All-Inclusive Resorts in Buenos Aires
Buenos Aires is home to some of the world's finest all-inclusive properties — and knowing which ones actually deliver is where a good travel planner earns their keep. Buenos Aires is South America's most sophisticated city — a European-influenced metropolis of grand boulevards, world-class theater, late-night steakhouses, and a tango tradition that expresses the Argentine soul better than any words could.
The Wedding Unicorn has vetted the all-inclusive resort landscape in Buenos Aires and knows which properties offer genuine luxury, which overdeliver at mid-range prices, and which ones to avoid entirely. We match you to the right resort based on your travel style, not on whoever pays the highest commission.
Buenos Aires is the most European city in South America — boulevards wide as Paris, beef as good as anywhere on earth, and tango that makes strangers intimate.
We book the right room categories (not all rooms are created equal, even at the same resort), negotiate group rates when applicable, arrange excursions outside the resort, and ensure you get the most from Buenos Aires's tango, steak, Recoleta cemetery, Teatro Colón, café culture.
- Best time to visit: October–April (Southern Hemisphere spring/summer)
- 11 hours from New York City
- Language: Spanish
- Visa: No visa required for US citizens
- Currency: Argentine Peso
- Resort matching based on travel style
- Room category optimization
- Negotiated rates and extras
- Excursion coordination outside resort
- Restaurant and entertainment reservation
7 Nights in Buenos Aires — Tango, Steak & European Grace in South America
The Paris of South America, where tango was born and beef reaches its apotheosis
Buenos Aires is the most European city in South America and one of the world's great metropolitan experiences — a city of 3 million people built in the late 19th and early 20th centuries in a conscious imitation of Paris and Madrid, with wide boulevards, grand cafés, ornate theaters, and a population that takes food, culture, and psychoanalysis with equal seriousness. The tango was born here in the working-class conventillos (tenements) of La Boca in the 1880s and still thrives in the milongas (tango dance halls) that run from midnight to 4am throughout the city. For honeymooners, Buenos Aires offers a distinctly romantic and sophisticated experience: late dinners (nothing starts before 9pm, midnight is normal), the sensory intensity of a live tango performance in San Telmo, a Sunday asado at a parilla surrounded by locals, and the beautiful architecture of Recoleta and Palermo. Seven nights in Buenos Aires is genuinely not enough — but it's enough to understand why the city has been called the most addictive city in the world.
1Arrival — Puerto Madero & the Riverfront
Ezeiza International Airport is 35km from the city center. Puerto Madero — the converted 19th-century docklands immediately east of the historic center, rebuilt in the 1990s as Buenos Aires' premium dining and residential district — is the most visually striking first impression of the city: the red brick brick dock buildings housing restaurants with river views, the iconic Puente de la Mujer (Woman Bridge, 2001, by Santiago Calatrava) swinging on its pivot over the dock basin, and the Ecological Reserve of Puerto Madero beyond. A first dinner at one of Puerto Madero's parillas — Cabaña Las Lilas or Cabana Mayor — for an introduction to Argentine steak culture: a bife de chorizo, mollejas (sweetbreads), and a bottle of Malbec from Mendoza. Buenos Aires beef is extraordinary and the parilla culture — long, leisurely, wine-soaked — is a specifically Argentine social institution.
- ✦ Puerto Madero docklands and the Calatrava Puente de la Mujer
- ✦ Ecological Reserve at sunset facing the Río de la Plata
- ✦ First Argentine parilla dinner — bife de chorizo and Malbec
- ✦ Puerto Madero evening promenade
2Recoleta — Cemetery, Fine Arts & Cafe Culture
Recoleta is Buenos Aires' most aristocratic neighborhood — a labyrinth of French-style palaces, great cafés, and the extraordinary Recoleta Cemetery, where the city's great and powerful have been buried in elaborate above-ground mausolea since 1822. The cemetery contains 4,691 vaults, many of extraordinary architectural quality, in a city-within-the-city of avenues, chapels, and monuments. Eva Perón's grave (Evita, the most iconic figure in Argentine history) is here — always covered in flowers. The National Museum of Fine Arts nearby has the best collection of Argentine art in the country and an excellent collection of European masters. Cafe Tortoni on the Avenida de Mayo — open since 1858, the oldest and most beautiful café in Buenos Aires, with marble columns, stained glass, and the ghosts of Borges and García Marquez in its booths — for afternoon coffee and pastries.
- ✦ Recoleta Cemetery — the city of the dead with marble palaces
- ✦ Evita Perón's grave — always covered in flowers
- ✦ National Museum of Fine Arts — Argentine painting and European masters
- ✦ Café Tortoni — the most beautiful café in South America since 1858
3San Telmo & La Boca — Tango's Birthplace
San Telmo is Buenos Aires' oldest neighborhood — a district of 19th-century colonial buildings with cobblestone streets where the city's antique market, tango culture, and bohemian life are concentrated. The San Telmo Market (open daily but most atmospheric on Sunday) is a magnificent 19th-century iron-and-glass market building full of antique dealers, street food stalls, and live tango performers. The Sunday Feria (outdoor market) on the Plaza Dorrego extends the market into the surrounding streets. La Boca, 2km south, is where tango was born in the 1880s: the Caminito street art district and the brightly painted zinc houses on stilts above the Riachuelo canal are the most photographed images in Buenos Aires. Boca Juniors's La Bombonera stadium is here; the club museum traces the history of the world's most passionate football culture.
