The short version: Stay. Sol Katmandu Park & Resort is a four-star Meliá property in Magaluf, Mallorca, with a steampunk theme running through everything from the lobby to the bedhead, an on-site mini theme park behind the hotel (Sol Katmandú Park), a splash tower that genuinely belongs at a world-class water park, a huge indoor soft play included with your stay, and Magaluf beach four minutes’ walk away. It’s pitched squarely at families with primary-school-age kids and that’s exactly who will get the most out of it. There’s one main buffet restaurant rather than several, and dinner service at 6:30pm is, in my words on camera, a bonfire. Two of the park attractions (Crazy Golf and the Steamot Laser Challenge) sit outside the stay basis and cost extra. Pools are unheated. Visited 27 to 29 October 2025 as a family on Half Board.
Quick facts
| Location | Magaluf, south-west coast of Mallorca, Spain |
| Brand | Sol Hotels by Meliá (Meliá Hotels International) |
| Resort tier | Four-star family theme-park resort |
| Best for | Families with primary-school-age children who want themed accommodation, a great splash park, an included on-site mini theme park, and the beach within walking distance |
| Pools | Three: a main pool with sunbeds, a small toddler paddling pool, and the splash park (a large splash tower with multiple slides and a periodic tipping bucket). All unheated |
| Splash park | Big splash tower with four or five slides, a tipping bucket and constant water features. Deck chairs around it (no sunbeds). Lower-resort area, separate from the main pool |
| Soft play | Huge indoor under-the-sea-themed soft play, split into two age groups, supervised. Included in stay. You can leave children with a phone number for around 45 minutes at a time |
| On-site theme park | Sol Katmandú Park, accessed from the back of the hotel. Includes the House of Mysteries, 4D cinema (two films: roller coaster and race), Los Banditos shooting ride, Zombies (scarier, recommended for teens), Desperadoo, and The Little Prince. All included with your stay |
| Paid extras inside the park | Crazy Golf (Expedition Golf) and the Steamot Laser Challenge are NOT included; both cost extra |
| Restaurants | One main buffet restaurant for breakfast, lunch and dinner. Pool bar with simple food during the day. Snack Shack inside the theme park area. A pizza truck near the snack shack was closed during our late-October stay |
| Dinner service note | Dinner queues at 6:30pm opening are heavy. There’s a fresh-cooked station with a different cuisine each night (Mexican one night, pasta the next) which is genuinely good when you get to it |
| Accommodation | Sol Katmandú Family Suite (and other room categories): two rooms, master with double bed and balcony access, second room with single beds plus a pull-out child bed and a hideyhole. Steampunk decor throughout. Walk-in rainfall shower, dual vanity, safe, fridge (no minibar), Bluetooth speaker, novelty telephone. Tea and coffee pods. Balcony with seating and drying rack |
| Kids’ entertainment | Two age-split kids’ clubs, mini disco, character meet-and-greets, magician (Nick Frost lookalike, properly entertaining with shadow puppets), occasional singer in the evenings |
| Beach distance | Four minutes’ walk to Magaluf beach, with toilets, showers and other facilities on the seafront |
| Location context | On the Magaluf strip. Nightlife noise audible from the resort, particularly on the strip-facing side |
| Visit dates | 27 to 29 October 2025 (two nights, Half Board) |
First impressions
Sol Katmandu Park & Resort is the kind of hotel where the theming hits you in the lobby and doesn’t let up. The whole place is decked out in a steampunk style, cogs, copper, gas-lamp lighting, a yeti up on the building outside, and the same look carries into the bedroom: brass-look table lamps, a chest that opens like an actual chest, a novelty telephone, the lot. It is a deliberate, committed aesthetic, and even with Halloween dressing layered on top during our stay it held together. If your kids respond to that kind of thing, half the work of “is this hotel fun?” is already done before you’ve put the bags down.
The other thing you clock quickly is the scale of what’s behind the hotel. There’s a properly sized splash park to one side, and the on-site mini theme park out back, and a huge soft play indoors, all included with your stay. It’s a four-star Meliá pitched specifically at families with younger children, and it knows what it is.
The splash park is the headline feature
There are three pools at Sol Katmandu. There’s a decent-sized main pool with sunbeds around it. A small kids’ paddling pool sits just beyond, with a few small inflatables allowed (there’s a size limit, our crocodile didn’t make the cut). And then there’s the splash park, which is the reason most families will book this place over anywhere else in Magaluf.
