10 Mejores Hoteles de Lujo 5 Estrellas en Miami, EE.UU. — South Beach, Brickell y Bal Harbour (2026)
Mejores Hoteles

10 Mejores Hoteles de Lujo 5 Estrellas en Miami, EE.UU. — South Beach, Brickell y Bal Harbour (2026)

T Equipo editorial de TopOfHotel Publicado 15 de enero de 2024 Actualizado 21 de junio de 2026 15 min
✓ Reseñas honestas desde 2017✓ Comparamos en 3 webs de reservas✓ Sin posiciones pagadas
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Lo que nadie te cuenta sobre Miami: la ciudad está construida sobre un pantano. La isla barrera que hoy llamamos Miami Beach era un matorral de manglares hasta que Carl Fisher la rellenó de arena en los años diez del siglo pasado y convenció a ricos norteños para que construyeran sus mansiones de invierno. Un siglo después, esa misma franja de arena recuperada concentra la mayor densidad de arquitectura Art Déco del planeta y sirve como capital espiritual del lujo latinoamericano en Estados Unidos. El océano está a temperatura de baño en diciembre, el segundo idioma oficial bien podría ser el español y un cóctel de $25 en la barra de una piscina se considera razonable.

Los principales atractivos son accesibles a pie si te alojas en la zona adecuada. Ocean Drive y el Distrito Histórico Art Déco ofrecen hoteles pastel de todas las películas de Miami desde Scarface. Wynwood Walls, a 15 minutos en coche, es el renombrado barrio del arte urbano. El Museo y Jardines Vizcaya es una villa italianizante de 1916 en la Bahía de Biscayne que parece sacada de la Costa Amalfitana. La Pequeña Habana en Calle Ocho es donde los hombres mayores juegan al dominó y lían puros a mano.

Elegir el barrio importa más aquí que en la mayoría de las ciudades. South Beach (SoBe) es ruidosa, transitable y llena de neón — la vida nocturna y Ocean Drive son el principal reclamo. Mid-Beach (Faena, EDITION) es más tranquila, de diseño vanguardista y aún frente al mar. Bal Harbour y Surfside son silenciosas a lo millonario, con tiendas de diseño y largas playas. Brickell es el distrito financiero — vistas del skyline, bares en las azoteas y trajes de ejecutivo. Para una primera visita, quédate frente a la playa; Brickell solo tiene sentido si estás aquí por negocios.

La escena gastronómica en 2026 es emocionante y cara. La cocina cubana es el plato del alma — un cubano y un cortadito en Versailles o Sanguich ronda los $15–20 y es de visita obligada. Las cenas en los locales de moda (Joe's Stone Crab, Carbone, Mila, Komodo) ascienden a $150–300 por persona con una copa. Los cócteles de la piscina en cualquier hotel de aquí cuestan $22–30. La propina es obligatoria: 18–22% en restaurantes y muchos locales añaden ahora un cargo por servicio automático — lee la factura antes de añadir propina encima.

Lo práctico: la mayoría de los pasaportes del Reino Unido, la UE, Australia y Japón entran sin visa gracias al ESTA ($21 en línea, válido dos años). Otras nacionalidades necesitan una visa B1/B2 con citas con meses de antelación. El aeropuerto MIA está a 20–30 minutos de la playa; un Uber cuesta $35–55. En la playa no hay metro — te moverás caminando o en coche. Las zonas turísticas son seguras de día; Ocean Drive después de las 2 de la mañana se vuelve ruidosa. La temporada de huracanes es de junio a noviembre; el mejor momento es de finales de octubre a principios de diciembre y en mayo. Un aviso: los grandes eventos en el Hard Rock Stadium — partidos de los Dolphins, el Miami Open, el Gran Premio de Fórmula 1 de Miami y los grandes conciertos — elevan las tarifas en toda la región, así que reserva con tiempo.

Elegimos estos diez leyendo cientos de reseñas recientes de huéspedes y verificando qué está abierto realmente en 2026 — desde el cinematográfico Faena Hotel en Mid-Beach (Baz Luhrmann diseñó cada centímetro) hasta el familiar St. Regis Bal Harbour con tres piscinas y tiendas de diseño a la puerta. A continuación: qué hace mejor cada uno, para quién es ideal y lo que debes saber antes de reservar.

