When you stay at Hotel Mary in Vico Equense, you'll be connected to a shopping center, within a 10-minute walk of Gulf of Naples and Giusso Castle. This beach hotel is 6.2 mi (10 km) from Piazza Tasso and 10 mi (16 km) from Pompeii Archaeological Park.
Relax at the full-service spa, where you can enjoy massages, body treatments, and facials. You can soak up the sun at the private beach or enjoy other recreational amenities including an outdoor pool and an indoor pool. Additional amenities at this hotel include complimentary wireless internet access, concierge services, and babysitting (surcharge). The shuttle (surcharge) will take you to the nearby beach or shopping center.
Enjoy local cuisine at Ristorante Mary, a beachfront restaurant where you can enjoy drinks at the bar/lounge, take in the ocean view, and even dine alfresco. You can also stay in and take advantage of the room service (during limited hours). Relax with your favorite drink at the beach bar or the poolside bar. A complimentary cooked-to-order breakfast is served daily from 7:30 AM to 10:00 AM.
Featured amenities include a business center, limo/town car service, and dry cleaning/laundry services. Planning an event in Vico Equense? This hotel has 334 square feet (31 square meters) of space consisting of conference space and a meeting room. For a surcharge, guests may use a roundtrip airport shuttle (available 24 hours) and a cruise ship terminal shuttle.
Make yourself at home in one of the 68 guestrooms featuring refrigerators and LCD televisions. Wireless internet access (surcharge) keeps you connected, and digital programming is available for your entertainment. Bathrooms feature bathtubs or showers, complimentary toiletries, and bidets. Conveniences include phones, as well as safes and desks.
"I stayed in nine hotels on this trip to Italy, and this one was the most ”uncomfortable.”
[Key Tips to Avoid Pitfalls]
Be very careful with this [Superior Sea View Room]. It's anything but ”superior”—it's the cheapest room in the hotel (within the ocean view), the lowest-end of the ocean view rooms (there are no standard sea view rooms).
It's the farthest from the sea, which is a minor issue.
The key issue is that there are two vertical elevators next door, ”dimpled” from the room (essentially, two elevators directly at the head of the bed).
Result A: The room is incredibly small and oddly shaped.
Result B: The elevators are noisy.
Don't expect to be able to change rooms. This is a terrible room type, with only one per floor. It's the same no matter which room you move to. Don't count on the hotel offering an upgrade out of kindness. I contacted the hotel using Ctrip's Black Diamond channel before check-in and was told the elevator was right next door, with no other rooms available (though there were other rooms available when I checked in).
About the hotel as a whole:
Pros:
It's newly renovated, making it one of the more pleasant-looking older hotels. The downside is the strong odor, which is most noticeable on the highest floors (September 2026). Walking around the two lower floors, the odor seems less noticeable.
The room types are generally acceptable (excluding the superior sea view rooms, a warning). The view is also okay.
Cons:
1. The front desk staff's attitude towards Asian customers is average; not indifferent, but not exactly welcoming either.
2. Regarding the air conditioning: During check-in, the front desk staff gave a lot of rambling instructions, essentially saying that it only works if the balcony door is closed and locked. However, no matter how I tried to close or lock the balcony door, the air conditioning kept displaying ”LOC.” Since the weather wasn't too hot, I slept with the balcony door open for the entire night and didn't have the energy to argue with the unhelpful front desk staff. 3. This awful [Superior Sea View Room] is absolutely disgusting.
4. The room key is just a key with a heavy, old sign.
5. In the wilderness, late at night, early in the morning, with dogs barking in the distance for an hour, pure rural charm.
Let's talk about the hotel restaurant.
1. Since it's not in the downtown area, if you don't have a car, you'll most likely have to eat dinner in the hotel's only restaurant.
2. Restaurant costs are pretty much the same for four-star hotels in Italy. 80 euros for two people roughly corresponds to three main courses, one dessert, and a bottle of water. This hotel restaurant falls within this price range.
3. The biggest [feature] is the portion size; it's incredibly [exquisite].
4. For example, the shrimp main course for 28 euros (approximately) is just three shrimp slices with a little mashed potatoes; that's the ”main course” (see picture).
5. For two people with small appetites, 80 euros is enough. For larger appetites, it'll start at at least 100 euros, not counting drinks. 6. The meals are expensive, and the main courses are small. Another reason is that in Italy, main courses are divided into first and second entrees, making it difficult to get a full meal from one entree like in the US. If one person orders both entrees, the starting price is 35-45 euros.
7. The restaurant has a head waiter who looks like a gentleman waiter straight out of a TV or movie. His facial expressions, language, and body language are all very performative and ritualistic (like a magician on stage). He is very dedicated and has a strong presence, which is probably a ”super deal” for a restaurant of this price (someone mentioned him on Dianping). He is the only one in the restaurant with the authority to show customers to their seats, communicate, and take orders (this is the case in most restaurants), while everyone else focuses on basic service. Because of his professionalism and performative nature, he seems more welcoming and polite to Asians than in other restaurants, and he seems to treat everyone equally (on the surface, but only on the surface). (Of course, the other waiters are much more indifferent)."