The splash tower is huge. Four or five slides come off it, water cannons and sprays everywhere, and a big tipping bucket high up the tower that fills slowly and dumps periodically onto whoever’s below. The kids who know it’s coming wait for it. The kids who don’t get a delightful surprise. The bucket alone is the kind of feature you’d see at a paid-entry water park, not a hotel splash zone. There are deck chairs around the splash park rather than full sunbeds, and they get taken early on sunny days, so claim one if you want it.
One thing worth knowing: the pools are unheated. We were there at the tail end of October and they were chilly, which is fine for kids who don’t care and bracing for adults. In high summer this won’t be an issue. In the shoulder seasons, factor it in.
The on-site theme park, Sol Katmandú Park
Out the back of the hotel is Sol Katmandú Park, a small but proper theme park attached to the resort. The first thing you walk past is the House of Mysteries, which the kids loved. From there it opens out into a few different ride areas, a 4D cinema, two or three food outlets and a couple of attractions.
The 4D cinema plays two different shows on rotation, a roller coaster simulation and a race. Both are short, both are good fun, and the staff (Fran and another guy whose name I missed) deserve a specific mention. They were really good with my son. They went the extra mile, they made the experience feel bigger than it really is, and that does not always happen at theme-park attractions where the operators are clocking in and out.
The rides themselves split by age. Los Banditos is a horseback shooting ride that younger kids enjoy. Desperadoo is straightforward fun. The Little Prince was our family’s favourite. Zombies leans scarier and I’d hold that back until your kids are firmly in their teens. None of the rides are big, none of them rival a proper theme park’s headline rides, but for kids in the four-to-ten range they’re plenty. My son was happy.
Two attractions inside the park sit outside the stay basis. Crazy Golf (Expedition Golf) at the back of the site is paid extra. The Steamot Laser Challenge is also paid extra. Both are good, neither is included, so build the cost into your trip if you want them. It’s worth flagging because most guests assume everything inside the park gate is covered.
If you want a fuller walkthrough of the park element specifically, Florence has done a separate video on it over on her channel Let’s Flo.
The soft play, which is genuinely huge
Indoors there’s a soft play that I’d back as the best I’ve seen at any resort. It’s under-the-sea-themed (the moving ball features make sense once you’re inside), divided into two age zones so the very young aren’t being run down by the bigger kids, and it’s properly large. Both my kids could lose themselves in there.
Two important details. First, it’s included with your stay, not a paid extra. Second, the staff will take your phone number and let you leave the children there for around 45 minutes at a time. As a parent, that’s the difference between “we’ll pop in for ten minutes” and “we can go and have a proper coffee on our own”. That single feature saves the trip on a rainy or windy afternoon.
The food, which is good when you can get to it
This is the one part of the resort where I’d warn you to manage expectations. There is only one main restaurant at Sol Katmandu (called Kumar’s Kitchen). It runs breakfast, lunch and dinner, and on Half Board you’ll be in there twice a day. Lunch is bookable as an add-on or paid extra; on Half Board most guests will eat lunch elsewhere (more on that below).
The food quality itself is fine. Breakfast is a good spread: pastries (croissants, pink waffles, churros with chocolate dip), an omelette station, eggs cooked fresh, hash browns I’d actually go back for, beans, scrambled eggs, bacon and English sausage, plus cereals, fruit, cold meats, cheese, and bread stations. The juice comes out of those machines that aren’t quite the real thing, which is a small disappointment at a four-star, but everything cooked is properly cooked. Dinner has a different rotating fresh-cooked cuisine each night, made in front of you (we had pasta on our night, Mexican was the night before). The wok station and the curry station were highlights. Salads, oils, cheese, dried meats and bread fill the rest of the room.
The problem is dinner service at 6:30pm. Everyone wants to be in at 6:30pm because the 7pm kids’ activities are right behind it, and you can feel the queue compressing into a single doorway. I called it a bonfire on camera and I’ll call it a bonfire here. It’s not the kitchen’s fault and the food quality is unaffected, but if you’re sensitive to chaotic service, aim to arrive a little later. Or much earlier. Around 6:45pm we found things had settled and we got a table without queueing.
For lunch and snacks, there are two other options inside the resort. The pool bar has a simple selection of food during the day, partly from breakfast leftovers (bacon, beans, fruit, ice cream). Note that no food can actually be taken to the pool itself, so you eat in the bar seating area. The Snack Shack up in the theme park area does a standard kids’-menu range. There’s also a pizza truck near the Snack Shack, but it was closed throughout our late-October stay, likely a seasonal thing.