Dónde alojarse — barrios

Lo que nadie te cuenta sobre Miami: la ciudad está construida sobre un pantano. La isla barrera que hoy llamamos Miami Beach era un matorral de manglares hasta que Carl Fisher la rellenó de arena en los años diez del siglo pasado y convenció a ricos norteños para que construyeran sus mansiones de invierno. Un siglo después, esa misma franja de arena recuperada concentra la mayor densidad de arquitectura Art Déco del planeta y sirve como capital espiritual del lujo latinoamericano en Estados Unidos. El océano está a temperatura de baño en diciembre, el segundo idioma oficial bien podría ser el español y un cóctel de $25 en la barra de una piscina se considera razonable.

Los principales atractivos son accesibles a pie si te alojas en la zona adecuada. Ocean Drive y el Distrito Histórico Art Déco ofrecen hoteles pastel de todas las películas de Miami desde Scarface. Wynwood Walls, a 15 minutos en coche, es el renombrado barrio del arte urbano. El Museo y Jardines Vizcaya es una villa italianizante de 1916 en la Bahía de Biscayne que parece sacada de la Costa Amalfitana. La Pequeña Habana en Calle Ocho es donde los hombres mayores juegan al dominó y lían puros a mano.

Elegir el barrio importa más aquí que en la mayoría de las ciudades. South Beach (SoBe) es ruidosa, transitable y llena de neón — la vida nocturna y Ocean Drive son el principal reclamo. Mid-Beach (Faena, EDITION) es más tranquila, de diseño vanguardista y aún frente al mar. Bal Harbour y Surfside son silenciosas a lo millonario, con tiendas de diseño y largas playas. Brickell es el distrito financiero — vistas del skyline, bares en las azoteas y trajes de ejecutivo. Para una primera visita, quédate frente a la playa; Brickell solo tiene sentido si estás aquí por negocios.

La escena gastronómica en 2026 es emocionante y cara. La cocina cubana es el plato del alma — un cubano y un cortadito en Versailles o Sanguich ronda los $15–20 y es de visita obligada. Las cenas en los locales de moda (Joe's Stone Crab, Carbone, Mila, Komodo) ascienden a $150–300 por persona con una copa. Los cócteles de la piscina en cualquier hotel de aquí cuestan $22–30. La propina es obligatoria: 18–22% en restaurantes y muchos locales añaden ahora un cargo por servicio automático — lee la factura antes de añadir propina encima.

Lo práctico: la mayoría de los pasaportes del Reino Unido, la UE, Australia y Japón entran sin visa gracias al ESTA ($21 en línea, válido dos años). Otras nacionalidades necesitan una visa B1/B2 con citas con meses de antelación. El aeropuerto MIA está a 20–30 minutos de la playa; un Uber cuesta $35–55. En la playa no hay metro — te moverás caminando o en coche. Las zonas turísticas son seguras de día; Ocean Drive después de las 2 de la mañana se vuelve ruidosa. La temporada de huracanes es de junio a noviembre; el mejor momento es de finales de octubre a principios de diciembre y en mayo. Un aviso: los grandes eventos en el Hard Rock Stadium — partidos de los Dolphins, el Miami Open, el Gran Premio de Fórmula 1 de Miami y los grandes conciertos — elevan las tarifas en toda la región, así que reserva con tiempo.

Elegimos estos diez leyendo cientos de reseñas recientes de huéspedes y verificando qué está abierto realmente en 2026 — desde el cinematográfico Faena Hotel en Mid-Beach (Baz Luhrmann diseñó cada centímetro) hasta el familiar St. Regis Bal Harbour con tres piscinas y tiendas de diseño a la puerta. A continuación: qué hace mejor cada uno, para quién es ideal y lo que debes saber antes de reservar.

Ubicaciones de los 10 hoteles
Cómo seleccionamos

Elegimos primero por ubicación y barrio, luego por puntuaciones reales de huéspedes en Agoda · Booking.com · Trip.com, características únicas y relación calidad-precio.

Reseñas · 10 mejores hoteles

Toca un estilo de viaje — la lista se reordena para mostrar la mejor opción primero.

Faena Hotel Miami Beach — hotel No. 1 #1 Legendary design · Mid-Beach beachfront 9

📍 Heart of Mid-Beach on a private stretch of sand, right on the Miami Beach Boardwalk — South Beach and Lincoln Road are about a 10-minute drive away.

