The Top 18 Hotels Near Olivella
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A sprawling 1920s Spanish Colonial compound set across 220 acres of wooded valley near Los Padres National Forest, the Ojai Valley Inn has long drawn Hollywood figures seeking mountain refuge alongside its championship golf course and spa complex. The resort's six restaurants and multiple leisure facilities make departure tempting only when the town's galleries and the surrounding ridgelines call.
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A 1919 Spanish Revival hotel restored with Mission-style bones and local art, El Roblar spreads its fifty rooms across a main building, garden bungalows, and a new sycamore wing done in warm earth tones. What reads as tasteful restraint—natural wood, Monterey furnishings, stone fireplaces—feels less like hotel design and more like inheriting a well-kept Ojai house.
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In the Topatopa foothills between Los Angeles and Santa Barbara, refurbished Airstreams and a cottage circle a botanical garden where hammocks sway between palms. The arrangement captures Ojai's bohemian temperament—part spiritual refuge, part wanderer's pause—without the pretense.
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A sprawling oceanfront estate in Montecito dressed in Art Deco and coastal charm, with rooms that open directly onto sand and a sixteen-acre grounds scattered with fire pits and bocce courts. The Rosewood indulges the fantasy of private beach ownership without the upkeep, though the price reflects the dream.
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Tucked against the Santa Inez Mountains with Pacific views, San Ysidro Ranch has sheltered the famous and discreet—Churchill, the Kennedys—in private cottages for over a century. The luxury lies not in spectacle but in seclusion, attentive service, and seasonal dining that asks nothing of you but presence.
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Three restored buildings arranged like a village just steps from the beach create a compound that feels simultaneously Moroccan and authentically Santa Barbara. The Spanish Colonial Revival architecture, updated with Moorish details and anchored by two on-site restaurants, has the wandering quality of an escape rather than a hotel.
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The Waterman trades hostel communality for a majority of private rooms, each fitted with a king or queen and a twin Murphy bed that folds into the wall. The result is budget lodging with boutique styling, pitched at travelers who want solitude without the price tag.
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A 1920s Spanish facade opens onto spare, warm interiors where reclaimed wood and clean geometry whisper rather than shout. The central State Street address anchors a social core—Dawn for coffee, Dusk for oysters and ceviche—that keeps the place alive without pretense.
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A vintage-inflected hotel that absorbs Santa Barbara's casual elegance without resort cliché, Palihouse Santa Barbara trades polish for a lived-in warmth that feels both preppy and Pacific. The tweedy interiors and unhurried service suggest a place designed less to impress than to settle into, like a well-worn linen shirt.
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The Canary arrives as Santa Barbara's first serious boutique hotel, a Kimpton property that acknowledges the town's Spanish colonial aesthetics while offering something deliberately distinct. Clean modernism and proximity to mountains, coast, and wine country make it a plausible base for the region rather than merely another period pastiche.
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Perched above Santa Barbara's languid downtown, El Encanto resists the temptation to chase Los Angeles glamour, instead settling into the town's essential quietude. The hotel seems to understand that some places demand restraint—and that understanding, quietly maintained across its rooms and grounds, is precisely what gives it weight.
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Twelve acres of sculpted gardens and cascading water frame this Four Seasons outpost in the Santa Monica foothills, where the spa sprawls across dedicated wellness wings. The setting—equidistant from airport and coastline—works equally well as a corporate conference venue or a couple's escape into mountain air and manicured calm.
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A Spanish village transplanted to seventy-eight beachfront acres, all white stucco and red tile roofs overlooking the Pacific with the ease of a film set depicting paradise. Five restaurants, a sprawling spa, and the Santa Ynez wine country nearby suggest that leaving the grounds is optional.
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A spare, light-filled refuge on the PCH where Modernist restraint meets bohemian ease, Hotel June Malibu arrives without the self-consciousness that typically dogs Malibu hospitality. The rooms and common spaces settle into a kind of unfussy elegance—stylish but lived-in, comfortable without grandeur—that feels less like a statement and more like home.
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Nobu Ryokan Malibu trades the chef's signature celebrity circus for seclusion: sixteen teak-lined rooms on Carbon Beach where Japanese restraint meets California light. The place whispers rather than shouts, a retreat that defines itself against everything else in the Nobu empire.
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A mid-century motel deep in Santa Barbara County's desert, restored to its original George Vernon Russell design of cowboy-Modernist restraint. The restaurant trades that aesthetic for straight ranch vernacular, where the architecture matters less than what lands on the plate.
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The Surfrider sits directly across from its namesake beach, a mid-century relic remade by an unlikely triumvirate of architects, adventurers, and automotive enthusiasts into something Malibu's sparse coastline had long wanted. The Pacific Coast Highway roars past; inside, the hotel settles into the quieter business of being precisely what a boutique property should be.
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A hushed oceanfront hotel where every room frames the Pacific and staff ferry drinks to umbrella-shaded chaises on private beach. Italian linens and custom oak furnishings compose rooms that feel like a wealthy friend's casual indulgence.