The Top 7 Hotels Near Inn at Lost Creek
-
The Inn at Lost Creek sits at the intersection of two lifts in Mountain Village, offering slopeside rooms and direct access to both the ski terrain and Telluride's free gondola to town. Its restaurant and deck put you center stage for the mountain's rhythms—skiers by day, snowcats by night, summer concerts just beyond the railing.
-
The Madeline sits steps from Telluride's ski lifts in a modern Swiss-inflected lodge of wood and mountain light, its suites outfitted with kitchenettes and views across the village below. An outdoor pool and the Timber Room's double-sided fireplace mark a resort that treats alpine leisure as something earned and savored.
-
A boutique refuge in Mountain Village's quiet enclave, Lumière trades the frenzy of town for ski-in access and residential ease. The kitchen works with the restraint of a place that doesn't need to perform, letting ingredients and technique speak across a menu rooted in clarity.
-
A five-bedroom Telluride townhouse that borrows from the region's Tyrolean roots rather than Rocky Mountain cliché, Dunton's urban outpost carries the refined reputation of its mountain siblings. Book the entire house around ski season or summer hiking, knowing the Dunton name still promises something genuinely considered in a town built for festivals and escape.
-
An 1895 Victorian hotel anchors Telluride's compact downtown, its period details and corner position offering the town's texture before you even glimpse the peaks. The rooms carry forward that history without preciousness, a baseline for visitors seeking the resort's quieter character.
-
In a reclaimed Colorado ghost town along the Dolores River, hand-hewn cabins and a teepee shelter guests who soak in thermal springs and dine on organic fare. Dunton trades the predictable luxury resort for the specific pleasure of isolation and history, where comfort arrives quietly.
-
Dunton River Camp extends an already storied outpost into the San Juan backcountry, offering the same frontier aesthetic as its sister property without the interminable wait. The twelve cabins and communal tent preserve the architecture of the original prospectors' settlement, down to weathered wood and minimal electricity.