🎬 Designed by Baz Luhrmann 🦣 Gold-plated mammoth skeleton in the lobby 🏖️ Private beach with red cabanas
Designed by Baz LuhrmannDamien Hirst gold mammothPrivate beach and cabanasFaena Theater

Faena Hotel Miami Beach is a beachfront resort unlike anything else in Miami, because Argentine businessman Alan Faena teamed up with Hollywood director Baz Luhrmann (the man behind Moulin Rouge and The Great Gatsby) and designer Catherine Martin to wake the old 1947 Saxony building into something like a living film set. You walk into the Cathedral lobby — gilded columns, painted murals — and dead center sits a gold-plated mammoth skeleton in a glass case by artist Damien Hirst, the kind of curated piece everyone stops to photograph. The palette runs bold red, gold and pink across every square inch. Outside there is a private beach with red-striped cabanas, a pool set in a palm garden, the South American-style Tierra Santa Spa, and the Faena Theater staging cabaret after dark. It has been voted the #1 hotel in Miami by Conde Nast Traveler Readers' Choice across several years. Best for couples and design lovers who fall for bold, story-rich rooms. Overall 9.0/10.

  • Bold, story-rich design by Baz Luhrmann — photogenic from every angle
  • Private beach, red cabanas and a pool in a palm garden
  • Warm, attentive service plus a theater and spa under one roof
  • Very high room rates plus heavy add-on charges (resort fee, valet)
  • Mid-Beach location means a 10-minute ride into South Beach
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Four Seasons Hotel at The Surf Club — hotel No. 2 #2 Ultra-luxury · Legendary 1930 beach club 9.2

📍 Beachfront in Surfside next to Bal Harbour — a few minutes' walk from the upscale Bal Harbour Shops, and about a 15 to 20 minute drive to South Beach.

🏛️ 1930 beach club, restored in 2017 🏖️ 900-foot private beach plus Cabana Row 🍝 Le Sirenuse Miami, the Positano outpost
Legendary 1930 beach club900-foot private beachMichelin-level Le SirenuseForbes Five-Star Four Seasons service

Picture a Mediterranean-style beach club that opened back in 1930 — once a playground for Hollywood stars like Elizabeth Taylor and Frank Sinatra — then meticulously restored by Pritzker Prize architect Richard Meier into an ultra-luxury resort in 2017. That's the Four Seasons Hotel at The Surf Club, set in Surfside right next to Bal Harbour. What makes it special is how it keeps the original arches, tiled courtyards and old-world charm intact, then flanks them with Meier's modern glass towers. The 900-foot private beach is far quieter than South Beach, backed by a Cabana Row lining two pools, plus Le Sirenuse Miami — a transplant of the legendary hotel in Positano, Italy. Reviews praise the attentive Four Seasons service, and couples rate it 9.6 on Booking.com. The trade-off is top-tier pricing and a location away from the South Beach buzz. It scores 9.2/10, ideal for couples and luxury travelers who want privacy and historic seaside charm.

  • Legendary 1930 beach club, beautifully restored
  • Quiet 900-foot private beach plus Cabana Row
  • Renowned Le Sirenuse plus praised Four Seasons service
  • Top-tier rates — high extras and tips by Miami standards
  • Away from the South Beach buzz, so you drive into town
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The Setai, Miami Beach — hotel No. 3 #3 design luxury · Forbes Five-Star on South Beach 9

📍 On South Beach along Collins Avenue, in the heart of the Art Deco District — an easy walk to Ocean Drive (about 5 minutes) and to the shops and restaurants of Lincoln Road.

🏆 Forbes Five-Star + AAA Five Diamond 🏊 Three pools lined up at three temperatures 🏖️ Private beach on South Beach
Forbes Five-Star + AAA Five DiamondArt Deco meets Asian designthree-temperature pools by the seaprivate South Beach

The Setai, Miami Beach brings together two worlds that rarely meet. One side is the cream Art Deco building from the 1930s on Collins Avenue, restored down to the original detail; the other is a dark, composed Asian aesthetic of black brick, teak wood and warm low lighting that feels closer to a zen resort than a city hotel. The thing everyone talks about is the trio of pools set in a palm courtyard — three pools at three temperatures, so you pick your soak by mood, from bracing-cool to warm. The courtyard runs down to a private beach on South Beach, where staff set up loungers and umbrellas. Inside, Jaya serves Asian dishes and the beachside Ocean Grill handles easygoing meals. Reviews agree on the attentive service, the luxury that doesn't shout, and the easy walk into the Art Deco blocks. It holds an AAA Five Diamond and ranks among Greater Miami Beach's top resorts per Travel + Leisure. Score 9.0/10 — best for couples and luxury travelers chasing calm over a party.

