
Maysan Doha, LXR Hotels & Resorts
When you book Maysan Doha, LXR Hotels & Resorts in Doha, Qatar through our Hilton for Luxury partnership, your stay includes daily breakfast, room upgrades and a $100 hotel credit.
Exclusive Booking Perks
- VIP guest status
- Complimentary breakfast for 2 guests
- USD100 hotel credit per stay (or local equivalent)
- Double Hilton Honors Points
- Upgrade to next room category (subject to availability)
Location
Maysan Doha belongs to LXR Hotels & Resorts, Hilton's collection of independent luxury properties united by a devotion to local character and refined service. Each LXR address reflects its setting rather than a template, and here that means a property rooted in Doha's accelerating transformation from pearling outpost to cultural and sporting powerhouse.
The hotel sits in Baaya, one of Al Rayyan municipality's most developed districts, where Al Waab Street threads together the Aspire Zone (a sports complex anchored by Khalifa International Stadium), Aspire Park, and Villaggio Mall. Doha itself sprawls along the Persian Gulf coast, a city founded in the 1820s that became Qatar's capital in 1971 and now holds more than eighty percent of the nation's population. The skyline rises in glassy columns above the corniche, and beneath that polish lies a city of souqs and falcons, pearl-diving history, and the world's richest museum collections of Islamic art.
Hamad International Airport lies eighteen kilometres southeast; a taxi or car brings you through the city's arterial highways, past construction cranes and immaculate roundabouts, into Baaya's orderly grid. The drive takes twenty-five minutes in light traffic, longer during rush hours when the city pulses with commuters.
Doha's Michelin-starred dining scene punches above its weight. IDAM by Alain Ducasse occupies the top floor of the Museum of Islamic Art, eleven kilometres east, where French contemporary cuisine meets sweeping views over Doha Bay. Jamavar, twelve kilometres away in the Sheraton Grand, serves intricate Indian dishes named after the embroidered Kashmir shawls; expect tandoori lamb and butter-soft naan. Alba, seventeen kilometres north in the Raffles within Katara Towers, takes its name from the Piedmontese truffle capital and delivers northern Italian cooking beneath vaulted ceilings. Book a table at IDAM for sunset, when the call to prayer drifts over the water and the museum's geometric facade catches the last light.
Souq Waqif, ten and a half kilometres from the property, remains Doha's beating heart: narrow alleys of spice vendors, textile merchants, and the Falcon Souq where hooded raptors perch on gloved arms. Education City Golf Club lies less than five kilometres west, a championship course carved from desert hardpan. Katara Beach and the Katara Cultural Village, fourteen kilometres north, offer sand, art galleries, and outdoor amphitheatres where traditional music performances fill warm evenings.
November through March delivers Doha's gentlest weather: highs in the low twenties, evenings cool enough for terrace dining, light blanching the Gulf in silver. The souqs hum with foot traffic, and mornings at Aspire Park feel crisp rather than punishing.
April and October flank the shoulder seasons, temperatures climbing into the low thirties but humidity still tolerable. Spring rains in March occasionally sweep through, brief and dramatic, leaving the desert briefly green.
May through September turns brutal: temperatures surge past forty degrees, the air thick and still, the city retreating indoors until dusk. Visit then only if you relish empty museum galleries and off-peak hotel rates; most travelers wisely choose the cooler months when Doha's outdoor life returns.
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