The Top 8 Hotels Near The Milton Inn
-
A restored nineteenth-century brick mansion in Mount Vernon, the Ivy Hotel wraps travelers in heated limestone and four-poster languor. Its courtyard opens onto Magdalena, where chef Ülfet Ralph's cooking anchors the place in something more than hospitality—a argument for staying put.
-
A century-old pier building overlooking Baltimore's harbor holds this boutique hotel, where poolside lounging and waterfront views arrive as unexpected luxuries in Fell's Point. The neighborhood's density of restaurants and bars makes the Pendry less retreat than anchor, a place to return to after the city's own entertainment.
-
A gleaming waterfront tower near Inner Harbor, the Four Seasons anchors itself with museum-quality art, floor-to-ceiling views, and a tenth-floor spa that opens onto the city's only waterfront infinity pool. The place functions less as a hotel than as a destination—a controlled, polished retreat where the harbor becomes your private geography.
-
A 1912 Latrobe Building in Mount Vernon now houses Ulysses, a high-design boutique hotel that channels early-twentieth-century glamour filtered through the sensibility of Baltimore native John Waters. The result is a place where architectural restraint meets subtle literary mischief, all dark wood and considered eccentricity.
-
In Mount Vernon's cultural heart, Hotel Revival channels the neighborhood's artistic DNA through every corridor and room, a Joie de Vivre property that treats design and curation as seriously as hospitality itself. The Walters Art Museum's proximity feels less like accident than inevitability—a place built to belong among galleries and institutions.
-
A restored 1906 Beaux Arts landmark that once housed B&O Railroad headquarters, this Kimpton property preserves its gilded past through Tiffany fixtures and marble staircases. The hotel trades in the fantasy of a vanished era, though whether that nostalgia justifies the price is another question entirely.
-
A waterfront hotel positioned where Baltimore's Inner Harbor meets the city's skyline, with dark-wood rooms and upper suites that frame the view through generous windows. The rooftop deck and indoor pool create a self-sufficient retreat that charges less than comparable properties while keeping Camden Yards and the Aquarium within easy walking distance.
-
The Graduate Annapolis occupies a former chain hotel transformed into a spirited refuge tailored to the Naval Academy town's particular history and character. What emerges is a place of genuine distinction—colorful, thoughtfully appointed, and refreshingly alert to its setting in ways the building's previous life was not.