Hotels & Accommodations
Best hotels in Seattle for every type of traveler

When visiting Seattle, there’s no shortage of accommodations that will command or pique the interest of travelers. Views of Puget Sound or Lake Washington, rock ‘n’ roll history, glass art, and Pacific Northwest seafood and wine await curious explorers. From island lodges to high-end hotels, these nine places to stay are worth checking into when planning a trip to the Emerald City.
Guests staying at Hotel Ändra Seattle can take a cooking class at Chef Tom Douglas’s on-site cooking school, Hot Stove Society. Photograph courtesy of Hotel Ändra Seattle
Here’s an inside look at the lobby of Hotel Ändra Seattle, located downtown four blocks from Pike Place Market. Photograph courtesy of Hotel Ändra Seattle
Best for: Foodies
This 123-room luxury hotel is home to Lola, one of 14 Seattle-based restaurants owned by James Beard award-winning Chef Tom Douglas, that serves eastern Mediterranean dishes such as grilled octopus with romesco sauce and seafood tagine with Turkish pepper paste and saganaki—but the hotel also features his cooking school, Hot Stove Society. Take a class in Korean, Jamaican, Asian bao, French pastry, or paella-making, or learn basics like bartending. You can also buy tickets to his two-hour food podcast, recorded on Thursdays in the hotel, which includes breakfast and a trivia quiz where Douglas asks audience members questions related to his show’s theme.
Assaggio, a central and northern Italian restaurant, is also located on-site at the hotel. Across the street, there are three more Douglas restaurants: pizzeria Serious Pie, Dahlia Bakery, and Neb Wine Bar. The hotel is four blocks from Pike Place Market, one of Seattle’s best-known attractions.
Good to know: Seattle ranked No. 3 of America’s most diverse food cities in a 2025 survey by Escoffier, a top-ranked culinary school, of big cities that analyzed 46 different ethnic cuisines. (San Francisco was No. 1, New York City No. 2.)
(The essential guide to visiting Seattle)
Best for: Shopping
Over 100 restaurants and food vendors offering everything, including fresh seafood, spices, artisan chocolate, and jewelry, fill Pike Place Market, which opened in 1907. If you enjoy shopping, you should consider staying at this 79-room hotel located inside the market. “Amid the market’s hustle and bustle, we’re an oasis of tranquility, a one-of-a-kind Seattle original,” says Jay Baty, sales and marketing director, who notes half the guest rooms offer stunning views of Elliott Bay from floor-to-ceiling windows, as does the guests-only rooftop deck. This brick-and-steel hotel’s three restaurants include Sushi Kashiba, the French-inspired Café Campagne, and Bacco Café, serving breakfast all day, including Dungeness crab Eggs Benedict. Guests can shop at four on-site shops: Watson Kennedy, Isadora’s, Fini, and Bobbie Medlin, which sells French ceramics as well as art and flea market finds.
Good to know: A new 20-acre Waterfront Park features an Overlook Walk that links Pike Place and downtown Seattle. Take a scenic water taxi to West Seattle, where Alki Beach is a favorite for swimming or picnicking, Vashon Island, or a car-and-passenger ferry to Bainbridge Island.
(Meet the famous fish throwers of Seattle’s Pike Place Market)
Best for: Art lovers
The Seattle area is known for its glass art, thanks to Dale Chihuly, the world’s most famous glass artist. Sheraton’s lobby showcases one of the best glass art collections, which features the artwork of Chihuly and 27 pieces created by artists who’ve studied at the school he co-founded, Pilchuck Glass School. All 1,236guest rooms and the second to fourth floors display art by Pacific Northwest artists, ranging from Coast Salish silk-screen prints to paintings.
“Every corridor from the lobby to your guest room is a gallery awaiting to be discovered,” says Dillon Sand, senior marketing manager. The 35-story hotel has a top-floor indoor pool and duplex gym with panoramic views, restaurants for Asian fusion and Pacific Northwest food, a wine bar, and 75,000 square feet of event space.
