Spa Ceylon’s Pakistan story began long before the first store opened.

For Saeeda and Noor Mandviwalla, Sri Lanka was never just a destination. It was part of family life, woven through summers spent there, familiar language, warm memories, colour, nature, food, fragrance, and an instinctive relationship with wellbeing.

They first knew Spa Ceylon as customers. The brand was not discovered as a business opportunity first. It was something they had already fallen in love with, from its fragrances and rituals to the way it captured so much of what Sri Lanka felt like.

For Saeeda, whose roots connect deeply to Sri Lanka, bringing Spa Ceylon to Pakistan was personal. It was a way of carrying a piece of one home into another. Public coverage of the launch also described Spa Ceylon Pakistan as a mother-daughter venture brought in by Saeeda Mandviwalla and Noor Mandviwalla. 

Their background in beauty and hairdressing through TONI&GUY gave the idea a strong foundation. Saeeda had spent decades building experience in premium hair, beauty, and wellness, while Noor brought a new generation’s understanding of how personal care was changing. Together, they saw that Spa Ceylon could offer Pakistan something both elevated and familiar.

Across South Asian homes, wellness has always had its own language. Oils, herbs, spices, kitchen ingredients, hair rituals, skin remedies, and family totkay have been passed down for generations. Spa Ceylon offered a refined expression of something Pakistani customers already understood, natural care rooted in tradition, presented through modern luxury.

The early days came with their share of challenges. Bringing a premium international brand into Pakistan meant navigating imports, timelines, product availability, and the realities of building a new category in the market. There was also customer education involved, because Spa Ceylon was not simply a beauty brand, fragrance brand, or spa service. It was a complete wellness world.

What made the journey meaningful were the small moments of connection. A balm becoming part of someone’s difficult day. A fragrance reminding someone of travel. A mist turning a room into a calmer space. A gift becoming more personal because it carried care, not just product.

Today, Spa Ceylon Pakistan exists at the meeting point of two familiar worlds: the island rituals of Ceylon and the everyday traditions of South Asian self-care. Through skin, body, hair, home, fragrance, and gifting rituals, the brand brings luxury Ayurveda into modern Pakistani life in a way that feels comforting, sensorial, and close to home.