  • Art Deco shell wrapped in dark Asian decor — quiet, grown-up luxury on the beach
  • Three pools at three temperatures plus a private South Beach
  • Forbes Five-Star service that reviews single out
  • Rates and add-ons sit at the top end of Miami Beach
  • Some original Art Deco rooms run compact
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1 Hotel South Beach — hotel No. 4 #4 eco-conscious beachfront resort · 18th-floor rooftop pool 8.7

1 Hotel South Beach

From ~$371

📍 North end of South Beach, right on the Atlantic, on a beachfront plot over 600 feet long — about a 5-minute walk to the Lincoln Road pedestrian street, close to the Collins Avenue shopping and dining strip, and a 15-20 minute drive to Wynwood and downtown Miami.

🌿 Eco design — reclaimed wood and real trees 🏊 4 pools including an 18th-floor rooftop pool 🏖️ 600-foot Atlantic private beach
eco design reclaimed wood18th-floor rooftop ocean poolAtlantic private beachwalk to Lincoln Road

Picture a beachfront luxury resort that, instead of showing off with gold and crystal, shows off greenery, reclaimed-wood walls and natural light — that is 1 Hotel South Beach, a 5-star eco-minded resort on more than 600 feet of Atlantic oceanfront at the north end of South Beach. The 1 Hotels brand has a clear philosophy about staying close to nature, so the whole building is dressed in salvaged wood, raw limestone, organic linen and thousands of real plants running from the lobby to the walkways. Walk in and it feels like an open forest in the city with the sound of waves behind it. The 426-plus rooms lean airy and earth-toned, many with ocean-view balconies and carved-stone tubs. The detail everyone talks about is the 4 pools — especially the 18th-floor rooftop pool with a wide Atlantic panorama, a favorite spot at sunset. Below, a generous private beach with loungers and service, plus a Bamford spa, a serious gym, and several restaurants built around organic local produce. Guest scores back it up: Agoda 8.8, Booking 8.7, Trip.com 4.5.

  • Distinctive eco design — reclaimed wood and real trees, like a forest in the city
  • 18th-floor rooftop pool with a wide Atlantic Ocean view
  • Wide private beach and an easy, relaxed mood
  • High rates plus a resort fee and valet parking to check first
  • Rooftop pool and service get crowded on busy days
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W South Beach — hotel No. 5 #5 beachfront · chic W-style resort 8.5

W South Beach

From ~$463

📍 On the sand at South Beach, on Collins Avenue at the north end of the Art Deco District — an easy walk to the restaurants and shopping on Lincoln Road, with Ocean Drive close by.

🏝️ On South Beach with a private beach 🛏️ Every room has a balcony and marble bathroom 💰 From around $460 a night, up to roughly $2,000
South Beach beachfrontprivate ocean-view balconies3 outdoor poolsAway Spa and fitness

W South Beach takes the loud, fun energy of South Beach and folds it into the slick, design-led style of the W brand. It sits on Collins Avenue at the north end of the Art Deco District, facing the Atlantic head-on. What sets it apart from most South Beach hotels: every room and suite has its own private balcony and a roomy marble bathroom, and many open onto panoramic blue-water views. The heart of the resort is a deck of 3 outdoor pools hidden in a shady tropical palm garden, and you can walk straight through the garden to a private beach where staff set up loungers and umbrellas for you. The vibe is alive, modern and dotted with contemporary art, with an Away Spa, a gym, bars and in-house restaurants. Reviewers consistently flag rooms that run larger than the typical South Beach hotel, those ocean-view balconies, and the energetic mood. It scores 8.5/10 and suits couples and groups of friends who want a modern beachfront resort in the middle of the action.

  • On the South Beach sand, about a 5-minute walk to Lincoln Road
  • Every room has a private ocean-view balcony and a roomy marble bathroom
  • 3 pools in a tropical garden plus a private beach
  • Lively and crowded, with bar music on some nights
  • Premium resort fee and add-on charges stack up
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Fontainebleau Miami Beach — hotel No. 6 #6 Legendary icon · Mid-Beach beachfront 8.4

📍 Right in the middle of Mid-Beach on a private stretch of sand — next to the Miami Beach Boardwalk, about 10–15 minutes by car from South Beach and Lincoln Road.