Good to know: Guests can visit the Chihuly Garden and Glass—a 3-minute Monorail ride from Westlake Center, near the hotel. The venue’s eight galleries display Chihuly’s vividly colorful art, such as a 100-foot-long flower-inspired installation suspended from the ceiling, and the garden artfully places glass trees and plants amid real trees.
(10 must-do experiences for your next trip to Seattle)
Eco-conscious travelers should consider checking into the Populus Seattle. Photograph by Ric Stovall courtesy of Populus Seattle
The six-story hotel that uses 100 percent renewable electricity and plants a tree for every night’s stay. Photograph by Pic Stovall courtesy of Populus Seattle
Best for: Eco-conscious
This 120-room luxury hotel in Pioneer Square goes above and beyond in terms of sustainability and nature-inspired design. A building originally built in 1907, this six-story hotel uses 100 percent renewable electricity, plants a tree for every night’s stay, and its restaurants convert all food waste to compost. Exposed Douglas fir beams and exposed brick adorn the lobby and all guest rooms. More than 35 artists created over 320 boldly colored artworks—posted in public areas and rooms—that capture the natural beauty of the Pacific Northwest. A hanging artwork crafted from fallen trees and living plants, including native red cedars and yews centuries old, greets visitors at the entrance.
“Preserving an existing structure reduced carbon by 36 percent, equivalent to 2.2 million miles driven or 492 tons of coal burned. There wasn’t a material from the original building [that was] not used: even artwork frames came from its wood floors. New construction is one of the most damaging things for the planet,” says Rod Lapasin, the general manager.
Good to Know: Pioneer Square is home to Klondike Gold Rush National Historical Park and the longest-running Art Walk in the country on First Thursdays.
Best for: Music lovers
No hotel wanted the Beatles back in 1964, but the Edgewater gladly accepted them. An iconic photo shows them fishing out of the hotel’s window. After they check in, hotel guests can check out the free acoustic guitars and songbooks of about 1,000 classic rock and pop songs from the front desk. The cozy lobby with a river-rock fireplace next to the water hosts free concerts that feature emerging bands.
“You can sip a cocktail and play in our lobby or take to your room,” says Ian McLendon, general manager. “Bands play by the window, so you see the sunset behind them. We also hold free concerts on our pier, and a big, ticketed standing-room-only show in our restaurant maybe three times a year.”
The Edgewater is Seattle’s only overwater hotel. The 222-room hotel juts into Elliott Bay on Pier 67, next to the ferry to Canada (a three-hour ride to Victoria, British Columbia). Music fans can splurge to stay in a suite. In the Beatles Suite, guests can play Beatles CDs on a state-of-the-art stereo; the Pearl Jam Suite has a Fender guitar, amplifier, record player, and rare Pearl Jam vinyls.
Good to know: An independent record shop, Easy Street Records, curates the Edgewater’s vinyl collection, and it has an in-house diner that serves food named for legendary musicians, such as the Culture Club, and the TLC Chili, or the Dolly Parton Stack—two pancakes, two strips of bacon, and two eggs any style.
(7 of the best coffee shops in Seattle)
Best for: Travelers who enjoy grand hotels
Sometimes only a grande dame hotel will do: Old World-style details, a gilt-vaulted lobby ceiling, marble galore, crystal chandeliers, and plush rugs. A member of Historic Hotels of America, this 1924 property features 450 elegant rooms and suites, a 42-foot indoor heated pool, a hot tub bathed in natural light, a spa, gym, and beauty salon. Restaurants and bars include The George, a brasserie for local seafood and dry-aged meats; Olympic Bar, serving mostly Washington wines and beers; Founders Bar, a speakeasy-inspired bar behind a bookshelf inside the Olympic; and Shuckers, a casual oyster bar and an espresso bar. Cocktails feature local ingredients, like honey from the hotel’s rooftop hives.
Good to know: The hotel is a five-minute walk from Pike Place Market, a 20-minute walk from the Seattle Art Museum, and a 25-minute walk from Chihuly Garden and Glass.
