Herbert Samuel Hod Dead Sea Hotel
Beersheba · Israel · Ein Bokek Dead Sea
About Herbert Samuel Hod Dead Sea Hotel — Luxury Boutique Hotel in Beersheba
Herbert Samuel Hod Dead Sea Hotel is an exceptional 4-star hotel in Beersheba, Israel. Guests enjoy a distinctive experience combining world-class facilities including bar, beach club, concierge, and more with the personalised warmth that defines great boutique hospitality.
Guest Reviews 3.8 / 5
The hotel is located close to the Dead Sea beachfront, with towels and gowns provided. Also available are spa facilities, pools, Jacuzzi, and a sauna. The all-you-can-eat breakfast and dinner menus made lunch redundant. A coffee machine with capsules in the room was icing on the cake!
We loved it! They were attentive accommodating and caring when we stayed. We keep kosher and Shabbat and it was important for us if food is acceptable by our American orthodox Kashrut standards. And it was! For those that care: Overall hashgacha: Bikat hayarden Meat and chicken- Badatz mehadrin Rav Shlomo Machpud which is high level for us and very acceptable! Produce- Mashgiach confirmed that teruma and maaser has been taken. Dairy- mehadrin Heksher. We enjoyed lavish foods and choices! Overall great experience!
We came to the Herbert Samuel Hod Dead Sea Hotel to celebrate my birthday and enjoy a relaxing spa day. The spa treatments were outstanding—the therapists were warm, professional, and made the experience truly special. The pool and facilities were clean, calm, and very relaxing. Overall we had a wonderful time but I had a major issue with the following situation: We added lunch on to our day package using our miluim voucher, and that’s where the experience unfortunately took a turn. Before our treatments, we wanted to get drinks at the spa bar, but it was closed. We were told to go upstairs to the hotel bar. When I asked about cocktails, the woman working there snapped that she doesn’t make cocktails, only the bartender coming at 3 does. When I came back to pay for my drink and my husband’s coffee, she rudely said “I know!” when I pointed him out—unnecessarily sharp for a hospitality setting. We then went straight to lunch. I was wearing swim shorts, a shirt over my bathing suit, and a spa robe —modest and very typical attire for a spa guest, especially when lunch is part of the spa day package. There were no signs or staff at the entrance to say otherwise. Everyone there was in very causual clothing, shorts, jeans and t-shirts, nothing formal. Mid-meal, the same woman from the bar came over and told me I couldn’t wear a swimsuit or robe there. A manager followed and gave me a difficult time in front of everyone, claiming he had already told me that (he hadn’t—he wasn’t even there when we arrived). I was embarrassed and shocked at how poorly it was handled. The spa staff later said when we told them what happened, “Wouldn’t one think for themselves that it’s not appropriate?” only after when we said our issue is with how it was handled, she agreed. But in many nice hotels in Israel, it’s totally normal to eat in spa attire if you’re coming straight from the pool or treatment. This hotel even had an outdoor enclosed seating area off the pool—they could have easily and politely offered that option instead of making me feel like I wasn’t being modest. It’s a shame, because the actual spa experience was really lovely, but the lack of hospitality, poor communication, and unnecessarily harsh behavior during lunch really clouded what should have been a 100% relaxing birthday.