The Top 33 Hotels Near Mentone
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A mid-century modern hotel steps from the boardwalk, where faded Sixties bones meet bold geometry and a knowing retro palette. The Dream Inn distills Santa Cruz's casual sophistication into one approachable stay.
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Forty-five Craftsman bungalows scattered across 1,700 acres of Santa Cruz Mountain foothills offer fireplaces and soaking tubs with views toward either valley or fairway. Il Vigneto's contemporary Californian kitchen trades in regional produce; the One Iron Bar, anchored by dual hearths and a martini program, extends most visits well past checkout.
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A low-slung resort on Monterey Bay's quieter flank, where dune-sheltered rooms and gas fireplaces ward off the coastal fog. Salt Wood Kitchen & Oysterette anchors the property with locally sourced seafood and New American cooking that justifies the stay.
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A sprawling coastal resort anchored by championship golf and the Pacific's unobstructed view, The Inn at Spanish Bay layers dining venues across its manicured grounds like a landscape painting. Roy's offers refined French technique at lunch, Pèppoli reserves its tables for evening ceremonies, and Traps exists chiefly to deliver aged spirits as the sun drops into the ocean.
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A contemporary hotel in San Jose's Santana Row development that signals the city's slow emergence from decades of overlooked status. The interiors are clean and confident, a departure from the chains and aging motor inns that long defined the local landscape.
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The Monterey Plaza Hotel & Spa sits literally over Cannery Row's crashing surf, a century-old institution that has refined its particular brand of attentive service into something almost invisible. What lingers is the relentless California lightness of the place—salt air, bay views, the sense that you've arrived somewhere that has long known how to receive guests.
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A Victorian cottage hotel in a fog-draped coastal town, all pitched gables and period charm upgraded with modern ease; the guest rooms marry pale linens and weathered wood in the manner of a very comfortable memory of the sea.
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The Domain Hotel positions itself as functional transit hub for the Valley's office parks, offering weekday shuttles to Google, Apple, and surrounding campuses within a ten-mile radius. It is a place that knows exactly whom it serves and makes no pretense otherwise.
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A 1927 Spanish Colonial villa on the Pebble Beach grounds where guests inhabit rather than merely occupy a room, down to the valets mixing evening cocktails by name. The intimacy survives modernization through small rituals—a manager's advance call, fountains in the courtyard, the sense that you've inherited someone's Mediterranean life.
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The lobby frames the 18th hole and Stillwater Cove in a single vista, and the grounds offer heated pools, horseback riding, and views sweeping from Carmel to Big Sur. Rooms with expansive windows and terraces amplify what the property's oceanside perch already accomplishes: making the landscape feel less like scenery and more like an extension of the stay.
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A white stucco courtyard hotel from 1929, designed by the architect who built Jack London's home, has shed its bohemian past for polished luxury. L'Auberge Carmel trades artist haven for high-thread-count linens and concierge service, a transformation that feels less like resurrection than gentrification.
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The Stilwell Hotel strips Carmel's bohemian affectation down to clean lines and muted palettes, a modern sibling to the vintage-inflected Tradewinds Inn down the block. Neutral tones and unfussy furnishings suggest a certain ease—the studied casualness of California chic without the performance.
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The coastal quiet of Carmel seeps into this thirty-four-room inn, where the Palihotels signature warmth translates into something closer to a well-kept home than a hotel. Intimate and bed-and-breakfast in spirit, it settles you into the town's unhurried rhythm without fuss or pretense.
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A twenty-four-room inn on Carmel's 8th Avenue that reads more like a seaside bed-and-breakfast than a designed hotel, with the unpretentious warmth the Palisociety group favors. The vintage-inflected rooms and residential comfort suggest you've borrowed a friend's coastal cottage rather than checked into something self-consciously stylish.
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Villa Mara Carmel trades the clutter of Carmel's tourist corridors for a sequestered grounds where handsome wood and stone furnish sixteen rooms in the manner of a wealthy friend's private retreat. The cocktail bar and garden firepits suggest a place built for lingering—for people who came to the coast to disappear, not perform.
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A century-old Mediterranean villa steps from Carmel's shoreline, La Playa balances modernist comforts with the architectural language of its bohemian origins. Bud's Bar and the town's first swimming pool anchor a property that remains, improbably, both nostalgic and contemporary.
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Hidden among Sunnyvale's office parks, Treehouse Hotel opens into a greenhouse lobby and pool ringed with stump tables and record players, a deliberate counterpoint to corporate sterility. The property pitches itself at families and road warriors alike with kid-sized robes and a beer garden, trading polish for a particular kind of playful sincerity.