The family suite, and the steampunk styling that runs through it
We had an Extra Katmandu Family Suite. Two rooms, joined by an internal door. The master room has a king-size bed, a TV, access to a shared balcony, tea and coffee pods next to a properly fancy kettle, a Bluetooth speaker, a desk, and the steampunk styling carried through in the bedhead murals, the chest that opens like a chest, and a brilliant novelty telephone that the kids spent a happy half-hour with. The second room has single beds and a pull-out child bed underneath, which is a clever way of sleeping a third child without losing floor space. There’s also a little hideyhole in the wall painted as part of the mural, which my kids immediately turned into a den.
The bathroom is the part of the room that genuinely surprised me. It has an enormous walk-in rainfall shower with a handheld attachment, a dual vanity with proper lighting and big mirrors, and loads of towels and toiletries. For a four-star Meliá that pitches at families it punches above what I’d expect. Storage is decent (a safe in the wardrobe, extra bedding and pillows tucked away, a fridge with no goodies in it). The balcony has seating for two and a clothes-drying rack, useful after the splash park.
And, as is now traditional: no bog brush in the bathroom. If you’ve watched the channel before you’ll know how important this is to me, and to you, the discerning Resort Report viewer.
Entertainment, characters and the magician who looked like Nick Frost
The evening entertainment is solid for the audience it’s pitched at. There’s a kids’ mini disco every night, the resort characters come out to meet the kids (and they really do come out, which doesn’t happen at every resort), and there’s a rotating evening act. Our nights had a magician one night and a singer another. The magician deserves a mention: he looked uncannily like Nick Frost, he had real stage presence, and his shadow puppets were properly impressive. The audience was almost entirely children but I sat there genuinely entertained too.
The kids’ clubs are split into two age groups, and ours got involved in several activities. The chocolate cookie decorating session was very messy, the kids loved it, and (rare for craft sessions) they actually ate what they made. Bertie overdid it with the sprinkles, which is on him.
What is missing is anything specifically for adults. The magician was enjoyable and the singer was fine, but the programming clearly assumes kids in the room. If you’re hoping for late evening entertainment after the kids are down, you’ll need to head out of the resort. Which leads me to the location.
The location, and Magaluf beach four minutes away
Sol Katmandu sits on the Magaluf strip, which is the practical context here. Magaluf has a particular reputation, and that reputation does drift into the resort in two ways. First, there’s some noise from the strip in the evenings, audible from rooms on that side of the building, audible at the pool area depending on which way the wind is going. Second, the kind of crowd Magaluf is known for is out and about in the immediate streets. The resort itself is family-focused and is its own world inside its gates. The walk from gate to beach takes you past some of the more colourful Magaluf shopfronts, which won’t matter at all to most families but is worth knowing.
I’d read a Trip Advisor review beforehand warning me the place would be packed with a particular Magaluf crowd. It wasn’t. The clientele inside the resort was overwhelmingly families with primary-school-age kids, which is what you’d expect given how the place is built.
The beach itself is four minutes’ walk away and is genuinely lovely. Clear water, calm surf, the right amount of yellow sand, toilets and showers along the seafront. Even at the tail end of October the sun was warm and the water was calm. You can be on the beach within five minutes of leaving the lobby, which for a resort with this much else going on inside is a real bonus.
Who is Sol Katmandu Park & Resort for?
This is a hotel for families with primary-school-age children, roughly four to ten, who want a busy, themed, programme-heavy holiday with a great splash park, an included mini theme park, and the beach right there. The theming, the splash tower, the soft play and the included rides hit hardest at that age. Teenagers will find the rides a bit young, except possibly Zombies, and would probably rather be in the parks of a bigger destination resort.
It is not a couples hotel. The attractions are pitched at children, the entertainment is pitched at children, and you’d struggle to find a quiet adult atmosphere on the resort. If you don’t have kids in that age window, look elsewhere on Mallorca.
FAQ
Stay or stay away?
Stay. Sol Katmandu Park & Resort is a four-star Meliá that knows exactly who it’s for and delivers on it. The splash park is brilliant, the on-site theme park is included and properly entertaining at the right age, the soft play is the best I’ve seen at any resort, the food is good when you can get past the 6:30pm queue, the theming carries through the whole property, and the beach is four minutes’ walk away. The cons are real but mostly mild: one restaurant only, dinner service is chaotic at peak, two attractions inside the park cost extra, pools aren’t heated, and the Magaluf strip is right outside. None of those would stop me coming back with kids in the right age window. If your children are between four and ten and you want a resort built around them, this is a stay.