🏛️ Designed by Morris Lapidus in 1954 🏊 6 swimming pools plus cabanas 🎉 In-house LIV nightclub
Morris Lapidus 1954 design6 pools and cabanasLIV nightclub9 restaurants

Fontainebleau Miami Beach is one of the most storied names in all of Miami, open since 1954 from the drawing board of architect Morris Lapidus, the man who birthed the famous "Miami Modern" (MiMo) look. The sweeping white curved tower and the spiral-staircase lobby with its star-patterned marble floor became the postcard image of Miami's golden age — it has stood in as a set for the James Bond film Goldfinger and for Scarface. The place is a genuine resort-city: over 1,500 rooms across 4 buildings, a wide private beach, 6 pools with cabanas and poolside bars, the big Lapis spa, 9 restaurants in different styles, and the renowned LIV nightclub where DJs and celebrities turn up constantly. Walking around inside feels like a small town that has everything. The trade-off is crowds and a buzz that never really stops, so it suits party-and-fun people more than anyone chasing quiet. Overall score 8.4/10.

  • Legendary Morris Lapidus icon — photogenic from every angle
  • 6 pools, a private beach and cabanas, all in one spot
  • LIV nightclub plus 9 restaurants inside the building
  • Huge and crowded — lobby and pools pack out at peak
  • Stacked extra charges, and some nights get loud from the party
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The Miami Beach EDITION — hotel No. 7 #7 design resort · Ian Schrager on Mid-Beach 8.7

📍 Beachfront in the Mid-Beach district on Collins Avenue — about a 10-minute drive from the buzz of South Beach, giving you more privacy and quiet.

⛸️ Underground ice rink and bowling alley 🌴 Pool set in a tropical garden 🏖️ Wide private beach on Mid-Beach
Ian Schrager minimalist white designunderground ice rink and bowlingtropical garden pool and private beachMatador Room by Jean-Georges

The Miami Beach EDITION is the resort Ian Schrager — the man who built the legendary boutique-hotel scene and ran Studio 54 — created with Marriott. He took the 1950s Seville building and reworked it into a clean white space that stays warm thanks to pale wood and a lot of greenery, set on Mid-Beach a good deal quieter and more private than the crowds of South Beach. At its core is a tropical garden with a pool tucked among the palms. The piece everyone talks about is The Basement — an underground complex with an ice rink, a bowling alley and a nightclub in one spot, which no other beachfront resort has. Dining runs to the Matador Room by renowned chef Jean-Georges Vongerichten, plus the all-day Market. Reviews line up on the photogenic design, the understated-luxe feel and the privacy. It scores 8.7/10 — ideal for couples and design lovers.

  • Ian Schrager design, clean white minimalism, photogenic everywhere
  • Underground ice rink, bowling and nightclub
  • Pool in a tropical garden plus a quiet private beach
  • Mid-Beach sits about 10 minutes from South Beach
  • Room rates and add-ons are premium-priced
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Nobu Hotel Miami Beach — hotel No. 8 #8 Beachfront Japanese design · Nobu brand 8.6

📍 Beachfront in Mid-Beach on Collins Avenue, inside the Eden Roc complex. Quieter than South Beach, but a short 10-15 minute taxi or rideshare drops you into the South Beach action.

🍣 Nobu Miami restaurant on site 🏊 Adults-only oceanfront pool 🧖 Esencia spa, around 22,000 sq ft
Nobu brandContemporary Japanese designAdults-only oceanfront pool22,000-sq-ft Esencia spa

Nobu Hotel Miami Beach is a Nobu-brand hotel hidden inside the oceanfront tower of the legendary Eden Roc resort on Collins Avenue in Mid-Beach. What sets it apart from a typical Miami Beach hotel is the calm contemporary Japanese design by Studio PCH — warm-toned wood, natural stone, earthy linen, and soft low light that feels more like a Zen resort than a party town. The headline everyone talks about is Nobu Miami, chef Nobu Matsuhisa's renowned Japanese-Peruvian restaurant in the same building, plus a quiet adults-only oceanfront pool and the roughly 22,000-sq-ft Esencia Wellness Spa, one of the largest on Miami Beach. Out front sits a private Atlantic beach where staff set up your lounger and umbrella, and guests can also use Eden Roc's family pool and cabanas. Reviewers agree on the attentive service, the luxury-without-showing-off feel, and the calm of the Mid-Beach setting. The trade-off is distance from the buzz of South Beach — you'll lean on a car. Overall 8.6/10, best for couples and luxury travelers who want quiet beachfront and top Japanese food over a party scene.

