Oasis Spa Club exists to deliver one thing: silence. No screaming children. No teenage voices echoing across pools. No phone conversations at the next table. Just you, your travel companion if you have one, the Dead Sea minerals, and a spa designed with Moroccan aesthetics and serious intent. It’s the only adults-only (18+) hotel at the Dead Sea, and that distinction fundamentally changes what the experience feels like.
The property enforces a no-mobile-phones policy in common areas. Walk through the spa corridors, relax on the beach, or dine in the restaurants, and you won’t see anyone scrolling. It sounds austere until you actually experience it, at which point the calm becomes almost shocking. The hotel designs everything around that silence. The Moroccan styling, the heated Dead Sea water pools, the traditional hammam, the private beach with complimentary sunbeds. Everything serves the purpose of therapeutic retreat.
With 242 rooms and only adults staying, the property never feels overcrowded or frantic. The atmosphere is couples celebrating anniversaries, solo travelers reclaiming time for themselves, and guests who are done with resort chaos and ready for actual rest. Breakfast and dinner come included, so you move through meals purposefully rather than hunting for restaurants. Two on-site dining venues handle the variety without overwhelming complexity.
The Dead Sea situation here is identical to other Ein Bokek properties. The water contains 34.2 percent salinity and over 35 minerals. You float effortlessly; the minerals work on your skin; the experience is oddly therapeutic. But the difference at Oasis is that you’re experiencing it without typical resort background noise.
Oasis Spa Club sits in the center of Ein Bokek's narrow resort corridor, but the adults-only policy and no-mobile-phones rule create psychological distance from the typical resort atmosphere. You're at the Dead Sea, a UNESCO-listed natural wonder, without the sounds of families and activity that define other properties in the area.
Every room reflects Moroccan design language. Warm tones, traditional elements, mosaic tile accents. They’re not generic hotel rooms; they’re designed to feel intentional and cohesive with the spa philosophy. Standard double rooms provide comfortable space between activities; club rooms and suites expand the square footage and upgrade the furnishings considerably.
Room views are either Dead Sea or garden; ocean views cost more and deliver the premium experience of waking to the water. All accommodations include air conditioning, television, minibar, safe, and complimentary Wi-Fi. Bathrooms come appointed with either bathtub or shower, premium robes, and quality toiletries that reinforce the spa focus. The attention to detail is noticeable even in standard rooms.
If you’re spending serious time in your room or you want the Dead Sea view experience, club rooms and suites justify their premium. Standard rooms are comfortable but feel like a base camp. The difference between standard and upgraded is marked here because the design makes every detail visible.
The Moroccan-style spa is the property’s centerpiece. Mosaic tiles, arched doorways, warm amber lighting, water features. You walk into the space and immediately feel the intention to create a therapeutic environment separate from ordinary resort life. The architecture itself slows you down.
The heated Dead Sea water pool holds water at 34.2 percent salinity with over 35 minerals. Floating here is identical to floating in other Dead Sea pools, but the setting transforms the experience. The light, the Moroccan design, the absence of children’s voices and splashing, the knowledge that everyone else in the water is there for the same therapeutic reason. Soak times of 15 to 20 minutes are recommended per session.
Sulfur baths emit that distinctive rotten-egg smell while your skin soaks in mineral-rich water. A traditional hammam provides steam and scrubbing if you want that deeper cleansing experience. A sauna offers dry heat. Treatment rooms handle mud wraps, massages, and facial treatments using Dead Sea minerals.
The no-mobile-phones policy extends to the spa, pool, and beach areas. You won’t have background noise from people conducting conference calls while floating. That restriction, which might sound odd to some travelers, creates the entire therapeutic philosophy of the place.
Two restaurants operate under kosher supervision. Marine specializes in fish and seafood cuisine, a choice that feels regional and intentional. Tiltan handles meat and international dishes. A lobby bar serves beverages and light meals throughout the day. Breakfast and dinner are included in standard room rates under the half-board model, which means you move through meals without the logistical burden of hunting restaurants or worrying about additional charges.
