10 Mejores Hoteles de Lujo en San Francisco 2026: Estancias de 5 Estrellas en Nob Hill, SoMa y Embarcadero
Mejores Hoteles

10 Mejores Hoteles de Lujo en San Francisco 2026: Estancias de 5 Estrellas en Nob Hill, SoMa y Embarcadero

T Equipo editorial de TopOfHotel Publicado 15 de enero de 2024 Actualizado 21 de junio de 2026 15 min
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San Francisco encaja una cantidad absurda de ciudad en siete millas cuadradas — niebla entrando por el Golden Gate a las 4 de la tarde en julio, teleféricos esforzándose por pendientes de 23 grados que serían ilegales como calle en cualquier otro lugar, casas victorianas junto a torres de cristal junto a una arboleda de secuoyas dentro de un parque urbano. Invita a caminarla, castiga aparcar y concentra la mayor densidad de grandes hoteles históricos de la Costa Oeste en apenas cinco barrios caminables. Elige el correcto y el resto del viaje se coloca solo.

Los atractivos son casi vergonzosamente fotogénicos. El Golden Gate Bridge queda mejor en la vida real que en cualquier foto — prueba el mirador Battery Spencer en el lado de Marin para el ángulo definitivo. Alcatraz merece la fama que tiene: reserva el tour nocturno con semanas de anticipación y la audioguía narrada por antiguos reclusos es genuinamente escalofriante. Los teleféricos son el único Monumento Histórico Nacional en movimiento de América — sube por la línea Powell-Hyde hasta Aquatic Park en lugar de hacer cola en Union Square. No te saltes el Golden Gate Park, más grande que Central Park y con un jardín japonés de té, dos museos de renombre y una manada de bisontes que nadie te había advertido.

Dónde hospedarse importa más aquí que en la mayoría de las ciudades porque los barrios son microclimas y ambientes completamente distintos. Nob Hill es la opción clásica — grandiosidad de la vieja aristocracia en la cima empinada de una colina, hogar del Fairmont, el Ritz-Carlton y el Mark Hopkins, con teleféricos que pasan traqueteando por la puerta. Union Square te pone a pasos de tiendas y teatros pero es ruidosa y concurrida. SoMa y Yerba Buena son el barrio de museos alrededor del SFMOMA. Embarcadero y el Distrito Financiero se asoman a la bahía con vistas al Bay Bridge y el Ferry Building. Jackson Square es el tranquilo rincón boutique. Evita el Tenderloin por completo para alojarte — está junto a Union Square pero es un mundo completamente diferente.

La gastronomía es excepcional y los precios escuecen. Calcula $25-40 por un almuerzo casual, $80-150 por persona para una cena de verdad, $6-7 por un café con leche. El Mission tiene los mejores burritos del mundo (Taquería El Farolito, $12-15 y del tamaño de un antebrazo); el Ferry Building Marketplace es imprescindible para las ostras y el pan de Acme. Las propinas son ineludibles: 18-22%, y el impuesto sobre las ventas del 8,6% se añade en caja, no aparece en el menú.

Datos prácticos: la mayoría de los viajeros (UE, Reino Unido, japoneses, australianos) necesitan un ESTA para la exención de visa; los ciudadanos tailandeses necesitan visa B1/B2 completa solicitada con semanas de anticipación. El aeropuerto SFO hasta el centro es un Uber de 25 minutos ($55-75) o el BART en 30 minutos por $11,40 hasta Union Square o Embarcadero. El clima está perpetuamente confundido — lleva una chaqueta ligera incluso en agosto. En cuanto a seguridad, el centro está bien de día, pero partes de Market, el Tenderloin y SoMa después de las 9 de la noche son complicadas; usa Uber a partir de esa hora.

Los diez hoteles a continuación van desde la leyenda de mármol y caoba que es el Ritz-Carlton en Nob Hill, pasando por las torres de cristal de suelo a techo de ambos Four Seasons (downtown y frente a la bahía), el romance de candelabros y teleféricos del Fairmont, las vistas al puente del 1 Hotel y el Palace, hasta la intimidad de club privado de The Battery en Jackson Square. Todos están abiertos y tienen una puntuación de 8,7 o más por parte de los huéspedes reales.

Dónde alojarse — barrios

San Francisco encaja una cantidad absurda de ciudad en siete millas cuadradas — niebla entrando por el Golden Gate a las 4 de la tarde en julio, teleféricos esforzándose por pendientes de 23 grados que serían ilegales como calle en cualquier otro lugar, casas victorianas junto a torres de cristal junto a una arboleda de secuoyas dentro de un parque urbano. Invita a caminarla, castiga aparcar y concentra la mayor densidad de grandes hoteles históricos de la Costa Oeste en apenas cinco barrios caminables. Elige el correcto y el resto del viaje se coloca solo.

