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Nicaragua accommodation

Our Nicaragua accommodation & accommodations take in the best sites & off-the-beaten-track places from Virgin rainforests to beautiful beaches. All of our Nicaragua accommodation are from leading companies committed to supporting local people & the environment.

Nicaragua accommodation
Nicaragua surf lodge
Stay at a pristine Nicaragua surf lodge, from US $70 - US $99 per person per night
Granada hotel in Nicaragua
Hotel con Corazón in Granada, Nicaragua, from US $51 - US $116 per accommodation per night

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Latest accommodation enquiry

Made on 17 May 2012
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Latest accommodation review

Posted
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Newest accommodation

Added 07 Oct 2011
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0 reviews for Nicaragua accommodation0 star overall rating

These full and frank independent Nicaragua accommodation reviews are from travellers who have booked directly through responsibletravel.com. They are not edited by us or any of the companies we work with. Find the real story, from real travellers below.

Accommodation Reviews

We invite every traveller who books a holiday via us to send in a review. Because we don't run the holidays they're completely independent and unedited... remember to read between the lines though, as two people on the same holiday can have different views!

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Unedited reviews from other travellers

5 stars
I am reborn! Simply the best holiday I have ever been on
4 stars
Some great stories to tell the grandchildren. Would recommend to a friend
3 stars
Very enjoyable
2 stars
It was OK
1 star
A bit disappointing really

Want to know more about Nicaragua holidays before you go?

Find out more about Nicaragua by reading these Nicaragua articles.

"Nicaragua has had its fair share of natural and human-caused disasters. Behind me in this picture stretches Managua's vast city dump, La Chureca, a stark symbol of the failure of the neo-liberal economic policies pursued by the Government of Arnoldo Aleman, as decreed by the International Monetary Fund. Here 1000 people, 700 of them children, looking like extras from 'Mad Max' swathed in scarves and goggles to protect their eyes from the toxic fumes and dust, scavenge with hooked poles through the garbage for something to 'recycle' and sell-on. Working with a local charity, Dos Generaciones, Body Shop is offering these children a better life off the dump through education and training. Earlier I'd visited the site of the Las Casitas volcano mudslide, a natural disaster caused by Hurricane Mitch's assault on the country in 1998. A survivor recounting to me what happened on that terrible day, began with a traditional saying, 'To be Nicaraguan is to be where the problems are...', I could understand why. At 11.30 am on October 30, 1998 after a biblical '7 days and nights of rain' totalling five year's worth of normal rainfall, the crater of the volcano collapsed 'with a roaring noise like fighter planes', burying 8 communities in minutes and killing at least 2,500 people. The scar gouged through the landscape by the deluge of mud, trees and boiling hot rocks from the heart of the volcano is plainly visible three years on. Describing the sound as 'like fighter planes' comes unconsciously to a people too familiar with war." By Anita Roddick. Read more about Nicaragua in this Nicaragua article.
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