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The Ameswell Hotel sits within Mountain View's tech corridor, where Google's campus and nearby innovation centers have shaped a clientele drawn to polished design and purposeful comfort. Its meeting spaces and grounds accommodate anything from corporate gatherings to ceremonies, with the efficiency of a venue that understands its audience's appetite for both function and occasion.
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While San Francisco money flows north to wine country, this renovated resort on the Central Coast offers an alternative for those seeking privacy and space. The grounds sprawl across a working ranch with golf and tennis, their maintenance a quiet argument for slowness over the typical coastal rush.
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Tucked into oak and pine forest, Bernardus Lodge sits deep in Carmel Valley—remote enough to feel genuinely secluded, yet minutes from Carmel-by-the-Sea and a scenic drive from Big Sur. The place trades on its isolation and proximity in equal measure, offering the resort experience of withdrawal without actual distance.
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Perched on sixteen manicured acres in Sand Hill Road's epicenter, this resort hotel wraps tech executives in marble bathrooms and mountain views that feel miles from the venture capital offices below. The Sense spa and sprawling pool deck signal that even in Silicon Valley, there exists a place built less for deals than for the forgetting of them.
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A twenty-three-room boutique hotel in Palo Alto where a personal chef and concierge attend to every detail, from room service to valet, with nothing left to arrange yourself. The shared living spaces and twenty-four-hour pantry—stocked with local Tin Pot Creamery ice cream—extend the fiction that you're simply staying home.
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The lobby of this modernist hotel complex in East Palo Alto settles you into velvet seating and digital art before business or rest. Esc serves coffee and wine casually; Quattro offers California-Italian cooking—pizzas, pastas, salads—with the efficiency of a place built for people in transit.
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A Japanese-inspired hotel in downtown Palo Alto, Nobu opts for the restraint of an urban ryokan rather than the spectacle of its San Francisco counterparts. The tranquil courtyard garden and considered interiors suggest a deliberate step back from the noise, even if you're steps from the shopping district.
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The El Prado's modest exterior gives way to a contemporary luxury interior that recalls refined European boutique hotels, with guest rooms of particular distinction. It stands as Palo Alto's rare departure from the region's disposable hospitality vernacular.
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A 1929 brick building near Stanford wears its collegiate swagger in maximalist guest rooms and a rooftop bar overlooking downtown Palo Alto. Lou and Herbert's, the ground-floor café, serves coffee and cocktails beneath Spanish colonial arches, anchoring the hotel's unapologetic embrace of ornament.
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A red-brick hotel where rocking chairs outnumber standing desks and old fashioneds arrive in crystal, stubbornly untempted by the startup culture sprawling around it. The Stanford Park holds to an older idea of refuge—one that privileges quiet and a drink properly made over the frantic innovation nearby.
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A modernist boutique hotel in Menlo Park that trades the Valley's startup clatter for courtyards and gardens, positioned handily between Stanford and the business parks. Its outdoor lounges catch the California light in the manner of someone who remembers this peninsula was beautiful before the venture capitalists arrived.
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A converted 1950s motor lodge on a quiet Menlo Park street that has shed its neon past for redwood siding and private patios, some shaded by an old California oak. Minimal rooms, a communal breakfast, a fire pit for wine—the restraint itself is the appeal.
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citizenM sits at the edge of Meta's campus in a clean-lined room where the bed adjusts by iPad and windows dominate the walls. The 24/7 canteen and co-working living room—wired for people who treat hotels as offices—suggest a place engineered for how Silicon Valley actually lives.
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Hotel Nia stakes its claim in Menlo Park's business corridor with rooms built for work—smart controls, proper desks, rain showers that actually restore—and a dining room where Porta Blu's Mediterranean cooking feels like an afterthought to the real mission: a bed that doesn't disappoint and coffee from Verve that tastes like someone thought about it.
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Half Moon Bay's Ritz-Carlton sits where the Santa Cruz Mountains meet the Pacific, a formal outpost in a town that has resisted development and kept its quiet character. The spectacular coastline thirty minutes south of San Francisco remains the real draw here—a landscape that makes the hotel feel almost incidental to the view.
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A converted warehouse on the east bay flatlands offering loft-style rooms and the kind of efficient anonymity that suits traveling engineers more than wanderers. Ten minutes from Palo Alto, equidistant to three airports, and designed for people who measure distance in drive time rather than neighborhood texture.