Hotel in Nuquí, Colombia — where the jungle ends at the ocean

Jenené Lodge · Guachalito, Nuquí, Chocó

Most travelers never make it to Nuquí. That’s not a coincidence — and it’s exactly the point of coming here.

There are no direct international flights. No chain hotels. No tourist infrastructure built to make things easy. Getting to Nuquí requires a small propeller plane, a boat transfer along the Pacific coast, and the decision to leave your itinerary behind.

Jenené Lodge is where you land after that decision. Four cabins between the Chocó rainforest and the Colombian Pacific — built for travelers who stopped asking for comfort and started asking for something that lasts.

Accommodation at Jenené Lodge

Four cabins. Intentionally only four.

Vista aérea del hotel Jenené en Nuquí Chocó

Small enough that nothing gets lost in the noise

Most lodges in remote destinations compensate for their location by packing in as many rooms as possible. We did the opposite.

Four cabins means the jungle doesn’t compete with other guests. It means the person at breakfast knows your name. It means the Pacific at night belongs to whoever is listening.

Every cabin is designed around one idea: that the landscape is the room, and everything else is just where you sleep.

What's included

Natural ventilation

Open architecture that works with the tropical climate — not against it. No air conditioning needed.

Private bathroom

Each cabin has its own private bathroom. Clean, functional, well-maintained.

Terrace with hammocks

Every cabin opens onto a terrace with hammocks facing the jungle or the sea. This is where most guests spend most of their time.

Sleeps 4 to 5

Configured for couples, families, or small groups traveling together.

Solar powered

The lodge runs entirely on solar energy. Not as a selling point — as a commitment.

Satellite Wi-Fi

Available for those who need it. Most guests stop checking it by day two.

Choose your cabin at Jenené Lodge

Each cabin has a different relationship with the landscape. Some face the jungle. Others open directly to the Pacific. All of them share the same logic: the outside is always more important than the inside.

Cabin Iguana, Cornuda y Caguama

Area: 54 m²
Capacity: up to 4 adults
View: Pacific Ocean and tropical garden

Two levels. One jungle. Zero interruptions.

These cabins were designed for groups that want to share a space without losing the feeling of being alone in it. The two-level layout gives everyone their own corner — while the open structure keeps the air moving and the jungle present at all times.

The morning here doesn’t start with an alarm. It starts with whatever the rainfores decides to say first.


Characteristics

· King bed on the first level
· Two single beds on the second level
· Option for extra bed on second level
· Private bathroom
· Terrace with hammocks and lounge chairs
· Filtered spring water
· Mosquito nets
· Satellite Wi-Fi
· Solar-powered electricity

Cabin Yubarta

Area: 65 m²
Capacity: up to 5 adults
View: Pacific Ocean


The one where the Pacific is the first thing you see.

Yubarta is named after the humpback whale — and it earns the name. The terrace opens directly onto the view of the ocean, wide enough that the horizon feels like it belongs to the cabin.

This is not a room with a view. It’s a place where the view is the reason everything else was built around it.

 

Characteristics

· King size bed on the first level
· Second level with single and 1.40m double bed
· Private bathroom
· Balcony terrace with hammocks and lounge chairs
· Ample natural ventilation
· Filtered spring water
· Mosquito nets
· Satellite Wi-Fi
· Solar-powered electricity

 

What staying here actually means

Nuquí doesn’t reward travelers looking for a checked box. It rewards the ones who show up without a plan and let the place set the pace.

From Jenené Lodge you can reach empty beaches, disappear into the jungle, find waterfalls that don’t appear on any map, or spend an entire afternoon watching the tide come in. Doing nothing here is doing something.

Gardens en Jenené Lodge

Biodiversity that finds you

The lodge sits at the edge of one of the most biodiverse regions on earth. The wildlife doesn't need to be tracked down — it shows up on its own.

Whales, not whale tours

Between July and October, humpback whales come to these waters to give birth. Close, unhurried, and nothing like what you've seen in a nature documentary.

Beaches with no one on them

The Pacific coast around Nuquí has stretches of shoreline that see almost no visitors. Most days you'll have them entirely to yourself.

Disconnection that actually works

No traffic. No notifications that feel urgent. No background noise of a city that never stops. Just the Pacific and whatever you brought with you.

Food that comes from here

Fresh fish, coconut, plantain, piangua ingredients sourced locally and prepared simply. Nothing imported, nothing generic.

A lodge that belongs here

Jenené operates on solar energy, sources food locally, and employs people from the community. Not as a marketing position — as a baseline.

What you'll do — and what you won't plan to do but will anyway

Staying at Jenené Lodge puts you at the center of a region that most travelers never reach. The experiences here aren’t packaged or scheduled — they’re built around what the place offers and what the day allows.

Whale watching in Nuquí

Between July and October, humpback whales migrate to the Colombian Pacific to breed and give birth. From a small boat in the Gulf of Tribugá, you’ll be close enough to hear them breathe. There is no way to describe this accurately. You’ll understand when you’re there.

Waterfalls inside the jungle

The Chocó rainforest hides rivers and waterfalls that require a guide and wet shoes to reach. Worth both.

Guided rainforest hikes

Your guide knows this jungle by sound. What birds, what frogs, what movement in the undergrowth. You just follow and pay attention.

Pacific beaches, mostly empty

Black sand, dense jungle at the waterline, no vendors. Some of the least-visited coastline in Colombia — accessible directly from the lodge.

Afro-Colombian culture and food

The communities along this coast have a culture entirely their own. The food, the music, the way people relate to the territory — none of it feels performed.

Kayak along the coast

The Gulf of Tribugá by kayak — mangroves, open water, and a coastline that looks the same as it did centuries ago.

Local villages

A boat ride from the lodge takes you to communities where the pace of life is set by tides, not schedules. Go without expectations.

The kind of trip you stop explaining and start showing

If you’ve been looking for something beyond the usual Colombia itinerary — beyond Cartagena, beyond the coffee region, beyond what every travel blog recommends — Nuquí is the answer.

Jenené Lodge is where that trip is based.

Our team handles the logistics. You handle the decision to come.