Think about cities with world-class luxury hotels, and Boston may not immediately spring to mind. But it should. The de facto capital of New England is the rare destination to have not just one but two Four Seasons—both of which are adding, for summer 2026, new top-shelf restaurants plus longer-stay, residential-style suites for guests who regularly check in and simply can’t bear to leave. Raffles, meanwhile, recently planted its very first flag in North America with a Boston outpost—100 years after Ritz-Carlton opened its debut U.S. destination here, in a ravishing brick-and-limestone Neoclassical tower that today houses the city’s most fashionable independent hotel. These days, all of the equally cosseting ultra-luxe stays below impress in their own distinctive ways, be it the diversity of their decadent design, their sparkling rooftop bars and hidden speakeasies, or their service pedigrees and bespoke amenities. All together, they prove Boston a hotel powerhouse for the ages.
Here, in no particular order, are the 10 best luxury hotels in Boston right now.
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The Newbury Boston
Award: Fashion Forward Favorite
It’s not just the outposts of Zegna and Tiffany occupying its ground floor—nor just the Armani, Cartier, Chanel, Rolex and Valentino boutiques barely a precious stone’s throw away—that make this 286-room, 100-year-old property a style-lover’s fantasy. It’s also its provenance: Set on an affluent Back Bay block overlooking the Frederick Law Olmsted–designed Public Garden, the monumental neoclassical brick and limestone structure opened in 1927 as the very first Ritz-Carlton in the country. Now, thanks to its recent reinvention by Highgate Hotels, it tempts anew with residential-feeling rooms and suites by Alexandra Champalimaud. (Request a corner suite or one with a wood-burning fireplace.) The clubby street-side Street Bar bustles with locals and visitors from dawn to dusk, while its rooftop restaurant, Contessa, is among the sceneiest spots in town. With interiors imagined by entertaining and design impresario Ken Fulk, and a northern Italian–focused menu by New York’s Major Food Group (Carbone, The Grill Room), it channels the atmosphere of a private supper club at an alta moda villa on the shores of Lake Como.
Best amenity: Offering complimentary drinks and snacks all day long, a guest-only library lounge sits secreted away beyond the Street Bar and lobby, filled with regionally themed books curated by the Boston Public Library. In a hotel this popular with locals, having a private space like this is especially appreciated.
Can’t-miss experience: During the winter months—and in Boston, there are a lot of them—guests who’ve reserved a Fireplace Suite can book a butler to light and tend a fire for them, selecting from different fragrant wood varieties and enjoying a menu of specially designed cocktails, wine and elevated snacks, including kid-pleasing offerings.
From $600.
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Raffles Boston
Award: Best Newcomer
Raffles selected Boston as the site of its 2023 North American debut, situating its 147 rooms and suites in a new $400-million-plus, curved glass tower steps from historic Copley Square. Observe Boston’s best preserved Gilded Age architecture from the hotel’s elevated perch (occupying floors 6-14): the gothic grandeur of Henry Hobson Richardson’s Trinity Church and Boston Public’s Central Library with its famed John Singer Sargent murals. The hotel’s design, by Stonehill Taylor, marries New England iconography with Asian motifs that ring true to Raffles’ origins in Singapore. On the wellness floor, the 65-foot pool and one of only four Guerlain spas in the country prove reason enough to stop by, even if you’re not staying. And the restaurants do the same: James Beard Award–winning chef Jody Adam’s Padrona spins out ultra-elevated Italian, while travertine-arched banquettes, a sky-high patio, and culinary nods to the Northeast welcome diners to the 17th-floor Long Bar & Terrace. The speakeasy-style Blind Duck, meanwhile, on the 17th and 18th floors, beckons with soon-to-be-classic house signatures, including a souffle espresso martini, and seasonal additions, like a summery, fig-infused rye Manhattan.
Best amenity: Your Raffles butler, who’ll act as your primary (if not sole) point of contact to take care of anything and everything you need, from unpacking and packing your luggage, to creating individualized Boston itineraries, to drawing a bath at a requested time, scenting it with your preferred fragrance.
Can’t-miss experience: Start a Thursday evening at the Long Bar & Terrace with a Singapore Sling—a cocktail that traces its fame back to the original Long Bar at the first Raffles, in Singapore—then head to the Blind Duck to enjoy live jazz backed by views of the sparkling Boston skyline, seen through its floor-to-ceiling 17th-floor windows.
From $609.
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Four Seasons Boston
Award: Best for families
It’s hard to pick the most family-friendly hotel in Boston—a city full of them—but the Four Seasons earns some of the highest marks. Its location on the edge of the Public Garden puts it across the street from open green spaces, the park’s Duck Pond, and the swan-shaped boats that ply its waters. The top-floor swimming pool, surrounded by large windows, also proves a considerable draw. What’s more, over half of the hotel’s 170 rooms are suites, which means accommodations offer plenty of space for families. Still not convinced? Try this: A scavenger hunt that starts at the front desk leads kids around the lobby level (newly redone by Ken Fulk), then rewards them with use of a giant key that opens a secret closet stuffed with prizes.