Best for: Luxury travelers
One of only three hotels in Washington with Michelin One Key status, this 120-room hotel offers posh experiences like Seattle’s only Topgolf Swing, where you can play at two golf simulators and a $1,000 bath that includes Perrier Jouet Champagne, caviar, a French Girl Rose soak and body polish, plus a bath butler to draw your bath. The spa’s $350 spa facial includes a rose gel mask, LED light therapy, and lymphatic drainage. You can watch a dramatic Champagne sabering every Thursday in Rosebay, its cocktail bar.
“We want to create memorable experiences for our guests, from decorating rooms for anniversaries to making picnic baskets for outdoors. Our region’s natural beauty can’t be beat, and we showcase it with an etched-wood artwork of Mount Rainier using Japan’s Yakisugi technique and more wood and stone in our lobby and a raindrop light installation,” says Jeffrey Modaff, general manager.
Good to know: Part of the Hilton luxury collection, this hotel is a five-minute walk to the waterfront and three blocks from the Seattle Art Museum.
Best for: Families
Half of these 16 modern-design, Scandi-chic wood cottages with king beds are suites with two extra twin beds. Guests can reach these Vashon Island cottages via a 20-minute water taxi ride from Pier 50 in Seattle or a 20-minute ferry ride from West Seattle’s Fauntleroy Terminal. Nestled next to evergreens and landscaped paths, this pet-friendly lodging also has a communal area with firepits and games. You’ll find the cottages slightly hidden in lush, manicured greenery inside Vashon Uptown, a small town with delightful restaurants, shops, and cafes.
Good to know: Family-friendly activities on Vashon Island include beachcombing, biking, hiking, and troll-hunting.
Best for: Bed & Breakfast fans
This lovely Craftsman-style 1907 home is an eight-room bed and breakfast that has an outdoor pool, a living room, and a library—both with fireplaces. Some guest rooms feature stained-glass windows, some have decks overlooking Seattle, one has a fireplace, and the majority have private baths. The B&B serves guests a Continental breakfast in its oak-paneled dining room. “We’re in Capitol Hill on a residential block on a hilltop, a three-minute walk from the fantastic French Bakery Nouveau, near many shops and restaurants. Guests call us an urban oasis,” says owner Joelle Wheatley.
Good to know: Capitol Hill has many LGBTQ-friendly spots and Volunteer Park, a 48-acre park that’s home to the Seattle Asian Art Museum.
(How to plan the ultimate US rail trip along the West Coast or Eastern Seaboard)
Sharon McDonnell is a travel, food, drink and culture writer in San Francisco and member of SATW.
Hotels & Accommodations
Weeks before Ganesha festival, Bengaluru hotels warned about oil reuse | Bengaluru News

Bengaluru: The commissioner of food safety and drug administration has directed all hotels and bakeries not to repeatedly reuse cooking oil and, instead, hand over the same to RUCO (Repurpose Used Cooking Oil) agencies to be converted into biodiesel or soap.The directive comes in the backdrop of a drop in collection of used cooking oil: the state is now receiving only around 1.5 lakh litres per month for conversion into biodiesel, compared to last year’s average monthly collection of 2.3 lakh litres. In the last four months, the two RUCO agencies (which have been registered by the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India) have received just over 6 lakh litres. With just weeks to go for the Ganesha festival, food department officials fear that used cooking oil, which is discarded by large users, end up finding their way into roadside hotels and snack-manufacturing units. Health minister Dinesh Gundu Rao said on Monday: “The oil supplied to RUCO agencies should have increased, but that’s not the case. We want food quality to be better to prevent trans fat in day-to-day meals.” The food department has also asked hotels to strictly give their used oil to RUCO agencies to prevent their reuse.Dushyant Patel, owner of Pyrene Industries, a central govt-enrolled RUCO agency for biodiesel manufacturing in Karnataka, observed that there has been a stagnation in used oil coming in over the past year. “All over India, there is an initiative to avoid the use of reused cooking oil — after a few uses in hotels, it goes down to the street vendor who buys it for a 30% discount. There’s a set limit of times oil can be used, but people are using it beyond that, and it is definitely getting back into the market — even into the manufacturing of new oil.“At a meeting that took place Monday, food safety commissioner Srinivas K instructed all cooking oil manufacturing unit owners to maintain hygiene and sell fortified cooking oil to the public. GK Shetty, president of Karnataka State Hotels’ Association, said the association has reminded hoteliers from time to time to keep their bills and give their used oil to FSSAI-registered agencies. “A Dharshini (quick-service restaurant) would use 5-15 litres of oil a day. While the buying cost of fresh oil is Rs 125-140 a litre, when we sell it to RUCO agencies, we receive Rs 65-75 a litre,” he said, adding that there are some hotels that end up reusing oil as a matter of survival.Srinivas said reused oil collection usually increases during the festive season, which is due in the months to come.
