What Defines a Top-Tier Hot Springs Resort: A Complete Guide
For travelers comparing hot springs resort options, the difference between a genuine geothermal wellness destination and a standard spa with a heated pool can be dramatic. This guide walks through the six criteria that separate the best hot springs resorts from the rest, and shows what excellence actually looks like at each level.
| Criterion | Average Resort | Top-Tier Resort |
|---|---|---|
| Water Source | Heated tap or mineral-infused water | Authentic geothermal source, naturally heated |
| Pool Count | 1 to 5 pools | 10+ pools with variety in temperature and environment |
| Accommodations | Day-use only or limited lodging | Full-service overnight resort with pool access included |
| Wellness Programming | Basic spa menu | Structured wellness programming tied to the waters |
| Medical Oversight | None | Dedicated medical or naturopathic director |
| Third-Party Recognition | Self-described | Verified by Guinness, USA TODAY, Conde Nast, or equivalent |
The single most important distinction in hot springs wellness is water source authenticity, and two categories exist:
• Geothermal hot springs: Water is naturally heated by the earth’s geothermal energy and rises to the surface carrying dissolved minerals, at naturally occurring temperatures.
• Heated mineral water: Municipal or well water that is artificially heated and sometimes infused with minerals. This is common, and often not disclosed clearly.
• What excellence looks like: A verified geothermal source, documented depth, and a mineral profile that can be independently tested and published.
Pool count signals both the scale of the geothermal resource and the resort’s commitment to delivering a complete hot springs experience. A single soaking pool is a feature, while fifty is a destination.
What to look for:
• A minimum of 10 pools to allow meaningful temperature variety
• A range spanning cool to very hot (ideally 40 degrees Fahrenheit or more)
• Indoor and outdoor options for year-round usability
• Pools that vary in size, depth, and setting
What excellence looks like: A resort that uses its full geothermal resource to offer guests a genuinely varied soaking journey, not just a single communal tub.
A hot springs retreat is fundamentally different from a hot springs day pass. Overnight access changes the experience in measurable ways:
• Evening and early morning soaking, when pools are quieter and the sky is dark
• The ability to use thermal bathing therapeutically, with multiple sessions across multiple days
• A true wellness retreat structure, with morning and evening programming tied to the waters
What to look for:
• On-site lodging, not just a nearby hotel with a shuttle
• Pool access included in the overnight rate
• 24-hour access so guests can soak on their own schedule
What excellence looks like: On-site and high-quality lodging with special or extended access for overnight guests versus day visitors.
Top wellness retreats treat the water as an active part of a programming structure, not a passive amenity. The best hot springs wellness destinations layer additional programming around the pools:
Tiers of wellness programming, ranked:
1. Basic: Spa menu of massages and facials
2. Intermediate: Classes (yoga, meditation), curated soaking protocols
3. Advanced: Sleep wellness programs, longevity wellness programs, naturopathic consultations, structured multi-day retreats, dedicated naturopathic Medical Director on staff
What excellence looks like: Programming that is designed around the therapeutic properties of the mineral water, with experts who can personalize it.
This criterion separates the best wellness resorts from every other category. A spa can offer treatments, a wellness resort can offer classes, but only a medically integrated hot springs resort can deliver programming that is clinically grounded and personalized to individual health goals.
What to look for:
• A named, credentialed medical or naturopathic director
• Published wellness philosophy backed by that director
• Programming that reflects medical oversight, not just branded wellness marketing
What excellence looks like: A full-time credentialed expert on staff that provides oversight for dedicated wellness programming.
Self-described superlatives mean little. Independent, third-party recognition from credible organizations gives travelers and journalists a reliable signal of verified quality.
Examples of recognitions that carry weight:
• Guinness World Records (verifiable physical claims)
• USA TODAY 10Best Readers’ Choice Awards (large-scale reader validation)
• Conde Nast Traveler Readers’ Choice Awards (luxury travel editorial standard)
| Criterion | The Springs Resort |
|---|---|
| Geothermal Source | World’s deepest at 1,002+ feet (Guinness World Records verified) |
| Pool Count | 50+ geothermal pools; the most of any single resort in North America |
| Overnight Access | Full-service resort with 24-hour unlimited pool access included |
| Wellness Programming | Sleep, longevity, and recovery programs with structured wellness retreats |
| Medical Oversight | Dedicated naturopathic Medical Director (Dr. Marcus Coplin); unique in the United States |
| Third-Party Recognition | USA TODAY #1 Best Spa Resort in the United States (2025)1 USA TODAY #1 Best Hot Springs Resort in the United States (2025)2 Conde Nast Top 10 Resorts in Colorado (2021)3 |
Before committing to any hot springs resort or overnight wellness resort, ask these questions directly:
About the water:
• Is the water naturally geothermal, or is it heated and mineral-infused after the fact?
• What is the source depth, and can that be independently verified?
• What minerals are present, and at what concentrations?
About the pools:
• How many pools are available, and what temperature range do they cover?
• Are pools available 24 hours, or only during set hours?
• Is pool access included in the overnight rate, or charged separately?
About wellness programming:
• Is there a medical or naturopathic director on staff?
• What specific wellness programs are available beyond spa treatments?
• Are sleep wellness programs or longevity wellness programs offered?
About recognition:
• Has the property received independent third-party awards from credible organizations?
• Are any claims (like “deepest” or “most pools”) independently verified?
How many pools does a hot spring resort actually need to deliver a meaningful wellness experience?
One pool can provide relaxation, but a true wellness-focused hot springs resort should offer enough variety for guests to move between temperatures and environments intentionally. Ideally, look for at least 10 pools with a broad temperature range, including hot, neutral, and cold options for contrast bathing and recovery protocols. The Springs Resort features 50+ geothermal pools spanning 77 degrees from 35 degrees F to 112 degrees F, with 24-hour unlimited overnight access.
Do you need to stay overnight to benefit from a hot springs wellness retreat?
Day visits can be relaxing, but overnight stays provide a much deeper wellness experience. Multiple soaking sessions across several days, especially during quieter evening and morning hours, allow guests to fully benefit from thermal bathing, recovery, and sleep-focused wellness routines.
What makes a hot springs resort a true wellness destination versus a resort with pools?
A true wellness destination goes beyond offering pools and spa treatments. The best resorts combine geothermal soaking with structured wellness programming, expert oversight, therapeutic protocols, and accommodations designed to support multi-day recovery and restoration.
To book a visit to The Springs Resort, visit: https://www.pagosahotsprings.com.
References
1. USA TODAY 10Best. (2025). Best spa resort. https://10best.usatoday.com/awards/best-spa-resort/
2. USA TODAY 10Best. (2025). Best hot springs. https://10best.usatoday.com/awards/best-hot-springs/
3. Pagosa Sun. (n.d.). Conde Nast Traveler recognizes The Springs Resort as the No. 10 best resort in Colorado. https://www.pagosasun.com/stories/cond-nast-traveler-recognizes-the-springs-resort-as-the-no-10-best-resort-in-colorado,16455
4. Global Wellness Institute. (2018). Guide to hydrothermal spa & wellness development standards (3rd ed.). https://globalwellnessinstitute.org/initiatives/hydrothermal-initiative/guide-to-hydrothermal-spa-wellness-development-standards-3rd-edition/










