about in. If you don’t like that concept it’s really not the hotel to choose. Though in this case I think you could spend a little more time in these rooms than the city centre locations.

        • meta says:

          I don’t hang around in rooms, but I like to come back and wake up in a beautifully designed luxurious room, marvel at design features discovering every morning some new feature rather than looking at some drab furniture, magnolia/brown stained walls and brown-yellowish paneling.

          If I am going to spend a night at the hotel, I don’t want what everyone has in their home. In fact I want something similar, but actually much better than my home. I would never put this kind of design in my house anyway.

          • JDB says:

            Oh @meta I’m so glad someone at last says this here! The number of times people here say the room didn’t matter because we would be out most of the time amazes me, when actually you will likely be spending many hours there, not only sleeping but other stuff as well. Who wants to get changed or wake up in a grotty room? It isn’t even a question of expensive hotels vs cheaper ones. It’s about someone creating a well thought out space with personal touches and features that make for a quality feel. So many expensive hotels are getting so bland and corporatised while increasing prices that good very small hotels or Airbnbs offer much better alternatives in terms of quality and space and leave you with a lot of change.

          • Dave1986 says:

            “It’s about someone creating a well thought out space with personal touches and features that make for a quality feel”

            But that will cost them money and make them less profitable. You shouldn’t want that.

          • JDB says:

            @Dave1986 – the cost of properly decorating a room is very small in the context of a hotel development where someone like Four Seasons won’t even talk to you unless you are proposing to spend at least $1.5m per room on the the overall project. A few hotels I frequent have artworks and objets d’art in the public areas which they consider as investments both to enhance the feel of the hotel but also part of a collection they hope will appreciate in value. Quite a contrast to that terrible cheap panelling and pictures at the Edition that will just get scrapped.

            The quality of finish and furnishings/art at a Mandarin or Peninsula is on a totally different level with customised cabinetry, hand made custom wallpapers etc. etc.

  • HampshireHog says:

    A tiny beach packed with sun loungers and permanent supermarket musak. Mmm not my cup of tea thank you, however nice the hotel is which could be pretty much anywhere.

  • Mark says:

    I knew this was a Conny article when I read “I made so many photos…”! It’s rare for your German-ness to slip through Conny but that one’s a bit of a trap – we say “I took so many photos…” instead. Loved the article anyway, it was quite fun to pick that up though 🙂

    • AJA says:

      There’s also a little clue at the top of the article: “SEPTEMBER 2024 by Conny Urban”

      Both this and yesterday’s reviews are excellent. Comprehensive and great photos. I like this hotel more than yesterday’s but the cost is out of my price range that I’m prepared to pay. Slightly put off also by the mention of music playing all day and not sure I’d be able to tune it out.

      • ed_fly says:

        +1 I really like Conny’s reviews.

        • JDB says:

          Yes, Conny’s reviews and indeed HfP reviews generally are excellent and far more comprehensive than longer waffly reviews one might find elsewhere. The level of detail and the photos are incredibly helpful even though in this instance it tells me that we wouldn’t enjoy this place and that’s priceless. Mr Schrager has put a lot of hotel and tip top F&B into a tiny space but the cheek by jowl beach arrangement (or I imagine a monster tip for a cabana) is off putting. Also the ‘decor’ of the bedroom might make one think one had gone colour blind. The black and white photo perched to one side of the bedhead and then a big TV on the wood panelling wall are just bizarre. I really would expect the TV to be hidden as it’s very ugly yet seemingly the only thing on that wall. Minimalist isn’t particularly our taste although we have seen it done well but this looks rather cheap and lacking finish. The whole hillside looks rather built up. We would be wanting quite a lot more at this price point!

          • Rob says:

            There is, I agree, a sort of underlying feeling that the resort really should be bigger for the cost. This isn’t necessarily logical, since all it would mean is more rooms, more people etc, but I did feel that.

            The Mandarin Oriental site is huge, apparently, but only because it is essentially a villa development with a little hotel tucked in.

  • Nick G says:

    I wanted to stay here this august but returned to the Reges luxury collection in Cesme using 241k points for 7 nights as the prices were just too expensive. Not as impressive but considering it was up to mid £800/night it’s a no brainer using points. While its a lovely hotel it was £40 each for breakfast this time compared to mid £20 two years ago. Extra bed was £35/night which they insisted on charging me for. Cesme is a very Turkish resort which is lovely but it’s not cheap anymore. Still a great use of points

  • David says:

    £400 for dinner for 4 and that’s not with any alcoholic drinks? Think I’d rather fly long haul to Asia….

    • Rob says:

      Might have been one cocktail in there …. certainly nothing for me or the kids though.

      • meta says:

        According to online menus cocktails are priced £13-15 so that certainly didn’t push the price to £400

  • louie says:

    For those of you not so wedded to luxury, maybe think of a gulet, a Turkish yacht (albeit few actually use their sails!). Particularly if you like peace and solitude and fabulous Turkish home cooking.

  • The Savage Squirrel says:

    “beach takes only five minutes (downhill!).”

    … wondering how the beach/sea could be uphill 😉 Maybe in Holland… 😀

    • JDB says:

      @TheSavageSquirrel – you haven’t been to Norfolk then! Can be quite a climb with ups and downs to get to the beach from where you can park your car! Those less accessible beaches are some of the nicest ones.

  • ankomonkey says:

    I enjoyed yesterday’s and today’s reviews. But the lack of sucuk in the traditional breakfast concerned me. A deal-breaker for me (along with the fact that I don’t have anywhere near enough points or cash to stay here)!

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