The Top 44 Hotels Near Cyrus
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A sprawling resort north of Healdsburg trades wine-country pastiche for clean modernist lines and vineyard views framed through expansive glass. The 250-acre property settles into its Sonoma setting with the confidence of something built for now, not nostalgia.
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Kyle Connaughton's five-room hotel in downtown Healdsburg pairs austere modern-classic rooms with a daily breakfast of considerable ambition, though the real draw remains the adjacent restaurant, where the chef's Japanese-inflected cooking rewards the patience of advance reservation.
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Above a farmstead kitchen in Healdsburg, five minimalist rooms overlook the town square, each stocked with local provisions and designed around Japanese hospitality principles. The Connaughtons offer not refuge but immersion: a stay is an invitation into their wine country life, breakfast and all.
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An 1881 Aesthetic Movement mansion reimagined as a hotel on Healdsburg's quieter west bank, The Madrona resists the region's Tuscan clichés with deliberate eclecticism. Co-owner Jay Jeffers has threaded period details, modern touches, and a lifetime's worth of collected art and curiosities through the interiors, creating something closer to a curated cabinet than a wine-country retreat.
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A spare, light-filled modernist box on Healdsburg's main street, designed by David Baker to belong nowhere but California wine country. The hotel resists the region's tired Tuscan fantasies in favor of clean lines and present-tense restraint.
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A 1920s inn in Guerneville wrapped in its own storybook charm, subtly renewed without losing an inch of historical soul. Four chefs move through the kitchen celebrating the Russian River Valley's produce with the ease of people cooking from genuine abundance.
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Scattered across a working vineyard in Calistoga, this modernist compound channels farmhouse restraint through low-slung buildings, oak groves, and a spa anchored by gardens. Auro, its starred restaurant, arrives as the anchor—a reason to stay that justifies the journey.
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The Bartolomei siblings have fashioned a refined retreat across six Sonoma acres where farmhouse aesthetics meet genuine comfort, wine offered at arrival setting the tone for what follows. Sylvan gardens and twenty-five rooms appointed with the kind of detail that whispers rather than announces anchor a place that feels less like hospitality and more like staying with cultivated friends.
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At Solage, low-slung bungalows scattered across manicured grounds reject wine country's default affectation for something closer to Napa's actual past. The resort's Californian vernacular—modest, grounded, agricultural—feels like an argument against the region's fantasy of itself.
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A château restored from decades of abandonment now houses a boutique hotel where Calistoga's stone walls—original to the building's merchant-era past—frame rooms designed around salvaged architecture. The Francis House trades period grandeur for understated elegance, letting history whisper rather than shout.
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A adults-only renovation of a Seventies shell into something altogether contemporary, Boon sits in Guerneville as proof that the Russian River's weekend escape culture can absorb design ambition. Vintage Malm fireplaces anchor modern-rustic rooms, breakfast arrives at your door, and the spa's saltwater pool anchors a deeper commitment to slowness.
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The Farmhouse Inn sits in Forestville, a quieter corner of wine country removed from the resort circuit, offering reprieve from both city and vineyard crowds. Its French kitchen operates without pretension or affectation, letting the food speak in a register all its own.
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A mid-century fantasy in wine country, all flamingo pink and Modernist art, with a sprawling pool anchoring ten acres of vintage Vegas vibes. The spa and Lazeaway Club serve contemporary comfort in equal measure.
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A restored 1963 motor lodge on Santa Rosa's main drag, the Astro Motel channels mid-century streamline without apology or camp. Its renovation respects the original bones while positioning it as a genuine alternative to the wine-country resort circuit nearby.
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A half-century-old resort in St. Helena that has evolved into one of wine country's most refined destinations, where luxury accommodates without pretension. The wine program runs deep, the grounds feel almost monastic in their restraint, and everything whispers rather than shouts.
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Perched on a Sonoma Coast bluff above the Pacific, Timber Cove Resort sits just beyond cell service and the reach of reliable signal, a geography that enforces what intention alone cannot. The isolation is deliberate, the kind that makes a book more interesting than a screen.
