The Top 23 Hotels Near Boycott Bar
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Rise Uptown occupies a pair of renovated mid-century buildings on Camelback Road, where bright, stylish rooms and a buzzing courtyard anchor the property's social life. The pool deck hosts a cocktail bar, a respected coffee roaster, and an upscale popsicle stand—amenities that feel less like hotel afterthoughts than genuine neighborhood gathering spots.
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A 1929 modernist landmark designed by Albert Chase McArthur with Frank Lloyd Wright's input, the Arizona Biltmore commands central Phoenix with textile-block walls and stained-glass skylights. It remains the city's most storied hotel, a refuge for old money and dignitaries since its opening.
- Michelin Guide Selected Hotels
- Phoenix New Times 2025 · Best Luxury Resort · Best of Phoenix
- Phoenix New Times 2024 · Best Staycation Spot · Best of Phoenix
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A white-brick European oasis near Camelback Mountain's base, The Global Ambassador channels Old World elegance through Art Deco rooms and a buzzing lobby that anchors both locals and travelers. Five restaurants spanning global cuisines, a comprehensive spa, and 9,000 square feet of fitness space compose a resort designed as destination rather than mere accommodation.
- Forbes Travel Guide Forbes Four Star
- Michelin Guide 1 Key
- Phoenix New Times 2025 · Best High-End People-Watching · Best of Phoenix
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A modernist hotel perched in Phoenix's Camelback Corridor, all glass angles and mountain views, where the rooftop pool catches sunset light while Wade serves cocktails and small plates. Artizen's kitchen leans New American with Southwestern sourcing, a reliable anchor to the property's larger scheme of contemporary desert luxury.
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Downtown Phoenix's renewal finds its focal point in this sleek boutique hotel, where contemporary design and urban energy converge in a glass tower above Jefferson Street. The Palomar arrives at a moment when the city's center has finally become a destination rather than something to pass through.
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A 1929 Spanish colonial mansion at Camelback's base, Royal Palms resists Phoenix's corporate sameness with Oriental rugs and saturated hues that suggest a private estate rather than a resort. Stone pathways wind through nine acres of gardens and fountains, past casitas and dining rooms where the atmosphere feels curated for intimate retreat.
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Tucked within The Phoenician's sprawl, The Canyon Suites slows your pulse with earth-toned rooms and views of Camelback Mountain, where a waterfall threads through a cactus garden. The private pool and canyon-side lounge offer the quietude of genuine retreat, not resort theater.
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A luxury resort reimagined from its mid-century foundation, Mountain Shadows trades Rat Pack nostalgia for a contemporary take on Southwestern retreat. The place feels less interested in revival than in asking what Paradise Valley glamour means now—and answering with clean lines and desert minimalism.
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Nestled between Mummy and Camelback mountains across 125 acres, this 1936 resort arranges low-slung casitas and seven restaurants among desert gardens where pathways curve past fountains and flowering beds. The intimacy persists despite the sprawl—a morning coffee in the garden, birdsong overhead, and time moving at the pace of the Sonoran landscape.
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At the foot of Camelback Mountain, the Phoenician spreads across two hundred fifty acres of manicured gardens and nine pools, the largest finished in mother-of-pearl—a resort that announces itself through sheer expanse rather than restraint. The opulence is deliberate, unmistakable, and for some, exactly the point.
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The Hotel Valley Ho epitomizes a distinctly American strain of hospitality: the boutique roadhouse, situated in Scottsdale's upscale precincts with the casual swagger of a place that's earned its history. It represents what happens when a roadside sensibility meets deliberate refinement, neither apologizing for either impulse.
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A modern hotel dressed in desert tones and Camelback Mountain geometry, Canopy sits squarely in Old Town Scottsdale's walkable heart, a rarity in sprawling Phoenix. Its contemporary rooms and restaurants—Cobre Kitchen + Cocktails, Outrider Rooftop Lounge—trade resort theatricality for understated luxury.
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A desert resort styled as a Hemingway-era Cuban fantasy, complete with pineapple cocktails and ropa vieja, its eight acres of hammocks and twin pools conjure Caribbean languor in the Arizona heat. The Art Deco rooms and sandy-bottomed pool water the mirage convincingly enough.
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The W Scottsdale marks a tonal shift in a desert town once defined by golf courses and galleries, now animated by late-night energy and younger crowds. It arrives as the boutique luxury answer to Scottsdale's reinvention into a nightlife destination.
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The Yari brothers' Scottsdale social hub wraps Rockwell Group design around a sprawling terrace that opens to the desert air, its interiors all leather and powder-blue velvet. Kauboi's yakitori and crudo sit alongside a 12th-floor bar and breakfast spot, each tier calibrated for a different hour and mood.
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A sprawling desert resort anchored by four themed pools, championship golf courses, and a full spa, this 300-acre property in the Sonoran foothills offers enough activities to justify staying put for days. Chef Angelo Sosa oversees eight restaurants here, from casual Asian street food at Kembara to family-style Mexican at Tía Carmen, each with its own logic within the larger machine.
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The resort sits where Scottsdale's sprawl finally surrenders to actual desert—casitas scattered across forty acres of saguaro and stone, backed by national forest and Pinnacle Peak's ridge. You can golf at the legendary Troon North courses, spa, swim, and eat well at Talavera, but what lingers is the feeling of having vanished into wilderness without leaving the Valley.
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A college town hotel that takes itself seriously without pretension, the Graduate Tempe channels ASU's swagger and ease through midcentury design and a location steps from campus. The place hums with understated confidence—less Instagram spectacle than genuine hospitality for travelers who want style and substance in equal measure.
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A desert resort built on Gila River Indian Community land, where Pima and Maricopa design principles shape everything from the spa to the dining room. Two golf courses frame the Sierra Estrella Mountains while Kai Restaurant grounds its menu in tribal foodways, making cultural immersion inseparable from leisure.
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A desert resort that trades Scottsdale's golf-course conservatism for younger energy, the Andaz sits against Camelback Mountain's darkening silhouette at dusk. Its bungalows and communal spaces suggest the region might finally exhale.
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