Hotels & Accommodations
EDITION Hotels Celebrate National Wellness Month Globally

If you thought luxury hotels were all about the thread count and minibar selection, you clearly haven’t met EDITION Hotels. These design-led havens have decided that wellness isn’t just a trend—it’s a full-blown lifestyle, and they’re laying it on thick.
In fact, their global collection of spas might just be the closest thing to heaven without actually getting struck by lightning on a mountaintop.
From Los Angeles to Reykjavik, EDITION Hotels aren’t merely offering massages and cucumber water—they’re orchestrating wellness symphonies where sound therapy, cold plunges, and Turkish hammams play in perfect harmony. And no, you don’t need to speak fluent yoga to enjoy it.
The West Hollywood EDITION: Zen, but Make It Hollywood
Tucked just off Sunset, The West Hollywood EDITION is where calm gets a facelift. The Spa here is minimalist in the way only Hollywood minimalism can be—calculated down to the larchwood and Venetian plaster. Six private treatment rooms? Check. A dedicated meditation space? Naturally. Saunas and a recovery lounge? But of course.
More than just eye candy, the spa uses plant-based products and treatments that do more than smell nice. “The Spa at The West Hollywood EDITION is the first luxury destination in Los Angeles to unite wellness, mindfulness, and inner beauty through treatments that support ecological well-being and healthy living,” according to the hotel team. Oh, and there’s a 24-hour gym with Peloton bikes for when you feel the guilt creeping in.
The Miami Beach EDITION: Power Nap, No Pillow Required
If you’re after glamour with your grounding, The Miami Beach EDITION has you covered—right down to the custom hammam room on its lower level. Nine private treatment rooms, a full-service beauty lounge, and the kind of relaxation area where you half-expect to see a flamingo in a robe.
Here’s the kicker: you can take a Power Nap that uses Biotic Wave technology to give you the rest equivalent of four hours of sleep in just 30 minutes. Now that’s what I call cheating the system.
The Riviera Maya EDITION at Kanai: Nature, Nurtured
In Mexico, The Riviera Maya EDITION at Kanai looks like it was dropped into a cenote by the gods of relaxation themselves. With hydrotherapy pools, a Turkish hammam, and a steam and chromotherapy bed, it’s like Mother Nature got herself an interior designer.
The Spa’s private cabana-style treatment rooms are each named after local white flowers—Buganvilla, Pasiflora, and the mysteriously exotic Ololiuqui—giving it the feel of a botanical retreat.
“Centred around local florals and aromatics—with a focus on wellness, mindfulness, and personal connection,” the experience is as thoughtful as it is indulgent.
Add a Pool Bar that serves actual healthy drinks (not just minty mojitos), and you’ve got a proper wellness pilgrimage.
The Reykjavik EDITION: Vikings, Volcanoes, and Vibes
Who knew Iceland could be this warm? The Reykjavik EDITION is what happens when Norse mythology meets five-star pampering. By day, the spa serves up post-workout smoothies; by night, it becomes a sleek pre-party pamper zone. We’re talking thermal plunge pools, steam rooms, and hammams—all within snowball’s reach of a glacier.
