The Top 44 Hotels Near 2 Amys

  1. Georgetown's power-broker hotel, full of people who have motorcades and don't mention it. The Four Seasons here has been around forever, and it earns its Forbes Five Star the old-fashioned way: classic luxury, flawless service, and a crowd of diplomats and visiting VIPs who know exactly what they're getting. Bourbon Steak draws its own scene, and the fitness center is reportedly the most bipartisan room in the city.


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    Address
    2800 Pennsylvania Ave NW, Washington, DC · Washington
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  2. Georgetown has the Four Seasons and the Ritz, and then it has this: a boutique luxury hotel on the C&O Canal with only 55 rooms, so the staff actually knows your name by checkout. Dignitaries and quietly famous people tend to like that. The townhouse rooms come with private entrances and courtyards, the rooftop has good skyline views, and the library is the kind of room that makes you want to cancel your afternoon.


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    Address
    1050 31st St NW, Washington, DC · Washington
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  3. A Ritz-Carlton that skipped the white columns and marble fountains in favor of an old incinerator building, and it works beautifully. The brick walls, ironwork, and actual smokestack give it real character, while inside it's full Ritz comfort, down duvets, Frette linens, the works. It sits on a quiet Georgetown street between the C&O Canal and the Potomac, which means you're in one of D.C.'s best neighborhoods without feeling like you're in a hotel district.


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    Address
    3100 S St NW, Washington, DC · Washington
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  4. A polished, understated luxury hotel in the West End that somehow doesn't feel like sleeping inside a conference center. The 220 rooms lean minimalist and residential, with limestone bathrooms that make you feel vaguely important. Blue Duck Tavern draws locals and the occasional ex-president, and the Tea Cellar is a genuinely cool spot to work through teas you've never heard of. Pack something nicer than jeans.


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    Address
    1201 24th St NW, Washington, DC · Washington
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  5. If you want to sleep as close to the White House as legally possible, this is your move. The Hay-Adams is an old-school luxury hotel that's been around forever and somehow still feels like the most discreet address in a city full of people trying to be seen. Ornate ceilings, marble bathrooms, European linens, and some rooms with a direct view of 1600 Pennsylvania. The rooftop alone is worth the visit.


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    Address
    800 16th St NW, Washington, DC · Washington
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  6. A boutique luxury hotel two blocks from the White House, The Jefferson leans hard into its namesake, with Monticello replica furniture, framed maps of places Jefferson loved, and staff who genuinely know their history and will tell you things you didn't learn in school. It draws the kind of quietly powerful crowd that doesn't need to announce itself, and the whole place feels more like a very tasteful private club than a hotel.


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    Address
    1200 16th St NW, Washington, DC · Washington
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  7. The Dupont Circle Hotel is a polished boutique property from the Doyle Collection, sitting at a genuinely useful address near the White House and embassy row. The rooms feel contemporary with a midcentury lean, and the ninth-floor penthouse suites have a private elevator, because some guests require that kind of discretion. The bar pours an impressive run of Irish whiskeys, and the coffee counter does a solid morning pastry situation.


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    1500 New Hampshire Ave NW, Washington, DC · Washington
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  8. A polished full-service hotel in the West End, close enough to Georgetown to feel central without the tourist circus. The spa and wellness setup is genuinely impressive, with a 50-foot saltwater pool, sauna, steam room, and real fitness classes. Rooms are spacious and comfortable, and the lobby bar is good for lingering. There's also a resident dog named Georgie, which is either a perk or a spoiler depending on your allergies.


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    Address
    2401 M St NW, Washington, DC · Washington
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  9. The Ritz-Carlton in D.C.'s West End does the classic luxury hotel thing without apology: big rooms, Frette linens, soaking tubs, and minibars stocked like a very responsible adult lives here. The wood-paneled lobby pulls in the power-lunch crowd and visiting dignitaries who've stopped pretending to be casual. It's polished without being stuffy, which for a Ritz is honestly saying something.


