The Top 17 Hotels Near Four Seasons Palm Beach
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A Forbes five-star, Michelin two-key resort that earns its reputation without trying too hard. The rooms are breezy and quietly glamorous, the beach is genuinely beautiful, and the spa gives you a solid excuse to do absolutely nothing. Florie's, the flagship restaurant, brings serious culinary pedigree to South Florida produce. The crowd is old-money Palm Beach mixed with people who just discovered old money. Worth every penny if you can swing it.
- Forbes Travel Guide Forbes Five Star
- Michelin Guide 2 Keys
- 50 Best 2025 · Most Admired Hotel Group Award
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Palm House is a boutique luxury hotel that managed to make Palm Beach feel even more Palm Beach. The Mediterranean facade and coral tones were always here, but the redesigned rooms are bright and sixties-inspired, and the suites are genuinely palatial. The pink Murano glass chandeliers in the Palm Bar are worth stopping in even if you're not staying. Worth Avenue shoppers and their driver waiting outside are the natural clientele, but it wears the pretension lightly.
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A boutique hotel that's been around forever in Palm Beach's historic center, with just 32 rooms done up in a style that somehow makes Mediterranean Revival feel fresh. The pool courtyard is genuinely lovely, walkabout access to town is a bonus, and a shuttle gets you to the beach. The crowd is quiet money with good sunglasses. The on-site restaurant, Lola 41, earned its reputation up in Nantucket and carries it well down here.
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A boutique hotel on the West Palm waterfront that manages to feel genuinely rooted in place rather than just Floridian-generic. Rooms lean into lush tropical textures and good linens without the kitsch. You've got a rooftop spot for Mediterranean bites and cocktails with city views, plus a ground-floor diner reworking American classics with local ingredients. The crowd skews well-dressed weekenders who've graduated from Miami but not quite to the Keys.
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Adults-only suites overlooking Lake Boca, inside one of South Florida's grand old resort legends. The Boca Raton has been around forever and just got a serious renovation, so you get the ornate Spanish Colonial bones with actually updated rooms. Private beach, marina, golf, pickleball, tennis, and a pool club big enough to get genuinely lost in. The crowd leans honeymoon couples and people who retired early and aren't sorry about it.
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The Boca Raton has been around forever, but the Tower is where the resort turns up the volume. It's the tallest building on this sprawling 200-acre waterfront property, and after a serious renovation it reads as genuinely chic rather than just big and pink. Guests here get private beach access, multiple pool clubs, a spa, golf, and enough restaurants to eat somewhere different every night. The crowd is equal parts families and couples who found a babysitter.
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A Forbes Five Star resort sitting on a half-mile of private Gold Coast beach, this is the kind of place where your biggest decision is pool or ocean. Cabana-style rooms, three pools, a spa, golf, pickleball, tennis, and a marina mean you could theoretically never leave the property. The crowd skews toward people who have earned the right to do absolutely nothing, and they are very good at it.
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Delray Beach has been "up and coming" for so long it became a running joke, but this sleek boutique hotel might finally close the bit. Part of Hilton's Curio Collection, The Ray does tropical modernism without the Art Deco cosplay you get further south. Rooms are crisp and airy, the fitness program is genuinely serious, and there's a rooftop lounge plus a modern Japanese restaurant from Michelin-starred chef Akira Back.
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Six championship golf courses at one resort sounds like a flex, and honestly it is. PGA National in Palm Beach Gardens is a full-scale luxury resort built around the sport, but the spa, restaurants, bars, and racquet club mean non-golfers won't feel like they wandered into the wrong place. Expect a crowd in polo shirts who mean business on the fairway but are perfectly happy ordering a drink by the pool after.
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A sleek beachfront Four Seasons that leans hard into the whole yachting-capital thing, which means the crowd looks like they either own a boat or really want you to think they do. The curved white tower sits right on the Atlantic, the rooms have ocean or Intracoastal views, and there are two pools for when the beach feels like too much effort. The spa, the fresh seafood restaurant, and the beach concierge handle pretty much everything else.
- Forbes Travel Guide Forbes Recommended
- Michelin Guide Selected Hotels
- 50 Best 2025 · Most Admired Hotel Group Award
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A Forbes Four Star oceanfront hotel that trades on views, comfort, and the very reasonable life goal of never leaving your balcony. Rooms come dressed in neutral tones and proper linens, the spa runs to a serious size, and the onsite restaurant does seafood right with the ocean staring back at you. The kind of crowd that packed light but still looks put-together, sipping something cold by the water.
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A sleek all-suite resort right on Fort Lauderdale's oceanfront, where the kind of people who book club-level cruises come to decompress before or after their ship departs. Every room is a suite, which feels genuinely luxurious rather than a marketing trick. You're steps from the beach, and Las Olas is close enough that dinner out is never a production. Bring someone you want to impress.
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A beachside boutique hotel that's been around forever, the Shorebreak is the kind of place that draws a mix of couples doing the romantic-getaway thing and groups who just want somewhere that feels cooler than a generic chain. Fort Lauderdale beach is right there, the pool is the centerpiece, and the Kimpton polish means the whole thing runs smoothly without feeling corporate. Good base camp for the whole stretch of coastline.
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