One treatment, Uruz, is a tribute to hot-cold therapy and Viking ritual. Think salt scrubs, marine mud, hot stones, and chilled marble working in tandem to boost circulation and make you feel more alive than your Tinder profile suggests. “Massages, body wraps, and Bioeffect facials await curious visitors,” the hotel states. Curious? You’ll be converted.
The Bodrum EDITION: Ancient Ritual, Modern Reset
On the sun-kissed Turkish coast, The Bodrum EDITION is a spa-lover’s dream: eight treatment rooms, salt caves, steam rooms, and a hammam that’s as Instagrammable as it is authentic. Mediterranean architecture meets full-body surrender.
The standout? The Stress Release Massage—a signature EDITION Hotels treatment using sweet almond oil and deep-tissue magic to iron out every wrinkle your flight home might leave behind.
According to the team, “Guests can enjoy therapies such as the Optimal Release Massage… or the Stress Release Massage, an EDITION-exclusive experience.”
Final Thoughts (Before Your Next Booking)
This August, as National Wellness Month rolls around, EDITION Hotels are inviting guests to do more than just exist—they’re offering a reason to feel again.
Whether you’re detoxing in Reykjavik, sweating out last night’s cocktails in Miami, or floating in a hydrotherapy pool in Riviera Maya, there’s an EDITION for every kind of weary soul.
So, next time someone says “treat yourself,” tell them you’re headed to EDITION Hotels. And mean it.
Hotels & Accommodations
10,000 European Hotels Sue Booking.com Over Price Parity Restrictions

A coalition of over 10,000 hotels across Europe has launched a class-action lawsuit against Booking.com, accusing the global travel platform of enforcing unfair price parity clauses that have cost them significant revenue.
The complaint targets Booking.com’s long-standing contractual requirement that prevents hotels from offering lower prices on their own websites or other competing platforms. The hotels claim this practice limits their ability to compete and offer better deals directly to customers.
European hospitality association HOTREC led the charge, but Booking.com quickly pushed back, stating that the group’s claims are “inaccurate and misleading.” The platform defended its policy by noting that some customers use Booking.com to browse accommodations but book directly with hotels for cheaper rates—something the parity clause aims to curb.
The dispute comes as the EU’s Digital Markets Act moves to ban such restrictive clauses for major online platforms. In a related development, the European Court of Justice ruled last September that Booking.com’s price controls could potentially hinder market competition.
This legal battle could have far-reaching implications for the way accommodation is marketed and priced across digital platforms in Europe.
-
Brand Stories2 weeks ago
Bloom Hotels: A Modern Vision of Hospitality Redefining Travel
-
Brand Stories1 week ago
CheQin.ai sets a new standard for hotel booking with its AI capabilities: empowering travellers to bargain, choose the best, and book with clarity.
-
Destinations & Things To Do2 weeks ago
Untouched Destinations: Stunning Hidden Gems You Must Visit
-
Destinations & Things To Do1 week ago
This Hidden Beach in India Glows at Night-But Only in One Secret Season
-
AI in Travel2 weeks ago
AI Travel Revolution: Must-Have Guide to the Best Experience
-
Brand Stories1 month ago
Voice AI Startup ElevenLabs Plans to Add Hubs Around the World
-
Brand Stories3 weeks ago
How Elon Musk’s rogue Grok chatbot became a cautionary AI tale
-
Asia Travel Pulse1 month ago
Looking For Adventure In Asia? Here Are 7 Epic Destinations You Need To Experience At Least Once – Zee News
-
AI in Travel1 month ago
‘Will AI take my job?’ A trip to a Beijing fortune-telling bar to see what lies ahead | China
-
Brand Stories2 weeks ago
Contactless Hospitality: Why Remote Management Technology Is Key to Seamless Guest Experiences
You must be logged in to post a comment Login