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    1150 22nd St NW, Washington, DC · Washington
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  10. A grand, Forbes four-star hotel that's been around forever and has the bones to prove it, with Palladian windows and Italian Renaissance chandeliers that make even checking in feel vaguely presidential. Suitable for diplomats, lobbyists, and anyone who wants to feel like one. The White House is basically around the corner, which either thrills you or means nothing. Either way, the location is genuinely unbeatable for exploring the city.


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    Address
    923 16th St NW, Washington, DC · Washington
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  11. A luxury hotel in CityCenter that actually earns the label, the Conrad was designed by Herzog & de Meuron, which tells you it looks nothing like the usual D.C. beige. Eleven floors of glass, a rooftop bar called Summit where the city's power-adjacent crowd goes to be seen against a skyline backdrop, and a Chesapeake-focused restaurant downstairs. Business travelers and long weekenders fill the place, all looking quietly expensive.


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    Address
    950 New York Ave NW, Washington, DC · Washington
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  12. A boutique island resort where "roughing it" means your butler forgot to refresh the pool towels. A seaplane drops you into the Baa Atoll, a UNESCO reserve with reefs so alive they feel staged for your benefit. Fifty villas have private infinity pools and thatched roofs, and the overwater ones sit right on the lagoon. The restaurant built from traditional boats is genuinely worth lingering in. Couples and quietly wealthy honeymooners, mostly.


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    Address
    Milaidhoo Island, 1, 20002, Maldives · Washington
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  13. Staying here means sleeping inside a building that used to house the postmaster general, which somehow feels very on-brand for D.C. The Waldorf Astoria took over the old Pennsylvania Avenue post office and turned it into a genuinely grand luxury hotel, with 16-foot ceilings, original windows, and a skylight-lit lobby that makes every arrival feel a little ceremonial. The crowd skews power-lunch and expense-account, but the velvet and marble are worth the peek regardless.


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    Address
    1100 Pennsylvania Ave NW, Washington, DC · Washington
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  14. A polished full-service hotel sitting between the National Mall and The Wharf, Salamander pulls off the rare trick of feeling genuinely luxurious without the stuffiness you'd expect this close to official Washington. The terrace overlooking the marina is a strong argument for day drinking, and Kwame Onwuachi's Afro-Caribbean restaurant Dōgon is worth a reservation on its own. The spa is serious, the rooms are plush, and the crowd skews well-dressed optimists.


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    Address
    1330 Maryland Ave SW, Washington, DC · Washington
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  15. The Watergate Hotel is a DC landmark that's been around forever and carries its notoriety with a straight face. The curved Potomac-side building, designed to look like a sail, is genuinely beautiful, and the revamp pulls off that rare trick of honoring the retro swinging-sixties vibe without feeling like a theme park. Think out-of-town professionals and curious politicos who appreciate a hotel with a little history baked in.


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    Address
    2650 Virginia Ave NW, Washington, DC · Washington
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  16. A Michelin-keyed boutique hotel on the Wharf waterfront that feels more like a stylish escape than a D.C. obligation. The rooftop lounge has a circular bar, a terrace over the Potomac, and the energy of somewhere people actually want to be seen. Downstairs, the all-day Latin American restaurant pulls in water views, and the moody Bar Pendry keeps things interesting after dark. The rooms are calm and residential, which you'll appreciate after all that.


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    655 Water St SW, Washington, DC · Washington
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    1201 K St NW, Washington, DC · Washington
  18. A boutique hotel that actually has a reason to exist: the LINE DC lives inside a converted church in Adams Morgan, and the bones of the building do most of the heavy lifting. The vibe is bohemian without trying too hard, and the bars and restaurants pull in enough locals that it never feels like a hotel bubble. Worth knowing about even if you're just passing through for a drink.


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    1770 Euclid St NW, Washington, DC · Washington
  19. Riggs is a luxury hotel that wins on vibes before you even check in, because it's set inside a grand old bank building that they've somehow made feel both historic and genuinely fun. Penn Quarter is a solid base, the rooms have real character, and the common spaces make other D.C. hotels look like airport Marriotts. The crowd skews stylish and well-traveled, people who book hotels for the building, not the points.