  • Renowned Nobu Miami restaurant in the building
  • Calm contemporary Japanese design plus an adults-only oceanfront pool
  • Large Esencia spa and a private Mid-Beach beach
  • Far from the South Beach buzz, so you need a car
  • Premium room rates and add-on charges
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Acqualina Resort & Residences on the Beach — hotel No. 9 #9 beachfront luxury resort · 4.5-acre private beach 9

📍 On the sand at Sunny Isles Beach, right next to Bal Harbour — about a 5-minute walk to the upscale Bal Harbour Shops, and roughly a 20-25 minute drive to South Beach.

🏝️ 4.5-acre private beach plus 3 oceanfront pools 🛏️ 97 rooms and suites plus residences 💰 From about $745/night, ranging to $3,100+ for big suites
beachfront villa resort4.5-acre private beach + 3 poolsAvra Greek + Il Mulino ItalianForbes Five-Star + ESPA spa

Picture a beachfront resort designed like a grand Mediterranean villa, stretched along a private 4.5-acre beach in Sunny Isles Beach next to Bal Harbour. That is Acqualina Resort & Residences on the Beach, a Forbes Five-Star property where both the hotel and the spa hold the rating, and which U.S. News & World Report once named one of the top resorts in the country. What sets it apart is how private the Atlantic-front stay feels: 3 oceanfront pools, cabanas lined up along the sand, the Greek seafood room Avra (a New York transplant), the legendary Italian Il Mulino New York, and the ESPA at Acqualina spa that reviewers praise for its treatments. Bal Harbour Shops is about a 5-minute walk. Guests consistently flag the attentive service and calm luxury; the trade-offs are top-tier prices and a setting far from the buzz of South Beach. Overall 9.0/10 — best for couples, families, and luxury travelers who want private beachfront with everything in one place.

  • 4.5-acre private beach plus 3 oceanfront pools to drift between all day
  • Top-tier dining: Avra (Greek) and Il Mulino (Italian), both New York names
  • ESPA spa plus Forbes Five-Star service that reviewers praise
  • Top-tier prices — extras, resort fee, and tipping run high by Miami standards
  • Far from the South Beach buzz; you have to drive into the city
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The St. Regis Bal Harbour Resort — hotel No. 10 #10 service · St. Regis butler 24h on the beach in Bal Harbour 9

📍 On the beach in Bal Harbour, the northernmost stretch of Miami Beach, on Collins Avenue — directly across from Bal Harbour Shops, the high-end designer mall, a 2-minute walk away.

🏝️ On the beach in exclusive Bal Harbour, across from Bal Harbour Shops 🛏️ 243 rooms and suites, all with floor-to-ceiling ocean or Intracoastal views 💰 From about $700/night, rising to $2,900+ for the top suites
St. Regis butler 24h every roomAcross from Bal Harbour ShopsRenowned Remede SpaPrivate beach plus 3 pools

The St. Regis Bal Harbour Resort is a 243-room luxury resort at the northern tip of Miami Beach, in Bal Harbour — one of the quietest, most private, most exclusive pockets in the city. It opened in 2012 on the site of the legendary Americana Hotel, built as three glass beachfront towers where every room faces the Atlantic or the Intracoastal through floor-to-ceiling glass and a private balcony. The signature that sets the brand apart is St. Regis Butler Service: a butler looks after every room around the clock, packing bags, brewing tea, pressing shirts and handling requests before you ask twice. Outside there are several beachfront pools among the palms, a private beach with staff setting up loungers and umbrellas, and the Remede Spa at over 1,300 sq m, rated one of Miami's best. Best of all, it sits directly across from Bal Harbour Shops, the open-air luxury mall — a short walk. Guests consistently praise the attentive service, the cleanliness, and a calm, family-friendly luxury. Overall 9.0/10.

  • St. Regis butler in every room 24 hours, the attentive service reviewers single out
  • Private beach, 3 beachfront pools, and the renowned 1,300 sq m Remede Spa
  • Quiet, upscale Bal Harbour, right across from the designer mall
  • About 20 minutes from South Beach, so you lean on taxis and rental cars
  • Top-of-Miami pricing, plus premium resort fee, breakfast, and parking add-ons
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📊Comparativa · 10 hoteles

