Fendi Private Suites
Daily price line
Upcoming nightly rates
Review
Character and identity
Set on the third floor of a 17th-century palazzo on Via dei Condotti, with the Fendi flagship below and Trinità dei Monti in view, this is a seven-suite residence rather than a hotel in any conventional sense. Marble-floored corridors, Karl Lagerfeld photography, bespoke furnishings and bouquets in every room translate the maison's couture sensibility into living space. Zuma, the rooftop Japanese restaurant, handles dining across a main kitchen, sushi counter and robata grill, and doubles as the breakfast terrace. Service is doorman-led, near-silent, and pitched at residents rather than guests.
Who's it for
Best for:
Fashion-literate couples and design-minded solo travellers who want Centro Storico on their doorstep but absolute quiet behind the door. It also suits discreet business travellers who value a productive, hushed base, and anyone who treats Via dei Condotti shopping and a personal shopper at the Fendi boutique as part of the itinerary.
Should look elsewhere:
Families and anyone wanting full hotel infrastructure: there's no spa, no pool, no lobby scene, and just seven keys. The cobblestones outside are rough on wheels and luggage, and travellers who prefer Italian cooking on site will find only Zuma's modern Japanese menu.
Bottom line
What you're buying here is residence-style privacy inside a working fashion house, two minutes from the Spanish Steps, not a full-service grand hotel. Book it if the Fendi aesthetic and a doorman-quiet palazzo matter more to you than spa and pool facilities. Suite five rewards the splurge; the accessible junior suite six is the practical pick. Aim for shoulder season to keep Condotti walkable.