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    Address
    900 F St NW, Washington, DC · Washington

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    1337 Connecticut Ave NW, Washington, DC · Washington
  21. Proof that D.C. has a personality, Yours Truly is a boutique hotel that trades marble-lobby grandeur for something warmer and more lived-in. The building has that modernist industrial bones, but inside it feels like someone actually curated the place rather than hired a firm to make it look like every other hip hotel. The crowd skews young and unpretentious, which in this city is genuinely its own selling point.


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    1143 New Hampshire Ave NW, Washington, DC · Washington

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    1315 16th St NW, Washington, DC · Washington
  23. Viceroy has figured out something most hotels in DC never do: you don't have to choose between cool and comfortable. This boutique hotel leans hard into mid-century modernism, so the rooms look sharp without feeling like a design student's thesis project. It draws a mix of style-conscious travelers and suits who finally got tired of boring business hotels, and honestly, both crowds seem pretty happy about it.


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    1430 Rhode Island Ave NW, Washington, DC · Washington
  24. A boutique hotel on 14th Street that has a very clear point of view. The lobby alone is worth a peek, anchored by a floor-to-ceiling pointillist portrait of RBG that stops people mid-stride. The whole property is built around celebrating women's achievements, and it commits fully, from the art on the walls to the two warrior figures guarding the entrance. It reads more like a gallery than a typical DC business hotel.


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    1155 14th St NW, Washington, DC · Washington

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    806 15th St NW, Washington, DC · Washington
  26. A boutique hotel practically in the shadow of the White House, which is a flex this neighborhood really needed. The interiors lean bold and a little irreverent, which tends to sort guests into two camps: people who get it and people who quietly ask for a room transfer. You'll be in the first camp. It's the kind of place that actually has a pulse after dark, which, around here, counts for a lot.


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    515 15th St NW, Washington, DC · Washington

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    1401 Pennsylvania Ave NW, Washington, DC · Washington
  28. A Ritz in Arlington might sound like a consolation prize, but this one earns its keep. It's a full-service luxury hotel with the polished calm you'd expect, feather beds, Egyptian cotton, and a club level for when you really need to feel sorted. DC's monuments are minutes away, and so is the airport. Wind down at Santé, the on-site bar and restaurant, where the fireside lounge draws a mix of road warriors and locals who know a good cocktail when they see one.


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    Address
    1250 S Hayes St, Arlington, VA · Arlington
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  29. Awards
    Address
    333 G St NW, Washington, DC · Washington
  30. A newer Capitol Hill hotel that actually has a design point of view, with a ten-story atrium, a glass facade, and commissioned art that makes the lobby feel like somewhere rather than anywhere. Rooms are genuinely spacious for DC, with proper sheets and good beds. The on-site French bistro earns its concept, and Union Station is an eight-minute walk away, which is more useful than it sounds.


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    20 Massachusetts Ave NW, Washington, DC · Washington
  31. A boutique hotel in a converted seed factory in Union Market, which sounds like a premise for a TV pitch but actually works beautifully. The rooms have exposed beams, local art, and a minimalist vibe that attracts the kind of guests who pack one carry-on and mean it. The real draw is the rooftop Treehouse bar, all greenery and good views. A farmers market supplies breakfast, so even the fruit feels intentional.


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    411 New York Ave NE, Washington, DC · Washington

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    221 Tingey St SE, Washington, DC · Washington
  33. A Forbes Four Star hotel that earns its keep by being genuinely useful without feeling corporate. It's connected directly to Tysons Galleria, so the Neiman Marcus crowd and the laptop-open business travelers end up in the same lobby, which is its own kind of entertainment. Upper floors have real D.C. skyline views, there's a solid spa, and the wine bar with live music gives you somewhere to be after dark.