#HotelEstrellasPuntuaciónDesde / nocheZonaDestacado
1Faena Hotel Miami Beach59.0~$580No metro in this zone — you rely on cars and taxis. South Beach is roughly 10 minutes away, and Miami International Airport (MIA) about 20 to 25 minutes.#1 Legendary design · Mid-Beach beachfront
2Four Seasons Hotel at The Surf Club59.2~$1,126No metro — Bal Harbour Shops is a few minutes' walk, and South Beach is about a 15 to 20 minute drive.#2 Ultra-luxury · Legendary 1930 beach club
3The Setai, Miami Beach59.0~$720Heart of the Art Deco District, about a 5-minute walk to Ocean Drive. Miami Beach has no subway, so it is taxi or rental car for longer trips.#3 design luxury · Forbes Five-Star on South Beach
41 Hotel South Beach58.7~$371About a 5-minute walk to the Lincoln Road pedestrian street, right on its own Atlantic private beach, and a 15-20 minute drive to Wynwood and downtown Miami.#4 eco-conscious beachfront resort · 18th-floor rooftop pool
5W South Beach58.5~$463Right in the center of South Beach#5 beachfront · chic W-style resort
6Fontainebleau Miami Beach58.4~$360No subway here — you get around by car or taxi. South Beach is about 10–15 minutes away, and Miami International Airport (MIA) runs about 20–25 minutes by car.#6 Legendary icon · Mid-Beach beachfront
7The Miami Beach EDITION58.7~$514Mid-Beach district, about a 10-minute drive to South Beach. No subway in Miami Beach — use a taxi or rental car.#7 design resort · Ian Schrager on Mid-Beach
8Nobu Hotel Miami Beach58.6~$411Mid-Beach on Collins Avenue. No metro in Miami Beach, so it is taxi, rideshare, or rental car only; South Beach is roughly 10-15 minutes away.#8 Beachfront Japanese design · Nobu brand
9Acqualina Resort & Residences on the Beach59.0~$746No metro — Bal Harbour Shops is about a 5-minute walk, and South Beach is roughly a 20-25 minute drive.#9 beachfront luxury resort · 4.5-acre private beach
10The St. Regis Bal Harbour Resort59.0~$706Bal Harbour, the northern end of Miami Beach, a 2-minute walk across from Bal Harbour Shops. No subway in Miami Beach, so taxi or rental car; South Beach is about 20 minutes away.#10 service · St. Regis butler 24h on the beach in Bal Harbour

Cuál elegir — por estilo de viaje

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#1 Legendary design · Mid-Beach beachfront
Faena Hotel Miami Beach

#1 Faena is sleeping inside a work of art that Hollywood director Baz Luhrmann shaped down to the last detail — from the gold mammoth skeleton to the red-velvet theater — strong on bold, story-rich design and beachfront mood rather than quiet simplicity.

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#2 Ultra-luxury · Legendary 1930 beach club
Four Seasons Hotel at The Surf Club

#2 Four Seasons at The Surf Club is a stay inside a legendary 1930s beachfront landmark that was once a Hollywood playground — with a quiet private beach, a Cabana Row, and dinner at the renowned Le Sirenuse, paired with the Four Seasons service it's known for, leaning more on historic charm and privacy than on South Beach energy.

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#3 design luxury · Forbes Five-Star on South Beach
The Setai, Miami Beach

#3 The Setai is a calm, Asian-inflected stay inside a 1930s Art Deco shell on South Beach, with three-temperature pools and Forbes Five-Star service — strong on quiet luxury and a beachfront address, traded against some of the steepest room rates and add-ons in the city.

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#4 eco-conscious beachfront resort · 18th-floor rooftop pool
1 Hotel South Beach

#4 1 Hotel South Beach is an eco-luxury resort that pulls nature into the whole building — reclaimed wood and real trees that make it feel like a forest in the city by the sea, with 4 pools (including an 18th-floor rooftop with a wide Atlantic view) and a generous private beach; it stands out for its distinctive design, easy mood and north-end location that still walks to Lincoln Road, traded against luxury pricing and resort fees worth checking before you book.

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#5 beachfront · chic W-style resort
W South Beach

#5 W South Beach is a beachfront resort that bottles the playful energy of South Beach into rooms with private ocean-view balconies and pools set in a tropical garden — big on lively atmosphere, roomy rooms and a beachfront spot in the thick of it, traded against the crowds and premium add-on charges.

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#6 Legendary icon · Mid-Beach beachfront
Fontainebleau Miami Beach

#6 Fontainebleau is a stay inside a Miami Beach icon that works like its own little resort city — private beach, 6 pools, a renowned nightclub and 9 restaurants, big on scale and round-the-clock fun rather than hushed privacy.

Selección final

10 hoteles para todos los estilos y presupuestos — elige por barrio, características únicas y estilo de viaje.

Haz clic en cualquiera para leer la reseña completa y comparar precios en Agoda · Booking.com · Trip.com.

