The Top 20 Hotels Near Maysara Winery
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Ten suites tucked along a quiet downtown street, Tributary is the kind of boutique hotel that makes you feel like a houseguest with very good taste. McMinnville's wine country is right outside, but the whole vibe here is about slowing down: fires, soaking tubs, and a farm-driven kitchen doing proper food. Guests tend to look like they've already had one excellent glass of Pinot and are in no particular hurry to stop.
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McMinnville sits between Portland and the coast, and it's more interesting than you'd expect from a small Oregon town with a frontier past. The Atticus Hotel is a boutique spot that somehow pulls off country charm and urban cool at the same time, with rooms from snug micro studios up to a proper penthouse. Borrow one of their cruiser bikes to poke around town, or just stay for dinner at the restaurant.
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If the Willamette Valley is Oregon's answer to wine country, the Allison Inn is where you actually stay while pretending you understand pinot noir. It's a full luxury resort, sprawling across vineyards and woodland less than an hour from Portland, with a spa and a design that feels Pacific Northwest even when it's quietly nodding at Europe. The crowd shows up dressed down but spending up, which is basically the whole vibe out here.
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Portland has a reputation for keeping things weird and low-key, so a Ritz-Carlton feels like a plot twist, but it actually works. The city's first luxury high-rise hotel sits downtown in a glass tower with serious Cascades views, a spa on the 19th floor, and a restaurant doing honest justice to Pacific Northwest producers. The forest-meets-alpine interior design sounds like a lot, but somehow it isn't. Forbes recommended, Michelin one key.
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A genuinely glamorous hotel in a city that considers a flannel shirt dressing up. The Nines occupies the top floors of a gorgeous glazed terra cotta building downtown, and the rooms are elegant without being stiff. Local art covers the walls, the Pacific Northwest shows up in the materials, and the whole thing pulls off "luxurious" without feeling like it was airlifted in from somewhere else. A solid base for anyone who wants to sleep well in Portland.
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A landmark boutique hotel in the heart of downtown Portland, the Heathman has been around forever and still pulls its weight, drawing business travelers, touring musicians, and the occasional celebrity who'd rather stay somewhere with character than a generic tower. Rooms are comfortable and quietly stylish, the location puts you steps from the arts district, and the in-house restaurant does solid Pacific Northwest seafood worth trying before you head out.
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Proof that Portland can do polished without losing its soul, Woodlark is a boutique hotel that earns its Michelin key by nailing urban elegance in a city more famous for keeping it weird. Two historic buildings merged into one, it sits perfectly between downtown and Burnside, meaning Powell's and some of the city's best restaurants are basically at your door. The crowd skews creative professionals who still iron their shirts.
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The Hoxton is a hotel that knows Portland and its original London home are basically kindred spirits, so it fits right in. They've taken a century-old building just outside the Chinatown Gateway and given it a post-industrial makeover with a Pacific Northwest twist, drawing from the region's modernist design movement rather than just photocopying Shoreditch. It's stylish without being fussy, which is exactly what this city demands.
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Hotel deLuxe is a boutique hotel that commits hard to old Hollywood glamour in a city where the default aesthetic is reclaimed wood and a strong opinion about oat milk. The lobby alone, with its art deco mirrors, Czech glass chandeliers, and gold-leaf ceilings, feels like stepping into a film noir. The crowd tends toward visitors who actually packed a nice outfit, which in Portland makes you practically exotic.
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Hotel Lucia is a boutique hotel in downtown Portland that gets the balance right: enough personality to feel like somewhere, not just somewhere to sleep, without the kind of try-hard design that makes you feel like a prop. The staff actually seem to like their jobs, which sounds like a low bar until you've stayed somewhere they don't. A solid home base for anyone who wants comfort with a little character.
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A converted sailors' hostel in Chinatown that somehow pulls off affordable without looking cheap. Rooms range from bunk-style hostel beds to private en-suite, so you pick your budget and your privacy. The all-day café and bar handles breakfast through drinks without making a big deal of it, and the rooftop deck is a genuine find in Portland. Close to the river and just north of downtown, it's a solid base for people who'd rather spend money on the city.
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SCP stands for Soul, Community, Planet, which tells you pretty much everything about this small, eco-minded boutique hotel on the Oregon Coast. It skews younger and more adventure-oriented than the usual beachside lodge, with just a handful of private rooms plus some hostel-style bunks, so it stays genuinely intimate. A co-working space keeps the remote-work crowd happy, and a café and bar are coming. Bring your fleece and your laptop.