My girlfriend and I just returned from a week at the Presidente Inter-Continental, May 8-15, 2004. We took advantage of a special advanced booking offer that requires you to pay the entire amount up front with no changes or cancelations allowed. Dangerous, but a big money saver if you want to gamble. Then I followed the advice of other Inter-Continental guests and paid to join the Ambassador Club, which gives you a guaranteed room upgrade. So for a very low price and a "garden view room" we got a high floor ocean view. At check-in they gave me the option of further upgrading to a beachfront deluxe room, but it would have doubled the total price for my stay! Those rooms are larger and possibly better appointed from a quick glimpse I saw through someone's open door. The complex has three main sections for rooms. There is a five-story high rise, where we stayed, a one-story horseshoe thrusting off of it for beach and garden view patio rooms, and a long one-story straight section fronting the other, longer section of beach.
Our room was big enough, but had zero decorations on the walls. Just some yellow paint on the wall behind the bed. One of the walls was rather badly stained. It was not unattractive, just not what I have come to expect for full luxury resort prices (and this is not a cheapo Mexican discount hotel!). There was a tile floor that helped keep the room very cool. We usually didn't run the air conditioner at all. A large balcony permitted sightseeing and air drying bathing suits and scuba gear. The bed was hard as a rock.
We had no bathtub. The bathroom featured the toilet and shower stall together, with no boundary on the floor. So when you take a shower, the entire floor is soaked and you get to feel it whenever you use the toilet. The solution is to use the hotel beach towels to build a barrier at the edge of the shower. Towels are available all day, and you can exchange used ones for clean ones at any time, as often as you want. The towel area is located next to the swimming pool, which got a fair amount of use from families. There were lots of families with small children there.
The staff was plentiful, ubiquitous, and unfailingly polite, pleasant, and helpful. One of the best overall hotel staffs I have ever seen. I set up a special romantic private dinner for my girlfriend's birthday and the concierge worked with me ahead of time via email and then at the resort to follow up and ensure it went well. The concierge also put in a lot of effort on my behalf when reservations went amiss for an offsite activity (not her problem, but she took it on).
The grounds are very pretty. Lots of lush greenery, with palm trees, hibiscus hedges, and big green lawns. The beach areas are constantly raked and smoothed with a board so you can feel like you are walking on untrammeled nature. There are two roped off snorkeling areas (only roped to keep the many scuba boats from running you over). The coral was fairly dead along the shore, as expected from the number of guests running roughshod over it, but there were plenty of little fishies. There is a current that flows parallel to the beach, so you can drift along without effort in one direction, then get out and do it again!
A dive operator (Scuba Du) has rental and booking facilities on the hotel beach, but they are not part of the hotel and you can't charge things to your room. We had no problem with equipment availability or condition.
The hotel has two restaurants on site, with a third opening later in 2004 to concentrate on pasta. We didn't try the fancy expensive restaurant (El Arrecife), although they produced the food for our outdoor birthday dinner. The food was acceptable but not exceptional. The other restaurant is an open-air covered area near the scuba boat dock and the beach. They put on a very comprehensive buffet breakfast (you can also order off menu) that we both enjoyed. Dinners were just fine. Again, tons of servers and polite, friendly faces. The bar features a 2-for-1 happy hour from 5-7 each evening.
The hotel is about a three-minute cab ride from downtown Cozumel. Taxis were charging five dollars, and I threw in a dollar tip. You are halfway between town and Chankanaab Park, which makes it easy to get to the dolphin/sea lion programs that are noted as attractions.
Notes on travel to/from hotel:
If you fly in to Cancun, catch the regularly scheduled express bus to Playa del Carmen. It saves you about $30 per person over a taxi ride. The bus drops you across the street from a ticket counter for the ferry to Cozumel. Ferries leave on the hour, with a couple of "dark" hours each day to let them take a siesta or something. The crossing takes about 45 minutes and can be choppy. Sit in the lower center of the boat to minimize the effects. There are plenty of guys with little tricycle carts to help cart your luggage between the bus depot and the boat.
On the Cozumel side, you just walk from the pier to the taxi ranks right there at the street corner. There were always tons of taxis waiting everywhere.