Preguntas frecuentes

¿Es Miami segura para los turistas en 2026?
Sí, en las zonas turísticas — South Beach, Mid-Beach, Brickell, Bal Harbour y Key Biscayne están bien vigiladas y se sienten seguras de día y de noche. Ocean Drive después de las 2 de la mañana se anima y los carteristas trabajan entre la clientela de los bares. Evita Liberty City, Overtown y partes del norte de Miami de noche salvo que tengas un motivo concreto. No dejes objetos de valor en coches de alquiler — los robos con cristalazo son el delito más habitual contra los turistas.
¿Cuándo es la mejor época para visitar Miami?
El punto óptimo es de finales de octubre a principios de diciembre y de nuevo en mayo — mar cálido, menos turistas y precios razonables. La temporada alta va de diciembre a abril: tiempo espléndido de 24–27°C pero las tarifas de hotel prácticamente se duplican y Ocean Drive está abarrotada. Evita agosto–septiembre salvo que asumas el riesgo de huracanes y el 90% de humedad. Presta atención a los grandes eventos en el Hard Rock Stadium, que pueden elevar las tarifas en toda la región.
¿En qué barrio deben alojarse quienes visitan por primera vez?
Para quienes visitan por primera vez y buscan la experiencia clásica de Miami, alójate en South Beach (transitable, Art Déco, vida nocturna) o Mid-Beach (más tranquila, vanguardista, aún frente al mar). Bal Harbour es ideal para familias y amantes de las compras. Brickell solo tiene sentido si estás por negocios o quieres los bares de azotea con vistas al skyline. No te alojes en el centro de Miami propiamente dicho — está desierto los fines de semana.
¿Cómo llego del Aeropuerto de Miami (MIA) a la playa?
Uber o Lyft es lo más sencillo — $35–55 hasta South Beach, 20–30 minutos según el tráfico. Los taxis tienen tarifa fija hasta Miami Beach (unos $35) y son de taxímetro el resto. El autobús exprés al aeropuerto de Miami Beach (Línea 150) cuesta solo $2,65 pero tarda 50–60 minutos. Evita el coche de alquiler salvo que planees excursiones a los Everglades o los Cayos — el aparcamiento en Miami Beach cuesta $40–60/noche en la mayoría de los hoteles.
¿Moneda, pago y normas de propinas?
La moneda es el dólar estadounidense. Las tarjetas funcionan en todas partes — Visa y Mastercard son universales, Amex se acepta ampliamente en hoteles y restaurantes de categoría. Las propinas son obligatorias: 18–22% en restaurantes, $1–2 por bebida en bares, $2–5 por maleta a los maleteros, 15–20% en taxi/Uber. Fíjate en los cargos por servicio automáticos en las facturas de los restaurantes (habituales en las zonas turísticas) para no dejar doble propina. El efectivo es útil para los vendedores callejeros de La Pequeña Habana y Wynwood.
¿Cómo es la escena gastronómica y qué debo probar?
Miami come en clave latina. No te vayas sin un sándwich cubano y un cortadito en Versailles o Sanguich (menos de $20). Las pinzas de cangrejo de piedra en temporada (oct–may) en Joe's Stone Crab son un clásico de Miami. Prueba el ceviche en Coral Gables, el asado argentino en Los Fuegos y las arepas nocturnas en La Pequeña Habana. Calcula $150–300 por persona en las cenas más concurridas — la mayoría de los hoteles de esta lista tienen restaurantes de firma que merecen al menos una visita.
¿Necesito visado para visitar Miami?
La mayoría de los titulares de pasaporte del Reino Unido, la UE, Australia, Japón, Corea del Sur y Singapur entran sin visa gracias al programa ESTA — solicítalo en esta.cbp.dhs.gov, cuesta $21 y es válido dos años para estancias de hasta 90 días. Los ciudadanos de la mayoría de los demás países (incluidos Tailandia, India, China, la mayor parte de África y Latinoamérica) necesitan una visa de visitante B1/B2, que actualmente requiere entre 3 y 12 meses de espera para una cita según el consulado. Solicítala con mucha antelación.
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Equipo editorial de TopOfHotel

TopOfHotel es un equipo de especialistas en la selección y reseña de hoteles, en activo desde 2017: investigamos y evaluamos cada hotel con rigor y honestidad. Nunca aceptamos pagos a cambio de posiciones en el ranking, para que puedas elegir el mejor lugar donde alojarte.

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