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An Indonesian luxury brand plants itself in St. Helena's wine country with modernist rooms overlooking Beringer vineyards, softened by California Arts and Crafts touches. The accompanying restaurant, Acacia House, occupies a Georgian farmhouse that deliberately clashes with the hotel's contemporary architecture.
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Perched above Rutherford's vineyards, Auberge du Soleil remains a sanctuary where wine-country luxury feels earned rather than performed, its dining room commanding views as serious as the cooking beneath them. The restaurant's restraint—its refusal to chase trends in a region obsessed with them—is what makes it endure.
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Kenwood Inn sits at the measured center of wine country hospitality, neither remote resort nor cloying bed-and-breakfast. Stone buildings and terra-cotta roofs frame a spa courtyard that serves equal parts escape and social anchor for the region's weekend travelers.
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A hacienda constructed from reclaimed 19th-century timber by a salt heiress in the 1980s, Rancho Caymus Inn channels Spanish countryside romance without the sprawl of typical wine-country estates. Its modest twenty-six rooms retain an intimacy that larger rivals abandon for grandeur.
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Bardessono channels the austere minimalism of contemporary resort design rather than Napa's lingering Tuscan pastiche, its spare lines and muted palette a deliberate statement against ornament. The hotel's commitment to sustainability—evident in materials, systems, and ethos—reads less as marketing than as philosophical foundation.
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Vintage House anchors a sprawling 22-acre estate that mixes wine country leisure with culinary ambition, its 80 rooms and pool designed for unhurried relaxation. The property houses Italian restaurants under the Chiarello name, a chocolate shop, a wine tasting room, and bocce courts—less a hotel than a small village built for people who want everything within arm's reach.
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Four nineteenth-century farmhouses clustered around rose gardens in Yountville's restaurant corridor offer French country interiors with bed-and-breakfast warmth. Lavender trades the formality of its storied neighbors for chocolate chip cookies and complimentary wine, a deliberate softening that feels earned.
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The Estate Yountville houses two distinct hotels—the understated, bungalow-style Vintage House and the more animated Hotel Villagio—anchoring a luxury complex in a town already saturated with fine dining. In Yountville's density of culinary ambition, these properties represent the hospitality infrastructure that lets serious eaters stay put and eat their way through the block.
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A Victorian estate turned luxury refuge spreads across twenty low-slung buildings on six acres of Sonoma gardens, its nineteenth-century bones preserved while interiors whisper of contemporary ease. The ranch's equestrian past lingers in the design; what matters is how meticulously each room and path asks nothing of you but rest.
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On Washington Street in wine country's densest constellation of stars, Hotel Yountville presents itself in clean modernist lines rather than borrowed European pastiche. The architecture announces a region confident enough to celebrate its own materials and methods instead of chasing Old World legitimacy.
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At the southern edge of Napa, Carneros Resort and Spa breaks from the European pastiche that defines much of wine country with a spare, modern sensibility rooted in American vernacular. The restraint feels almost transgressive in a region of Tuscan villas and Provençal excess.
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Stanly Ranch spreads across 712 acres of Napa Valley floor with the kind of unhurried luxury that doesn't announce itself—spa, villas, and vineyards arranged as if they'd always belonged there. Bear, the on-site restaurant, keeps faith with the valley's produce and wine list, turning local bounty into something worth the drive alone.
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The Parker Mansion, an 1870 Victorian now operating as Senza Hotel, trades overt luxury for understated comfort and period character in a 48-room setting. Its northerly perch suits those drawn equally to Yountville's restaurants and Napa's quieter side, with on-site dining and a modest spa rounding out the stay.
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Downtown Napa's reinvention as a wine country destination finds its anchor in Archer Hotel, a boutique property positioned at the convergence of riverfront vitality and restored architecture. The hotel embodies a deliberate integration of local culture—wine tastings, dining, public art—that treats the town itself as an extension of the guest experience.
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The renovation of this 24-room lodge in Marin County offers rare proximity to Point Reyes' wild coastline without the sprawl of the Bay Area creeping into view. Nature dominates here, kept intentionally distant from tourism's usual machinery.
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