The dual-restaurant approach provides menu variety that many similarly-sized Dead Sea properties don’t match. You’re not locked into repeating the same dining experience every night. Both restaurants emphasize quality over volume; meals feel intentional rather than rushed buffet experiences.
Your primary activity is floating. The private beach provides direct Dead Sea access with complimentary sunbeds and umbrellas. Most guests spend hours in the water, reading, thinking, existing in that buoyant state where the water does the physical work. The seasonal outdoor pool offers fresh water and sun loungers if you want a break from salt.
The no-mobile-phones policy extends to beach and pool areas, so you won’t experience the typical resort soundscape of devices and conversations. It sounds restrictive until you experience how much calmer the atmosphere becomes.
Beyond the hotel, Ein Gedi Nature Reserve (30 minutes drive) offers hiking trails and waterfalls for those wanting change of pace. Masada (30 minutes drive) provides ancient history and spectacular desert views from a UNESCO-listed fortress. Both work as day trips without leaving the property’s peaceful atmosphere behind.
Oasis Spa Club enforces a strict adults-only (18+) policy with no exceptions. Families with children cannot be accommodated. If you need family-friendly Dead Sea accommodation, consider Milos or other Ein Bokek properties that welcome guests of all ages. This policy is non-negotiable by design; it’s core to the property’s therapeutic mission.
Couples celebrating anniversaries or romantic occasions will find everything they need here. The adults-only environment, included meals, private beach, and Moroccan spa create conditions impossible to find elsewhere at the Dead Sea. Solo travelers prioritizing wellness and wanting to disconnect from constant connectivity will appreciate the therapeutic design throughout.
This property is not ideal for families with children (accommodations simply aren’t permitted) or guests expecting high-activity resort experiences. If you want nightlife, crowds, kids’ clubs, and activity programming, you’re in the wrong place. If you want quiet, spa-focused retreats with curated meals and minimal digital distraction, this is exactly right.
Milos Dead Sea Hotel offers a nearby alternative for families; it features similar Dead Sea access with family-friendly amenities and boutique aesthetic while maintaining a quieter vibe than major properties.
Ein Bokek itself is a quiet strip of hotels facing the Dead Sea. There aren’t restaurants or shops outside the hotels; you exist within the hotel ecosystem. What you will find nearby: Ein Gedi Nature Reserve (30 minutes drive north) features hiking trails and freshwater waterfalls that feel refreshing after days of mineral-soaked skin. Masada (30 minutes drive), that legendary fortress, sits on a mountaintop with views spanning the desert and Dead Sea. Most guests take at least one day trip to one or both attractions.
The 18+ policy is strictly enforced with no exceptions. The hotel does not accommodate guests under 18, including teenagers traveling with parents. This is fundamental to the property’s design and therapeutic mission. If family accommodation is needed, you’ll need to book elsewhere.
Phones are prohibited in common areas, including spa, pool, beach, dining areas, and lobbies. You can use phones in your private room. The policy aims to create an unplugged, calm environment. Most guests discover it’s liberating rather than restrictive; you arrive already decompressed without the background noise of other guests taking calls.
Breakfast and dinner are included in standard room rates under the half-board model. You don’t need to plan additional dining or worry about extra meal charges. This simplifies the logistics of your stay considerably. Lunch is not included, but the lobby bar provides light meal options.
The mineral composition is identical: 34.2 percent salinity and over 35 minerals. The floating experience is the same at every Dead Sea property. The difference at Oasis is the setting, the spa design, the calm atmosphere, and the absence of children and typical resort noise. The water itself is exactly the same.
Ein Gedi Nature Reserve (30 minutes drive north) features hiking trails and freshwater waterfalls. Masada (30 minutes drive) is a UNESCO-listed fortress with ancient history and panoramic desert views. Both are manageable day trips. Most guests take at least one day trip to break up multi-day spa retreats
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