The Top 42 Hotels Near Cider Hill Farm
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On Plum Island's quieter reach, this Lark-designed hotel trades understated coastal charm for something more theatrically maritime, all golden sand and measured remove from the village bustle. The décor stakes a bolder claim than typical New England seaside inns, announcing itself with confidence rather than whisper.
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A restored 1950s motor inn on New Hampshire's coast where each unit becomes a full kitchen apartment, poolside and beach-ready without fuss. The swim shop stocks what you need for the water across the street; the quiet here feels deliberate, ten minutes from Portsmouth's noise.
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An 1881 Victorian on Portsmouth's main street holds thirty-two rooms where gaslit nostalgia meets spare modernism, the bones of the building speaking to its bones. Lark Hotels' restraint—no fussy period reproduction, no design aggression—makes this small place feel like the alternative to the region's hotel conservatism.
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A two-century-old Portsmouth house stripped of period fussiness and outfitted with clean lines and studio layouts, where breakfast waits in your room and the concierge stays pleasantly distant. The town center's shops and restaurants begin at the threshold, making the place less refuge than base camp for someone who came to walk the streets.
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A restored 19th-century house on the New Hampshire coast where six studios marry period detail with modern convenience—full kitchens, in-unit laundry—and the unhurried rhythm of residential living. The staff reads like locals who've cultivated taste rather than service, offering the kind of advice that sends you toward genuine discovery rather than marked routes.
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This substantial seaside hotel commands views of America's oldest working port, its classic maritime rooms and fireplaced suites opening onto the Atlantic. The in-house oyster bar trades in fresh catch while the rooftop bar catches the same light, making the whole enterprise feel less like a destination than a circumstance of geography.
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A loft-style hotel on Salem's walkable Essex Street, The Hotel Salem channels mid-century modernist glamour in a town better known for Victorian quiet. The 44 rooms feel like a downtown department store reimagined for travelers who want urban texture without leaving the North Shore.
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A 1956 motel modeled on a Navy ship's bridge rises from Long Sands Beach with nautical-deco rooms and ocean views from every terrace. The cocktail bar that doubles as the lobby is reason enough to linger before climbing to your quarters.
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A former motor lodge reborn with floor-to-ceiling views of Nubble Lighthouse, The Viewpoint Hotel trades dated efficiency for eighteen rooms of coastal-modern restraint and a saltwater pool that faces the Atlantic. Joe Lipton and Michelle Friar have made the case that a Maine seaside hotel need not shout—it need only frame the view and get out of the way.
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A sprawling clifftop resort on Maine's rocky coast, all 226 rooms angled toward the Atlantic and terraced private views. Since 1872 the place has grown into something between grand hotel and compound—pools, spa, cottage clusters—where the actual meal is the landscape itself.
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This colonial-era inn sits steps from where the American Revolution began, now serving as a quiet base for exploring Lexington's historical landmarks and the surrounding New England countryside. The location itself—bridging Revolutionary War sites, Thoreau's Walden, and farmland bike trails—matters as much as any room or meal within.
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A curved bronze tower on the Everett waterfront houses a casino resort that channels Las Vegas excess through Boston sensibilities, with galleries of contemporary art and a lobby drowning in seasonal flowers. Its 16 restaurants and bars—helmed by local chefs like Frank DePasquale and Sean Christie—operate as the civilized counterweight to the slots and table games humming below.
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A century-old Back Bay hotel emerges from renovation with Alexandra Champalimaud's restrained interiors and an art collection that justifies lingering in the lobby. The real seduction is the view: floor-to-ceiling sightlines of the Public Garden, a luxury more valuable than thread count.
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A 1922 Federal Reserve Bank becomes the stage for British restraint in Boston's Financial District, its imposing facade preserved while interiors unfold in contemporary luxury. The Langham settles into the city's power geography with a kind of transatlantic poise, letting history and refinement do the talking.
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Across from the Public Garden, this Five-Star hotel marries 1980s bones with sharp contemporary interiors and views that justify the splurge. The signature beds are genuinely comfortable; the eighth-floor pool overlooks the Common.
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The Boston Harbor Hotel trades in the kind of understated grandeur that comes from refusing to chase trends, its waterfront perch a studied exercise in old-world restraint. What emerges is less a statement of arrival than a quiet assertion that some things don't need to shimmer to endure.
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A new luxury boutique hotel nestled in Beacon Hill's red-brick streetscape, where the Longfellow Bridge looms nearby and classic architecture meets purposeful modernity. The Whitney threads a needle between old-money restraint and contemporary design with enough confidence to belong to neither camp exclusively.
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A luxury hotel on Boylston Street where obsessive design choices elevate the experience beyond the expected corporate retreat. The Mandarin Oriental arrives in Back Bay not as mere amenity but as a deliberate argument about what refinement demands.
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A former nineteenth-century jail on the Charles Street waterfront now operates as a luxury hotel, its rough-hewn granite walls preserving the austere grandeur of its carceral past. The Liberty trades on architectural contradiction—confining stone transformed into the setting for high-thread-count linens and river views that its original residents never enjoyed.
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A Henry Cobb tower completed in 2019 houses Boston's second Four Seasons, where contemporary design meets unhurried luxury without alienating traditionalists; the bird's-eye perspective alone justifies the elevation. Zuma's izakaya sophistication and LPM's French-inflected dining anchor a property where the spa and pool feel less like amenities and more like the point.