Best amenity: Every floor of the hotel features a so-called “Vault” filled with such treats as local gourmet potato chips and less-local Swedish Fish and M&Ms, while the street-level coffee bar, Sottovento, pairs house-made banana bread and spinach-and-feta croissants with barista-pulled espresso drinks.
Can’t-miss experience: For high-school-aged kids, and their college-process-curious parents, the hotel offers tours of the city’s many university neighborhoods. Focused on lifestyle rather than academics, these short journeys give a taste of what actually living in these areas would be like.
From $895.
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Four Seasons One Dalton
Award: Highest High
Locally known as the “new Four Seasons”—not to be confused with the city’s original FS hotel (see above)—the 214-room stay makes its home on floors eight through 21 of a 65-story building that became the tallest residential towers in New England on completion in 2019. The hotel’s new 2,000-square-foot presidential suite ups the ante even further. Set on the 21st floor, it’s now the highest-altitude suite in the region. As for the hotel’s dining experience, an expansive satellite of the global Japanese izakaya juggernaut Zuma has been a must-book practically since the hotel opened, while the summer 2026 debut of La Petite Maison will bring the flavors of the Côte d’Azur to the hotel.
Best amenity: A contemporary art collection featuring internationally renowned creators— including Alex Katz, Louise Nevelson, and Yinka Shonibare, who made a site-specific installation in the lobby—all curated together by Boston-based duo, Kate Chertavian and Lucy Rosenburgh.
Can’t-miss experience: An hour’s chauffeured drive from the hotel, down Massachusetts’ South Shore, brings you to the 11-acre farm where Island Creek Oysters harvests their succulent, salty-sweet bivalves. After a private two-hour, behind-the-scenes farm tour and raw bar experience—wine pairings plus a shucking lesson—you’ll return to the hotel to enjoy more of the farm’s oysters, along with caviar, matched with Champagne.
From $795.
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Boston Harbor Hotel
Award: Best Water Views
conic thanks to its monumental red-brick archway, the 232-room Boston Harbor Hotel has held pride of place on its prime stretch of waterfront for nearly 40 years. In that time, it has benefited from a series of major updates and renovations, most recently to its lobby and its array of fitness offerings. In 2018, it unveiled what is the hotel’s, and arguably Boston’s, most impressive accommodation: the John Adams Presidential Suite. A two-bedroom penthouse beneath the hotel’s soaring glass-and-copper rotunda, it features 4,800 square feet of interior space plus a 1,000-square-foot terrace with some of the most panoramic harbor views in the whole city. Stevie Nicks, Lady Gaga, and Madonna have all stayed in the suite (not all at the same time, of course).
Best amenity: The newly re-opened Rowes Wharf Health club. Completely redone to the tune of $8 million, it now beckons with an expanded gym, group fitness studio and classes, a golf simulator, and all new hydrotherapy offerings, including salt and infrared saunas.
Can’t-miss experience: The hotel’s Summer in the City festival welcomes a pop-up waterfront beer garden by local craft-brewer Trillium and live music Tuesday through Friday.
From $616.
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The Whitney Hotel
Award: Best Boutique Retreat
In a city of larger-scale hotels, the Whitney—set amid the brick townhouses of picture-perfect Beacon Hill—stands out for its sensible size and its subtle sensibility. The 65-room hotel’s intimate public spaces and friendly service reinforce a residential feel, as do the New England-with-a-twist finishes and furnishings (contemporary art depicting local landmarks, a cheeky monocle motif on the door to every room) of its sophisticated, masculine-feeling rooms and suites. All done in blues and grays with elevated amenities including Frette bed linens and bathrobes, they feature little winks to local flavor (both literal, in the well-curated minibar, and metaphoric, in nods to the life and times of the hotel’s namesake, 19th-century industrialist Henry Melville Whitney, who once owned the property). Interestingly, the hotel’s structure incorporates an entire 1908 redbrick residential building that was originally constructed as housing for nurses. One can easily imagine they enjoyed their home’s Charles River views as much as guests do today.
Best amenity: With its Neighborhood Passkey program, the hotel has organized special guest-only experiences, discounts, and gifts at more than 25 of the small boutiques and other independent businesses in and around Beacon Hill. All guests have to do is present their keycard to take advantage.
Can’t-miss experience: The warm-weather months see the arrival of the Whitney Social Cart in the hotel’s courtyard, bringing both guests and non-guests a changing weekly array of drinks and snacks: breakfast on Sundays, small complimentary bites from hotel restaurant Peregrine on Monday evenings, oysters and prosecco on Wednesday nights, gin cocktails Thursdays, and celebratory spritzes on Fridays.
From $399.
