Treatment rooms
Couple's rooms with twin beds and a shared transition space. Single rooms with a daybed view. The doors open to gardens; quiet hours hold across the spa.
Preparing your experience
The wellbeing spaces at Jayasom AMAALA are organised across the property: a spa core in the Health and Wellness Centre, hydrotherapy at the lower terrace, fitness and movement studios above, and gardens that thread between them. The architecture sets the foreground; the team holds the foreground steady.
Wellbeing Spaces are split across the Jayana adult-arrival side and the Jayela family-arrival side, with the Health and Wellness Centre shared between them. Seventy-six treatment rooms run across the centre.
Seventy-six treatment rooms, single and couple, each opening onto a private garden or an enclosed courtyard. Hydrotherapy, sound, breath, bodywork, and clinical-medical assessment all sit within the same complex.
Couple's rooms with twin beds and a shared transition space. Single rooms with a daybed view. The doors open to gardens; quiet hours hold across the spa.
A circuit of cold and warm pools, mineral baths, contrast showers, and Watsu in a deep warm pool. Sessions run as a sequence, paired with breath work; the order shifts to suit you.
Sound healing in dedicated rooms, breathwork at the open studio. Sessions are anchored to the Therapeutic Pillars rather than to fixed protocols.
Lower terrace
The hydrotherapy circuit anchors the lower terrace. Cold plunge, contrast showers, warm mineral pool, Watsu pool, herbal steam, salt cabin. The sequence is the work; the team will set the order with you.
Hydrothermal sequences run across pools, steam rooms, halotherapy chambers and cold-thermal rooms. Sessions are programmed into retreats by your Wellness Advisor and open to walk-in guests on a daily-rhythm basis.
The fitness studios sit on the upper terrace of the Health and Wellness Centre. Pilates, functional training, corrective exercise, and Pavigym-integrated floors. Equipment runs in the background; the work is small and constant, the kind that compounds across a year.
Yoga, breathwork, mobility. Twenty-two adult classes across the week. Class size held small; the schedule shifts to suit who's in residence.
Pavigym-integrated flooring, free weights, kettlebells, and assisted equipment. One-to-one or in pairs. Programmes anchor to recovery and longevity, not aesthetic targets.
Postural assessment, gait analysis, mobility work paired with bodywork sessions. Used inside Detox, Longevity, and Family Rebalance retreats.
Inside the spa
Each treatment room opens to a private garden. Twelve treatment categories: bodywork, energy, sound, water, breath, movement, beauty-as-restoration, traditional Saudi, traditional Asian, clinical-medical, recovery, and longevity assessment.
Beyond the building
The Wellness Plateau holds the outdoor practice spaces: a shaded pavilion for yoga and stretching, the Stonecrop Maze for walking meditation, talking-circle pits in the Phoenix Garden for evening conversation. The Beach Hut runs water-borne yoga, stand-up paddleboard, snorkelling, and swim lessons; everything is non-motorised.
Five named gardens thread through the property, each anchored to a botanical etymology and a sensory function. The Farm Belt runs alongside them, a loose chain of beds that connects the kitchens to the land.
Yasmeen is Arabic for jasmine, a night-blooming flower. The garden sits at the foot of the Wellness Plateau. A moon gate, reclining loungers angled to the sky, ring-circle tables, lighting reduced so the stars come into view.
A labyrinth on the high plateau. Walk the path slowly. The centre represents your heart or your consciousness. Stonecrop is a succulent that holds water; it associates with peace, perseverance, and calmness.
An amphitheatre baked into the ground beyond the Jayela family reception, facing the cove and the geological buttress formations beyond. Poa comes from Poaceae, the grass family. Occasional events; quiet most days.
Phoenix is Phoenix dactylifera, the date palm. The garden sits near Saratô on the adult side. Two talking-circle pits, a long dining table, palms framing the view to the beach. Reservable for evening meals.
A shaded deck on the Wellness Plateau. Bring water and a mat for yoga or stretching, or pause and breathe. A guided meditative soundtrack runs from a QR code.
Part of the five named gardens that run across the property. Each carries a botanical etymology and shapes a different practice across the day.
Architectural device
Throughout the property, brackets hold the spaces between the spaces: a bench at the bend of a path, a low wall that catches the breeze, a pause-object on the way to a treatment room. The buildings know when to step back.
In residence
The wellbeing-spaces team rotates. Eight to ten Visiting Practitioners are in residence at any given time, alongside the resident Wellness Advisors. An activity might not be available because somebody goes on leave or gets pregnant or is somehow not available; the Advisor builds your week around who is there.
Designed in partnership
Architecture by Heah & Co. Interior detailing by Studio Carter. Pavigym fitness flooring. Margaret Dabbs® London foot-care, Hydrafacial, Neurac®, and Gyrotonic® across the spa.
Questions
A spa with seventy-six treatment rooms, a hydrotherapy circuit, fitness and movement studios, five named gardens, the Stonecrop Maze on the Wellness Plateau, and the Beach Hut for water-borne sessions.
Select wellness experiences accept day visitors and AMAALA residents on a rolling basis. The Wellness Advisor allocates against availability that week.
Wellbeing Spaces at Jayasom AMAALA, Triple Bay, Tabuk region, Saudi Arabia. Operated by Triple Bay Wellness Resort Tourism Accommodation Company.
Reviewed by Vazeeq Madhar, Resort Manager, Jayasom Wellness Resort AMAALA. Last reviewed 1 May 2026.