Four Seasons Hotel Denver
Daily price line
Upcoming nightly rates
Review
Character and identity
A 45-storey downtown tower in the theatre district, with the first 14 floors given to the hotel and the rest to private residences, this is Four Seasons in a Rocky Mountain register. The 239 rooms read modern-residential: earth tones, soft yellows, browns, and marble bathrooms accented with shabui stone, framed by views west to the Rockies or down to the Daniels & Fisher Tower on the 16th Street Mall. Edge Restaurant & Bar handles the fine dining with Colorado beef and 50-plus wines by the glass. The third floor holds the spa, gym, and outdoor pool terrace. Service is polished and concierge-driven.
Who's it for
Best for:
Design-minded couples and well-heeled regulars who want a city-centre base with mountain views, a serious wine list, and a spa worth booking into (the evergreen-oil massage is the signature). Families are surprisingly well served, with a toy wagon at check-in, in-room tents, PlayStation on request, and babysitting.
Should look elsewhere:
Travellers who want a resort feel, a true rooftop scene, or sprawling grounds. The location is urban and the building is shared with residences, so guest floors are compact. Room service is comprehensive but priced accordingly, and the dry climate catches some guests out.
Bottom line
What sets this property apart is the combination of a genuinely strong concierge, a confident restaurant in Edge, and rooms that feel like small apartments rather than hotel boxes. Book a Deluxe Mountain View on floors 10 to 16 for the sunset, ask for a humidifier on arrival, and lean on the complimentary car service for anything within a two to three mile radius.