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Mandarin Oriental, Boston
Award: Top Spa Hotel
A local’s go-to for luxurious day-spa treatments, the Mandarin Oriental also demands attention for its restaurant by multi-Michelin-starred chef Gordon Ramsay, new in 2024, and its upgraded suites. Thanks to a $15 million renovation of all 148 of its rooms, suites now all come with kitchenettes, making them especially ideal for longer-stay guests. And who wouldn’t want to stay a good long while here—especially to take maximum advantage of that 16,000-square-foot spa? The rooms, too, feel spa-like, mining a surprising, but no less lovely, vein of chinoiserie that pays homage to the brand’s roots in Asia even as it introduces a modern-leaning, masculine-feeling sensibility.
Best amenity: A robot butler may seem slightly less than luxe—and it hardly replaces the hotel’s ace staff—but for 21st-century bragging rights in the AI era, few things beat contactless check-in and room service deliveries from the Mandarin Oriental’s bow-tied digital assistant.
Can’t-miss experience: Individually designed three- or five-night Inner Strength and Outer Strength programs. These holistic mental and physical wellness itineraries incorporate spa treatments and mindfulness modalities such as forest bathing and meditation, private pilates and yoga classes, and food made with organic, sustainable ingredients.
From $795.
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The Langham Boston
Award: Best for Business
Located in the middle of Boston’s financial district, the Langham rather aptly occupies the hallowed halls of a century-old Renaissance Revival–style landmark originally built as the headquarters of the local branch of the Federal Reserve Bank. Today, after a reportedly $150 million reimagining, the building safely guards the investment guests make in the precious time they spend traveling, whether for business or pleasure. Coin-like design motifs abound here, and the color of money—the U.S. dollar’s particular shade of light green, that is—can be seen everywhere you look. Particularly impressive? Soaring second-floor spaces including the restaurant, Grana, in the former bank’s grand hall, as well as wood-paneled event areas, in former executive offices, and special rooms and suites that offer a pleasantly palatial vibe.
Best amenity: Booking a room that grants access to the eighth-level club floor opens up a world of complimentary Champagne-filled flutes, gourmet bites and convenient butler service all day long.
Can’t-miss experience: The hotel partners with a local outfitter to offer helicopter tours of the city. These can be booked both daytime, when the waters of Boston Harbor and the Charles River sparkle, and at night, as the skyline and stars twinkle.
From $495.
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Fairmont Copley Plaza
Award: Most Gilded Grande Dame
Set on the southern edge of Copley Plaza, adjacent to the equally impressive Trinity Church and main branch of the Boston Public Library, this palace of a hotel all but overflows with both history and grandeur. Fairmont Copley Plaza opened in 1912 as the sister to New York’s Plaza, and, like its Manhattan relative, it owes its decadent design to Henry Janeway Hardenbergh, the architect behind NYC’s original Waldorf-Astoria. In the decade after it opened, it became known for a series of firsts: the first hotel in the world to take credit cards and the first with an international reservation system. Now part of the Fairmont group, it continues to impress with its almost overwhelmingly gilded decor, from the coffered ceiling of its street-level lobby and grand central hallway to the detailed accents adorning the antique furnishings of its fifth-floor presidential suite.
Best amenity: Cori, the hotel’s adorable black lab. The posh pup has a home in the lobby and outside the front entrance, and sits (and stays) at the ready for belly rubs. The hotel’s head concierge can arrange leash-led jaunts off premises, too.
Can’t-miss experience: Step, and sip, back in time with a drink at the hotel’s 83-foot-long copper bar, set beneath soaring carved-oak ceilings, crystal chandeliers, and 17-foot-high arching windows. Pick a drink from a cocktail menu based on favorites served here in the 1930s, when the space was known as The Merry-Go-Round Bar and featured a working indoor carousel that rotated once an hour. (The footprint of its tracks can still be seen on the floor.)
From $389.
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The Liberty Hotel
Award: Best Place to Get Locked Up
Boston’s always had more than a bit of a rebellious streak—the American Revolution got its start here, after all—and that independent thinking extends to its hotels, not least the Liberty, part of Marriott’s Luxury Collection. What exactly is so revolutionary about it? Merely the fact that it occupies the mightily thick walls of the former Charles Street Jail, a surprisingly beautiful riverside penitentiary built in the middle of the 19th century in the historic Beacon Hill neighborhood. Famous former inmates include mobster Whitey Bulger and, rather surprisingly, Henry David Thoreau. The building became the ironically named Liberty in 2007—more than 30 years after closing its cells—and for the past 20 years, folks from all over have been clamoring to break in; the better to experience the soaring central atrium ringed by catwalks, several restaurants (including one from local legend Lydia Shire), and its 300 rooms and suites (all designed by Alexandra Champalimaud).
Best amenity: Complimentary yoga classes on the hotel’s private patio—a.k.a. The Yard—every weekend from May through October, a nod to a time when prisoners used this same space for their hour of fresh air every day.
Can’t-miss experience: Embrace the state-pen-style setting with dinner at CLINK, which retains elements of the original jail cells, or a drink and snack at Alibi, in a holding cell in the former “drunk tank.” If you’re in residence on a Wednesday afternoon, book one of the weekly concierge-led tours that take you back in time to better understand the Liberty’s prisoner-filled history.
From $608.