- ✦ San Telmo Market Sunday feria and tango demonstrations
- ✦ La Boca Caminito — colored zinc houses and street art
- ✦ Boca Juniors La Bombonera stadium and museum
- ✦ Tango milonga booking for the evening
4Tango Night — Milonga or Show
A tango evening is non-negotiable in Buenos Aires. Two options: the milonga — a genuine dance hall where Portenos (Buenos Aires residents) dance tango from midnight to 4am (La Catedral, Club Noctambulo, or Salon Canning for authentic milongas where real skill is required and appreciated) — or the tango show, where professional dancers perform on stage for tourists (El Viejo Almacén in San Telmo and La Viruta in Palermo are the most genuine of these, with live orchestra). Take a tango lesson in the afternoon at one of San Telmo's many dance schools — even beginners learn the embrace and the basic step in 90 minutes, and the context makes the evening performance a completely different experience. Dinner before the show at Don Julio in Palermo — consistently voted Argentina's best restaurant, a parilla with an extraordinary wine list and the finest beef in the city.
- ✦ Tango lesson in the afternoon — basic step and the Argentine embrace
- ✦ Don Julio parilla dinner — Argentina's best restaurant
- ✦ Milonga or show — the world's most passionate dance culture
- ✦ Late night Buenos Aires at its most alive
5Palermo — Hipster Neighborhood, Parks & Design
Palermo is Buenos Aires' most vibrant and diverse neighborhood — a collection of sub-neighborhoods (Palermo SoHo, Palermo Hollywood, Palermo Chico) that house the city's best restaurants, the design and fashion boutiques, and the Palermo Parks — a network of large formal gardens, rose garden, botanical garden, and lakes that gives the city a Parisian quality. The MALBA (Museum of Latin American Art) has the finest collection of Latin American modern art in Argentina. Spend the afternoon in the botanical garden and rose garden, then dinner at Tegui in Palermo for Argentina's most creative tasting menu.
- ✦ MALBA Museum — Latin American modern art collection
- ✦ Palermo Parks — rose garden and botanical garden
- ✦ Palermo SoHo boutique shopping and street art
- ✦ Tegui restaurant — Argentina's finest tasting menu
6Tiger Delta Day Trip & Argentine Asado
Take the suburban train 30km north from Retiro Station to Tigre — a river delta town at the mouth of the Paraná Delta where the city ends and an extraordinary network of waterways begins. The Tigre delta has 350 square kilometers of islands and channels navigable by small motorboat — the weekend houses (quintas) of porteños line the river banks, accessible only by boat, with wooden docks and tropical gardens reflecting in the brown water. The daily market at Puerto de Frutos (Puerto de Frutos — the Fruit Port) is the delta's commercial center, now selling crafts, raffia goods, and subtropical fruit. The Victorica Museum in Tigre town is in an extraordinary art nouveau building. Return to Buenos Aires for an evening asado at a friend's home or at a traditional parilla in Palermo or San Telmo.
- ✦ Tigre Delta by suburban train — 30 minutes from the city
- ✦ Motorboat through the Paraná Delta river channels
- ✦ Puerto de Frutos market at the river's edge
- ✦ Traditional Argentine asado at a local parilla
7Final Café & Departure
Buenos Aires has two airports: Ezeiza International (EZE, 35km, for international departures) and Aeroparque Jorge Newbery (AEP, 3km from Recoleta, for domestic and regional flights). A final Buenos Aires morning belongs to the café ritual — a cortado and medialunas (the crescent-shaped Argentine croissant, richer and sweeter than the French version) at one of the Recoleta or Palermo neighborhood cafés. Walk the Avenida Alvear — Buenos Aires' most beautiful boulevard of French-style palaces and European luxury boutiques — for a final portrait of the city at its most aristocratic. Buy Malbec wine from a Mendoza wine shop (Aramburu or Aldo's in Palermo), dulce de leche in jars, and yerba mate if you've acquired the taste. Buenos Aires is a city that takes months to properly understand, and most visitors leave feeling they have barely begun.
- ✦ Final cortado and medialunas at a Recoleta neighborhood café
- ✦ Avenida Alvear — BA's most beautiful French-palace boulevard
- ✦ Malbec wine and dulce de leche for the journey home
- ✦ Transfer to Ezeiza International Airport EZE
Where to Stay
An early-20th-century French palace in Recoleta — the most beautiful hotel in Buenos Aires, with a garden connecting the historic palace to the contemporary tower, an extraordinary wine bar, and the most refined service in the city.
Philippe Starck's most theatrical hotel creation in a converted grain warehouse on the Puerto Madero waterfront — red velvet, gilded mirrors, and a spectacular pool, with the most design-conscious atmosphere of any hotel in Argentina.
A beautifully designed boutique hotel in a residential Palermo street, with a garden pool, excellent breakfast, and the most intimate and authentic neighborhood atmosphere of any hotel in Buenos Aires.
This is a sample — your actual itinerary is fully custom.
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