Every luxury hotel group has a moment when the domestic story ends and the international story begins. For Airelles, that moment is April 2026. The French group—which built seven hotels in France, including the guest residence at the Château de Versailles—opens the Palladio Venezia this month, its first hotel outside France and its first entry into the global ultra-luxury circuit on terms that invite direct comparison with the world’s most established luxury properties.
The Palladio occupies a sixteenth-century palazzo on Venice’s Giudecca Canal, positioned across the water from Piazza San Marco. Airelles renovated the building to its house standard, the same approach applied to its Courchevel property—which competes directly with Cheval Blanc—and to its Versailles address. That standard is what the group is exporting to Italy for the first time.
Pricing reflects the brand’s self-assessment. Weekday entry rooms open in the high four figures. Full-floor suites run into the low five figures. Both brackets match the Hôtel Cipriani’s published rate structure—Belmond’s flagship Venetian property and the city’s unchallenged top-tier hotel for forty years. Airelles is not entering at a discount to establish itself. It is entering at parity and asking guests to choose on brand merit.
The Market That Made This Entry Viable
Venice’s structural hotel supply constraints gave Airelles an opening that would not exist in most major cities. Ultra-luxury demand has grown for five consecutive years. The existing top-tier operators—Cipriani, Aman, Gritti Palace, St. Regis—cannot expand inside the protected historic core. Airelles took a historic building through a full renovation and added top-tier inventory to a market that could not generate its own.
Spring bookings run heavy. August and September—Venice’s true peak—remain ahead. The group’s management team was assembled largely from Venice’s existing luxury hotel workforce, recruited over nearly a year before opening. The wager is straightforward: French brand standards applied by locally experienced operators, in a market that has been waiting for a credible new option at the top. Whether that formula produces a permanent Venetian foothold or a well-executed test case is what the next twelve months will show.
Source: Airelles Palladio Venezia Opens This Month, Bringing the French Group to Italy

