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A Beaux Arts townhouse on Beacon Hill holds this hotel's dark elegance behind cast iron, all romantic swagger without the stuffiness of old money. The atmosphere tilts Gothic—all four-poster beds and shadow—where Boston's conventional luxury hotels would settle for mere restraint.
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A modern tower off Boston Common holds its own against the theater district's noise with interiors by Rockwell Group that marry Ritz-Carlton classicism to clean contemporary lines. The Artisan Bistro and Avery Bar suggest you needn't leave the premises for a evening well-spent.
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The InterContinental commands the Financial District waterfront where history pivoted on a December night in 1773, positioning itself for an audience that measures luxury in proximity to power and water views. Its grand arrival to Boston trades on geography as much as hospitality, anchoring itself to a location that refuses to be ordinary.
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A Singapore institution's Boston outpost slots into Back Bay with the ease of a well-tailored jacket, all restrained glamour and mahogany tones that ignore the noise of trendier rivals. The hotel's quiet authority suggests that real elegance requires no announcement.
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Perched above the Charles River in East Cambridge, the Kimpton Marlowe channels its innovative neighbors through a design language of soft sci-fi minimalism—industrial bones softened by saturated greens and blues. The hotel's playful restraint, named for a Polaroid pioneer's boulevard, suggests that even hospitality can be thoughtfully imagined.
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citizenM's debut Boston hotel rises above TD Garden with smart, modular rooms and a second-floor lobby dressed in street art and deep colors. Designed for the hurried traveler, it sits steps from North Station with harbor views from the terrace.
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A waterfront hotel that arrived early to Boston's Seaport District and never ceded its view of the harbor, all salt-tinged décor and convenient proximity to the Convention Center. Three dining venues, an onsite health club, and the kind of location that makes a business trip feel, briefly, like leisure.
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An 1904 flatiron wedged between Beacon Hill's brick and the North End's restaurant row hosts this 80-room boutique, its recent renovation marrying vintage charm with industrial bones. The result feels like a playful nod to New England loft living—unpretentious, chic, and thoroughly at ease with itself.
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A brick-faced Harvard fixture that reads as collegiate from outside but unfolds into thoughtful comfort within, all burgundy chairs and fresh flowers. The Presidential suite's baby grand and thick walls promise the kind of soundproofed privacy that appeals to performers and insomniacs alike.
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A century-old limestone palace anchoring Copley Square, all red awnings and ornate plasterwork, where locals and film crews alike convene for power lunches and evening aperitifs. The lobby feels less like a hotel than a living room for Boston's establishment—a place where grandeur doesn't demand pretense.
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An Art Deco tower from 1928 retains its ornate ceilings and brass bones while housing Fin Point's seafood counter and a casual café downstairs. The Dagny reads as downtown Boston itself—layered with history, skeptical of fuss, and oriented toward the water and working city beyond.
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The Godfrey occupies two early-1900s buildings in downtown Boston, its 242 rooms dressed in mid-century restraint—warm neutrals, modest orange—that nods to the city's architectural lineage without genuflecting. The staff here believes comfort is a serious matter, not a marketing concept.
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A rustic waterfront inn where New England privilege settles into creaking floorboards and salt air, White Barn has long sheltered the northeastern gentry in understated comfort. The cottage compound feels less like a resort than a family compound where you happen to be an invited guest.
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The tablet controls every amenity in these compact rooms—blackout blinds, mood lighting, the works—while the wraparound rooftop bar catches Fenway sunsets over Newbury Street. citizenM's formula of streamlined service and bright public spaces works as intended in Back Bay, a neighborhood built for walking.
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The Hotel Commonwealth sits in that rare Boston pocket where Kenmore Square's hustle meets a direct sightline to Fenway Park, colonial façade giving way to contemporary interiors that refuse nostalgia. Its location—equidistant from BU and Back Bay—makes it less a retreat than a staging ground for anyone serious about the city.
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A converted mid-century motel near Fenway Park trades Sox kitsch for rock history, its bones honest and its vision singular. The Verb refuses the obvious tribute and instead honors the neighborhood's music legacy—a choice that feels almost defiant in its restraint.
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A pink stucco landmark since 1947, The Colony Hotel preserves its retro-tropical color schemes and scalloped headboards while hosting a steady flow of locals and winter travelers. Swifty's restaurant and the pool bar anchor a scene of casual glamor that has little use for pretense.
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A Federal mansion from 1813 anchors this quiet tree-lined street, its period bones intact and its rooms spare but unhurried. Walking distance to galleries and the harbor, it reads as the kind of place where New England's maritime past feels less like history than like the air you breathe.
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A restored captain's house anchors this hotel's cluster of modern cabins in walkable Kennebunkport, where Elder & Ash's design discipline elevates what could have been another coastal cliché. The suites feel purposeful rather than precious, and the location—steps from the town's modest center—suggests you came here to actually leave the room.
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A six-room bed-and-breakfast in a 1753 Colonial house where Ralph Emerson summered, now outfitted with luxe linens and modern plumbing while preserving original pine floors and period details. The place trades exclusivity for genuine hospitality: coffee always brews, the honor bar never closes, and breakfast arrives without fanfare or pretense.
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The grounds at Hidden Pond feel weathered by decades, though the main lodge rose from Maine woods only recently, a calculated illusion sustained by careful architecture and restraint. What emerges is a hotel that honors New England's seaside past without the burden of actually living in it.
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A wraparound-porch landmark freshly revived with bright interiors and a youthful pulse, the Tides Beach Club remains tethered to its beachfront Maine roots. The classic exterior speaks to decades of accumulation; the vibrant new life inside suggests someone finally decided the view deserved company.