It's been nearly a month now since we got back from our 10 day stay at the RW Mayakoba, and I have been waiting to post my review to see if on reflection my feelings had changed about the experience. They have not. My husband and I have traveled all over the world, including to many luxury resorts in Asia, the Maldives, Bali, the Seychelles, Bora Bora, etc. and have yet to have a lukewarm or negative experience. I have had RW Mayakoba on my list for about a decade, but never made the time to go to Mexico because we had so many other places to check off our list. However, we recently had a baby and it was close by enough that it made sense to try out traveling with an infant, and we decided to splurge a bit more than usual as it was our 40th birthdays. I will say that the car service, while exceedingly expensive at $240 each way, did include some nice snacks, music, water/Corona, and most important an appropriately installed infant car seat. (For parents out there, it was a Mexican version of the Chicco KeyFit 30 attached with the base. I am sort of militant about car seat safety as a physician and was happy that it was super safe). They seem to install the seat regularly enough that it was easy peasy. Check-in was lovely in an open-air building by the start of the lagoons, and while a bit gimmicky like a Disney ride, the boat ride through the Mangroves to our room was beautiful. They did upgrade our room for us, which was a nice touch. We didn't meet our butler and were shown around our room by a colleague who was very much in a hurry. The room, however, was nicely babyproofed and the crib, play pen, and personalized toys for our child were an unexpected detail that we loved. This is perhaps where the compliments end. Getting in touch with our butler via WhatsApp to plan for and confirm reservations was touch and go. They didn't provide suggestions for us about where to eat or plan an itinerary for meals. The butler routinely did not confirm reservations. We decided to go on a nature walk/bird watching tour through Mayakoba for all the hotels that started at 7 AM, and despite eventually confirming our booking, the butler didn't offer to figure out transportation to the actual tour even though it was pitch black outside at that time of the morning. Restaurants were routinely closed on a regular basis at the last minute even though the hotel was not at capacity. On one of the evenings, the hotel was hosting a wedding welcome party at the garden restaurant, but used all the staff from the Casa del Lago to cover that event, plus a private dining party in the conference room attached to the restaurant. We didn't get our food for over an hour and a half, with a wailing infant who went home exhausted and hungry despite a 6 PM reservation. I tried to speak with the Casa del Lago manager about it, but he said "he didn't have time." Housekeeping routinely showed up around the time our infant napped, between 9-10:30 AM and again at 2-3:30 PM despite the do not disturb sign on our door. One would think that a luxury resort with 2 butlers per room would have the foresight to let the cleaning staff know that family X has left room ABC for breakfast and its time to clean their room. In the Maldives our butler routinely met us at breakfast to help plan the day and sort through activities while also notifying housekeeping we were out of the suite. At the beach and pool, there were very few staff members around to help set up the lounge chairs with towels or umbrellas (this was especially true at the beach), and you'd have to track them down just to get a bottle of water or order lunch. We actually didn't know that we could have ordered food for free for our little one as children under age 5 eat free, and had been ordering food for us to all share with her. In the end, we complained to the management team and while the manager did listen to our concerns, it was clear that the chaos surrounding meals/restaurants, the preference for wedding guests and the decision to close down restaurants last minute to accommodate those patrons, and the under-staffing present throughout the hotel were all just glaring issues. The manager conceded that the management team had changed in the last month due to issues, and that staffing shortages were present all along the Riviera Maya. In the end, it kind of felt like because we weren't "rich" enough, were were just another plebe that didn't matter. The manager did offer us two free massages, one for myself and one for my husband, and I will say they were lovely and the Spa/Sauna services were perhaps the highlight of the trip. The breakfast was the only Mexican option, which made us sad as we would have preferred more local, authentic, elevated food aside from the Mexican Grill Night (which, we barely got into AND was not full despite a 6 PM reservation). The remaining 3 restaurants (Zapote Bar, Agave Azul) were fine, nothing great. Service at the beachside restaurant was abysmal and we were rejected from breakfast one morning due to bringing our infant, despite a blasted text message from the butlers that families and children were welcome for breakfast at that location. Management also offered us a free-3 nights stay to come back and see how they had improved their service and promised it would be in our checkout paperwork. We left the resort at checkout empty handed, not that we would have wanted to come back to RW Mayakoba for another 3 day stay at a mediocre hotel resting on the laurels of the Rosewood brand. Especially one that also needs significant physical upgrades to the property, not just the service. Save yourself the time and skip this - we are now skipping all RW resorts after this experience. No need to feel nickel and dimed when you're paying this month for "luxury" with a complete lack of attention to detail and service. Also - Sakura at the Banyan Tree was a superior meal despite it being just "fine" in general, but was better than anything else on the RW property.