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    1700 Tysons Blvd, McLean, VA · Mc Lean
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    1600 King St, Alexandria, VA · Alexandria
  35. A boutique hotel in a grand old Leesburg estate, Hotel Burg is the kind of place that makes you feel like you've been invited to a very tasteful house party that you somehow earned. Suites have fireplaces and clawfoot tubs, and the rooftop terrace sits above the whole town. The in-house restaurant leans hunt-inspired, which makes perfect sense given the vineyards and horse farms just down the road.


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    208 S King St, Leesburg, VA · Leesburg
  36. Graduate is a hotel brand that finds college towns with mediocre lodging and fixes the problem, and Annapolis is a textbook case. What was once a forgettable chain hotel is now a colorful, Naval Academy-themed property that actually feels like it belongs here. It draws the parents-weekend crowd and weekend sailors who want something with a little personality, and it delivers without trying too hard.


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    126 West St, Annapolis, MD · Annapolis
  37. If you're going to splurge on a hotel in Baltimore, this glass waterfront tower earns it. The Four Seasons sits right on the Inner Harbor with floor-to-ceiling views that make the harbor look like it was installed for your benefit. The real draw is the rooftop setup: the city's only waterfront infinity pool, cabanas, and a serious spa. The lobby doubles as a surprisingly good art gallery for anyone who wanders down in a robe.


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    200 International Drive, Baltimore, MD · Baltimore
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  38. A Forbes Five Star, Michelin-recognized luxury resort about an hour from D.C., sitting on 340 acres of Virginia horse country that feels like it has always belonged there. The equestrian trails, spa, and wine bar drawing from local Virginia vintners all compete for your attention, and the dining leans seasonal and local without being preachy about it. The crowd here brought their good luggage and knows how to have a quiet, expensive weekend.


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    500 N Pendleton St, Middleburg, VA · Middleburg
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  39. A boutique hotel perched on a historic pier in Fell's Point, Baltimore's liveliest neighborhood, the Pendry earns its Michelin key with design-forward rooms, harbor views, and a poolside setup that somehow feels right. The building has been around forever and carries the weight of it well. The crowd skews stylish and knows it, but the place doesn't take itself too seriously, which makes it easy to love.


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    1715 Thames St, Baltimore, MD · Baltimore
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  40. A two-key Michelin boutique hotel tucked into a gorgeous red-brick mansion in Mount Vernon, the Ivy is one of only a handful of Black-owned luxury hotels in the country, which makes staying here feel like it actually means something. Rooms have four-poster beds and gas fireplaces, bathrooms have heated floors, and the courtyard is the kind of place where you'll linger over breakfast longer than planned. The on-site restaurant, Magdalena, is genuinely worth your time too.


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    Address
    205 E Biddle St, Baltimore, MD · Baltimore
  41. A waterfront hotel that actually earns the view, the Royal Sonesta sits right on the Inner Harbor with the aquarium and Camden Yards both walkable. The rooms go heavy on dark wood and gold tones, and the upper-floor suites frame some genuinely nice skyline shots. The indoor pool, sauna, and rooftop deck mean you never feel like you have to rush out, which is rare at this price. Harborplace is a short stroll for crab cakes.


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    Address
    550 Light St, Baltimore, MD · Baltimore
  42. If you've ever looked at a Monopoly board and wondered what B&O Railroad actually looked like, here's your answer. This Kimpton hotel lives inside a stunning Beaux Arts building that's been around forever, and the original marble staircases and Tiffany fixtures make it feel like you're staying somewhere that actually has a story. The rooms are stylish without trying too hard, which is very much the Kimpton way.


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    Address
    2 N Charles St, Baltimore, MD · Baltimore
  43. Boutique hotel in Mount Vernon, Baltimore's artsy historic quarter, where the Walters Art Museum is basically your neighbor. The team leaned hard into the neighborhood's creative pedigree, so the place is packed with art and design without feeling like a gallery you accidentally slept in. It's the kind of hotel that attracts guests who booked it on purpose, not just because it was close to the convention center.


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    Address
    101 W Monument St, Baltimore, MD · Baltimore

  44. Awards
    Address
    2 E Read St #6, Baltimore, MD · Baltimore

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