Full video transcript
Read the full transcript
Welcome to the Sol Katmandu, a four-star Meliá property here in Magaluf, Mallorca. This is The Resort Report and I’m going to be giving you a full review, a full guide of this property. I’m going to be covering the food, the entertainment, the park, the pools, and so much more. So right now, let’s go dive into those pools.
So when it comes to pools at Sol Katmandu, you’ve got three main options. We’ve got this decent size main pool with sunbeds all around. I’m told that the sunbeds do get taken. There are signs not to put towels out, but they do get picked up and taken. And then just behind me, we have a little kids’ paddling pool. There’s a few inflatables in there, but please note there is a maximum size limit on inflatables. Our crocodile was not allowed in that pool. And then we have the splash park. Let me show you that now.
And then we have this huge splash tower with loads of slides, lots of water, including that huge bucket which periodically splashes down and gets all of the kids. There must be four or five different slides coming off this splash tower. And yeah, let me see if I can take you up there without getting too wet myself.
So, no sunbeds here, but a decent amount of deck chairs, although you can see people trying to get into the sunshine. There’s a few more in the shade around there. So yeah, as the sun goes down, it’s going to get a little bit chillier, and I bet these get taken early on in the day.
So just one block away, literally four minutes from Sol Katmandu is Magaluf Beach and you can see lots of ginger people there with sun cream all over their faces as well as lots of other beautiful people. I mean, it is a really lovely beach. You know, we’re here in the almost off season now, but still great sunshine. You can see some clouds in the sky there, but you know, the water so blue and the view behind me, you know, just absolutely lovely. And as I say, four minutes’ walk from the resort. Easy for any family to head along and yeah, take a seat on the beach, enjoy the sun, enjoy the very little surf, you know, it’s really calm the water here. A little bit chilly, but not too bad. And yeah, perfect for the family. So this is the beach.
So we have an Extra Katmandu Family Suite. Let me show you around. First room has a pull out children bed underneath that one. Some great mural art on the wall and a little hideyhole there that the kids have already been enjoying. You can see Toothless in there. A TV in here. We have some storage in here which has the safe, extra bedding there, and a little fridge, but no goodies in there for us, I’m afraid. I love the steampunk styling throughout, especially this little table here. We have a decent size balcony with some seating and a drying rack out there.
Moving into the master room, another TV. Another access to the balcony. A nice big bed. It’s got Halloween dressing on given the time of year that we’re at. Tea and coffee making facilities with these little pods here. A very fancy looking kettle there. There is some kind of Bluetooth speaker here next to the desk. This chest literally opens up like a chest again. Fantastic mural art. Love the lights leaning into the style and yeah, this really fun telephone as well.
So, into the bathroom then we have a huge huge huge huge walk-in shower. Here we go. Let’s go into the shower, ladies and gentlemen. Come shower with me. Yeah. Big rainfall shower and a handheld there as well. Dual vanity. Great lighting, huge mirrors, lots of towels, lots of toiletries as well. And yeah, simple enough toilet, but no bog brush. And I know how important that is to everyone watching The Resort Report that you know whether a resort has bog brushes in the room. So that is an Extra Katmandu Family Suite here at the Sol Katmandu.
So at Sol Katmandu there is only one restaurant. It serves breakfast, lunch and dinner. And I’ll take you into a lunch service now. We’re going to start with dessert. Not because I want to, but because of the way the restaurant is laid out. So you’ve got some fruit here, various cakes, jellies, some yogurts there, some sweets, more cakes. Just there there is soft serve ice cream, fresh fruit and toppings for your ice cream. Another ice cream machine. You can mix and match them there. Baby food available.
And then here is the terrific Tahar. And he’s stir frying everything up. He does a really good job with stir frying these foods up. So, you get to choose from all of these different veggies, few different sauces, and then rice and noodles. And he does a fantastic job. Look at that smile.
And then we’ve got some nuts and dried fruit there. Moving on to some salads. There’s hard-boiled eggs and tuna there. Various sauces. Some hummus and other salad-like items. Artichokes there. Move on to this central platform. We have our oils here. Really good selection of oils. And then we’ve got some capers there. Some dried meats. All kinds of goodies. Some little pickled onions there. Olives. More oils and sauces. And then some cheese, please. Some bread sticks. Some preserves. Chutneys. Looks lovely.
