Luxury hospitality is no longer defined by thread counts or Michelin stars. It’s measured by how deeply guests can connect with themselves, their healthspan and their longevity. In today’s hospitality market, the strongest brands are the ones treating wellness not as a department, but as an ecosystem, combining the setting, health and technology.
At Six Senses and SHA, two of the most forward-thinking wellness destinations in the world, this idea has evolved into a complete design philosophy: meeting guests where they are — physically, emotionally and geographically — with experiences that adapt to their individual needs.
Personalization as the New Luxury
“At SHA, hyper-personalization is at the core of our method, and physical performance and wellbeing are fundamental pillars of our longevity-focused approach,” says Alejandro Bataller, Co-Founder and Managing Partner of SHA. “Our philosophy is rooted in understanding that every guest arrives with unique goals, capabilities and objectives. For those reasons, we offer a broad spectrum of possibilities that go far beyond a traditional wellness experience.”
That spectrum includes everything from private, in-residence workouts and immersive outdoor activities to virtual training sessions tailored to the guest’s own physiology. “Every experience is designed to support the guest’s physical, mental and emotional performance,” Bataller says.
Exotic destinations also lend themselves to customized experiences.
“We pride ourselves on offering pioneering wellness and for us that means that we are always looking forward to the latest science and technology that is evidence-based but we always make sure that it also integrates with the local history and sense of place,” said Susie Arnett, Director of Wellness Programming. “Each property is unique, however and leverages the beautiful culture, plants and history of the location, so the range of offerings is highly reflective of the place.”
The result is a wellness experience that feels distinctly human — not prescriptive. At SHA Mexico, guests train on terraces overlooking the Caribbean Sea and the Mayan jungle, snorkel alongside coral reefs and sea turtles, or practice mindfulness amongst the sounds of water and wind. At Six Senses, guests may find themselves immersed in locally inspired therapies or hiking the surrounding terrain for a movement experience that only landscape can offer.
Wellness travelers are no longer chasing escape — they’re looking for transformation. “We are seeing a strong shift toward longevity-focused health optimization,” Bataller says. “Guests are no longer seeking quick fixes; they want sustainable strategies they can maintain at home that enhance vitality, mobility, resilience and overall healthspan.”
At the same time, Six Senses notes that demand has broadened. “As wellness has gotten so much press, our guests are highly educated about the variety of possible offerings and it’s gotten more personalized,” Arnett explains. “At Six Senses, our goal is always to design an experience that speaks to the interests and desires of our guests so for some that’s a very zen stay and for others, that’s a highly active, muscle-building experience.”
The new generation of wellness guests arrives informed, curious and ready to participate — and they expect choice. Whether that means a guided strength session, a restorative sound bath or a walk through nature to lower cortisol and reconnect with presence, hospitality brands are being asked to deliver it all.

Partnerships that Power Experience
Technology and brand collaborations are the backbone of this transformation. “Technology and innovation are at the heart of SHA’s philosophy,” Bataller says. “We collaborate with leading fitness and health partners to integrate the most advanced diagnostic tools, performance tracking equipment and recovery systems into our programs.”
That includes partnerships with platforms like WHOOP, which allows guests to monitor sleep, recovery and heart rate variability in real time. “This data is followed by our team of doctors and experts to further track and personalize each guest’s health plan, ensuring precise, measurable and impactful results,” Bataller explains.
For Six Senses, innovation takes a different but equally compelling form. “We have important relationships with brand partners, everyone from Hyperice to Subtle Energies and many others,” Arnett says. “We are big fans of biohacking tech like compression, red light, PEMF and technologies that support our guests in going inward and in melting into deep relaxation.”
Across both brands, the underlying idea is that technology should not interrupt the guest experience — it should heighten it. From recovery systems to circadian lighting, these subtle innovations make wellbeing feel natural, intuitive and ever-present.
When asked what their guests request most often, both brands circle back to the same theme: personalization meets purpose. “Guests increasingly prioritize hyper-personalization, expert guidance and measurable outcomes,” Bataller says. “They are looking for health programs that align with their biological age, physical condition and lifestyle habits — something SHA has been pioneering for nearly two decades through advanced diagnostics and longevity protocols.”
At Six Senses, diversity of choice is key. “We have such a wide range of offerings, but our Spa treatments and biohacking tech are very popular as are our daily schedule of classes,” Arnett explains. “We bring the top visiting practitioners from around the world to our properties… so our goal is that you will discover something you cannot find at home and that the experience you have at Six Senses is something you can carry with you wherever you go.”
It’s this blend of local immersion and scientific precision that defines the new gold standard in hospitality wellness — and keeps guests coming back.

Continuous Innovation, Measured in Outcomes
Both SHA and Six Senses view innovation as a cycle — not a one-time offering but a living system of feedback and refinement.
“At SHA, continuous evolution and tracking is embedded in our philosophy,” Bataller says. “We combine real-time data, in-depth medical diagnostics and guest progress to refine and enhance the health journey on an ongoing basis.”
Six Senses echoes that sentiment from a hospitality perspective: “Like most spas, we generate reports that help us understand guest demand and we also just updated our guest survey, as getting that feedback is essential to continuing to improve on a regular basis,” says Arnett. “In our world, we’re not competing with other hotel brands but with our own experience, how can we do better tomorrow than we did today?”
That shared ethos — progress through personalization — is what’s propelling the next era of wellness travel. As hotels and longevity institutions evolve, fitness and wellness are no longer separate, they are the crux of the entire guest experience.