Now over here, we’re on to the paella. Some chicken soup. Rice. There’s a curry chicken just there. Some baked potatoes. Pork leg there with some gravy, lasagna. Actually says that’s tuna lasagna, which is interesting to see. Freshly cooked meat here. Actually, cuttlefish just there sizzling away. Pretty serious stuff.
Just missed out on the breads here. Really good selection of different bread items. And then you got your chicken nuggets, some kind of ham thing there, some peas, different soup, a vegetable soup, and then pizza and some pastas and sauce there.
So, in terms of seating arrangements, there’s seats inside here. There’s also seats outside, and outside there’s a few different ways you can sit. You’ve got these plastic tables and chairs, and then you’ve got these kind of wire metal frame ones, and then there’s some park benches just around the corner there. I want to just quickly show you the drinks on offer during this lunch service. So, you can get some various juices here. Then there’s some house wine options. There is a beer option and then you’ve got your Coca-Cola options as well. So, that is lunch and of course I’m going to be showing you breakfast and dinner as well.
So, another daytime food option is the pool bar, but please know that no food can actually go around the pool. There is all of this seating outside here. And you’ve got a selection of food just here. Some bacon from breakfast. Probably beans. Yeah. Leftovers from breakfast. Got some fruits here. So yeah, relatively simple affair. You got ice cream there. And so this is available either at extra charge or as part of your all-inclusive.
So we’re back in Kumar’s Kitchen for breakfast. Once again, welcomed by these ladies here. And yeah, let me show you what we’ve got on for breakfast. So, starting with these pastry items. Love these little pink waffle style waffles, little cookies, some croissants. My wife tells me they’re fantastic. Ice cream, chocolate milk.
So, there is a large omelette station here as busy as the wok station for dinner. You can see it just been put together. Closed now. Some cereals. No Sugar Puffs, ladies and gentlemen. We will never recover from this. It’s definitely getting a bad rating without Sugar Puffs.
Lots of other nice cereals. Onto the fruits. A good selection. And onto the cooked. Got some good beans, scrambled eggs, bacon, frankfurters, eggs. More here. These hash browns are excellent. Incredibly good hash browns, Dutch potatoes, tomatoes, more bacon, and English sausage. Got eggs being made here, fresh for you. See them getting served up.
And then we’re on to some more huge croissants. Your croissants. Some sauces. There was a huge queue for these waffles and pancakes earlier, died down a little bit now. Churros and you got that chocolate dip there. In terms of drinks, we have your coffees and your teas and juice out of one of these machines. I would have liked to have seen juice, you know, real juice as it were. Fairly hectic in here. Very busy. Your bread station here, including your toast. Two toast stations which again has led to a little bit of queueing the whipped cream here.
So, the final area I want to show you is this central reservation where we do have some wagyu, some nice salad items, some meat, salsa, some hams, lots of oil, lots and lots and lots of oil. And then around here, is that Quint? Don’t know. Cheese please. So there you go. That is breakfast here at Sol Katmandu in Mallorca.
Another daytime food option is the Snack Shack bar up in the theme park element. There’s also a pizza truck over there, but I haven’t seen it operating. It might just be this time of year. In the Snack Shack you got relatively standard kind of menu which you can see people around enjoying today.
Not going to take you through the full dinner service, but I do want to point out at the start of service there is a big queue. Everyone wants to get their dinner in at 6:30. What I will say is dinner is a complete bonfire. Frankly is pretty mad in there. Like, yep, cool. They’ve got some fresh dishes being made for you and that changes every night. We had a spaghetti or pasta dishes being made tonight. Understand there was Mexican dishes last night which we missed. But yeah, a real fraught experience for dinner, which is a shame when you know the quality of the food and the other services are fine but yeah I guess there’s not much they can do about that. That’s not their fault apart from limiting entry and staging the evening activities a bit better. You know we’re rushing to try and get to a 7pm kids’ activity and I know a lot of other families will be as well. But yeah, there’s food at Sol Katmandu.
So, out the back of the hotel is the Sol Katmandú Park. It’s a veritable theme park, although a small one. We have this wonderful House of Mysteries here, which the kids really enjoyed. And then there’s two or three food outlets and then a few 4D rides. This is a 4D cinema that plays two different things. There’s a race and a roller coaster. Got some lovely desserts just here. A shooting attraction. There’s that Snack Shack that I mentioned. And then the pizza truck in the background which hasn’t been operating while we’ve been here.
In terms of the other rides, we have Los Banditos where you ride on the back of a little horse and shoot things. You got Zombies which is a little bit scary for the younger ones. Recommended for teens really. Desperadoo is, yeah, wonderful ride. And then Little Prince was our favourite. Then we’ve got the Expedition Golf at the back there, which is extra. You do have to pay for that. At least you do on our room basis. If you want a full review of this area, check out my daughter’s channel, Let’s Flo, where we go into a bit more depth about what’s possible here at Sol Katmandú Park.
The resort has a huge and fantastic soft play where kids of two separate age groups, they’re separated, can play under the sea. There’s movement of balls as you can see there. You can hear those kids giggling at the moment. They can get super high up and as I say it’s a really good quality soft play and is included in our stay basis and you can leave children here with your phone number and yeah you can head off for 45 minutes or so. Yeah, really good facilities here at the Sol Katmandu.
So, when it comes to kids’ activities, there are two kids’ clubs separated by age. Bertie and Florence were able to join in with a number of activities during our stay, including this very messy chocolate cookie making session, which they really had fun putting together very messy creations. And they actually ate them as well, which is rare for these kind of things. Bertie probably overdid it with the sprinkles mind.
There is, of course, the obligatory children’s disco, the mini disco, which was enjoyed by lots of the kids and the character came out as well, which was good to see. Later in the evening, there was a magician. And the guy looked like Nick Frost and had great stage presence and yeah, was legitimately entertaining, although yeah, focused on children. I think the most impressive part of his act for me was these shadow puppets. He did a really good job with a number of really fantastic shadow puppets that had everyone laughing and amazed. One night there was a singer as well, entertaining children and adults alike.
So, it’s time for that stay or stay away rating. But before I give you that, I want to give you some pros and cons of staying at this resort. I want to start with the pros and talk about the ambiance, the way that this whole resort is decked out in that steampunk style. It is really cool even with the Halloween decorations that are up right now. Really really cool little kind of point there.
The excellent splash park, you know, it is a really good splash park. The kind that you’d see in a world-class water park. You know, it’s huge. It’s got lots of elements, that bucket is huge. And yeah, really really really cool indeed.
The soft play, I love that there is this big again, excellent soft play and that you get a decent amount of time included every day as much as you want really. Starting to rain on me now. Oh dear.
The park, the whole park attraction is really cool. I’ve enjoyed it. And you know is great for families.
The food was great. I loved all the food and especially that wok station where they were cooking up things fresh. Really cool to see fresh stuff being made.
The 4D cinemas, those attractions, there was a guy in there called Fran and actually there was another guy as well. They were really good, really fun. My son absolutely loved them. Like they were so much fun and added a lot to the experience. As they should, but you know that doesn’t always happen with theme parks and attractions.
So I’ve talked about that theming and decor throughout. I mean you can see the yeti up on the building there. I mean that’s a big piece but so many little theming elements that are really cool.
It is a family orientated resort which is good. I like that as well. The characters coming out. I enjoy the characters coming out and seeing the kids. That is a really cool thing that happens. You don’t get that in many places.
And the proximity to the beach and that beach being so good and full of facilities for people, you know, toilets, showers, etc.
Now, on to the cons. Behind me, you can actually see the steam, what do they call it? The Steamot Laser Challenge. The Steamot Laser Challenge nor the Crazy Golf are included in your stay, which is a shame. They’re the two attractions that aren’t included.
And there is only one real food outlet. Whilst it’s very good, it’s a shame that there’s only one, and it is a buffet.
The attractions, they are for kids really. I mean, I enjoyed them, but if you’re coming here as a couple, not really. If you’re coming here with teenage kids, not really. So it’s they’re fantastic, but they are for kids within a range.
I also think there is a lack of proper adult entertainment in the evenings. You know, we had we did have a singer. The magician I did find enjoyable and engaging, but yeah, nothing really for adults focusing on kids instead.
Now, where this resort is situated, it is near Magaluf. Well, it’s in Magaluf, but on the strip. And so being adjacent you are going to hear some noise and you have got that nightlife right outside. And then there are no heated pools. The pools are chilly. Now in the heat of summer that’s not going to cause too much of a problem but it is worth knowing.
So, just before that final point, before I came here, I read a review on Trip Advisor that said that the whole Katmandu is full of bulky tattooed northerners and there’s trout pouts and thongs everywhere. And somewhat disappointingly, that is not the case. You know, we had a really good time here.
And so, is it stay or stay away? It’s definitely a stay for me here at Sol Katmandu. Really enjoyed our time here and I think you will too if you come and stay here.
So that is it for The Resort Report for Sol Katmandu here in Magaluf. Let me know what you think in the comments down below.