Los atractivos son casi vergonzosamente fotogénicos. El Golden Gate Bridge queda mejor en la vida real que en cualquier foto — prueba el mirador Battery Spencer en el lado de Marin para el ángulo definitivo. Alcatraz merece la fama que tiene: reserva el tour nocturno con semanas de anticipación y la audioguía narrada por antiguos reclusos es genuinamente escalofriante. Los teleféricos son el único Monumento Histórico Nacional en movimiento de América — sube por la línea Powell-Hyde hasta Aquatic Park en lugar de hacer cola en Union Square. No te saltes el Golden Gate Park, más grande que Central Park y con un jardín japonés de té, dos museos de renombre y una manada de bisontes que nadie te había advertido.

Dónde hospedarse importa más aquí que en la mayoría de las ciudades porque los barrios son microclimas y ambientes completamente distintos. Nob Hill es la opción clásica — grandiosidad de la vieja aristocracia en la cima empinada de una colina, hogar del Fairmont, el Ritz-Carlton y el Mark Hopkins, con teleféricos que pasan traqueteando por la puerta. Union Square te pone a pasos de tiendas y teatros pero es ruidosa y concurrida. SoMa y Yerba Buena son el barrio de museos alrededor del SFMOMA. Embarcadero y el Distrito Financiero se asoman a la bahía con vistas al Bay Bridge y el Ferry Building. Jackson Square es el tranquilo rincón boutique. Evita el Tenderloin por completo para alojarte — está junto a Union Square pero es un mundo completamente diferente.

La gastronomía es excepcional y los precios escuecen. Calcula $25-40 por un almuerzo casual, $80-150 por persona para una cena de verdad, $6-7 por un café con leche. El Mission tiene los mejores burritos del mundo (Taquería El Farolito, $12-15 y del tamaño de un antebrazo); el Ferry Building Marketplace es imprescindible para las ostras y el pan de Acme. Las propinas son ineludibles: 18-22%, y el impuesto sobre las ventas del 8,6% se añade en caja, no aparece en el menú.

Datos prácticos: la mayoría de los viajeros (UE, Reino Unido, japoneses, australianos) necesitan un ESTA para la exención de visa; los ciudadanos tailandeses necesitan visa B1/B2 completa solicitada con semanas de anticipación. El aeropuerto SFO hasta el centro es un Uber de 25 minutos ($55-75) o el BART en 30 minutos por $11,40 hasta Union Square o Embarcadero. El clima está perpetuamente confundido — lleva una chaqueta ligera incluso en agosto. En cuanto a seguridad, el centro está bien de día, pero partes de Market, el Tenderloin y SoMa después de las 9 de la noche son complicadas; usa Uber a partir de esa hora.

Los diez hoteles a continuación van desde la leyenda de mármol y caoba que es el Ritz-Carlton en Nob Hill, pasando por las torres de cristal de suelo a techo de ambos Four Seasons (downtown y frente a la bahía), el romance de candelabros y teleféricos del Fairmont, las vistas al puente del 1 Hotel y el Palace, hasta la intimidad de club privado de The Battery en Jackson Square. Todos están abiertos y tienen una puntuación de 8,7 o más por parte de los huéspedes reales.

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The Ritz-Carlton, San Francisco — hotel No. 1 #1 classic luxury · 1909 building on Nob Hill 9.2

📍 On top of Nob Hill - about a 2-block walk to Union Square, a cable car stopping right out front, and an easy walk to Chinatown.

🏛️ 1909 neoclassical building on Nob Hill 🚋 Cable car stops out front 🛎️ Ritz-Carlton service reviewers praise unanimously
1909 neoclassical buildingatop Nob Hill2-block walk to Union Squarelegendary service

Picture a white stone neoclassical building with tall columns that has crowned Nob Hill since 1909 - originally the Pacific headquarters of Metropolitan Life insurance before it became The Ritz-Carlton, San Francisco, the city's legendary 5-star hotel. The selling point isn't flash but a quiet, steady classic luxury. Rooms come in cool blue-grey tones, dressed simply, with beds made up in Frette linens and Diptyque bath products in the bathroom. The detail reviewers agree on most is the staff - warm enough to make you feel like someone important - plus the 8th-floor Club Lounge serving food and drinks all day. The location is a winner too: about 2 blocks to Union Square, a cable car stopping right out front for the hills, and Chinatown within walking distance. The trade-offs are the steep hill, few room views and no pool. It scores 9.2/10, best for couples and luxury travelers who value location, building and service above all.

  • 1909 neoclassical building atop Nob Hill, a 2-block walk to Union Square
  • Ritz-Carlton service reviewers praise unanimously, plus the 8th-floor Club Lounge
  • 2-floor fitness center open 24 hours, with a cable car stopping out front
  • No pool and no full spa in the hotel
  • On a steep hill that's tiring to walk up, with few room views
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Four Seasons Hotel San Francisco — hotel No. 2 #2 Luxury · high-rise luxury on Market Street 9

📍 On Market Street in the city center, at the seam of Yerba Buena and SoMa — about a 5–7 minute walk to Union Square, 3–5 minutes to Powell Street station (BART/Muni), and 5–8 minutes to Yerba Buena Gardens and SFMOMA

🏙️ Glass skyscraper on Market Street 🪟 Floor-to-ceiling city and bay views 💪 Connected to Equinox Sports Club
glass skyscraper on Market Streetfloor-to-ceiling city and bay viewsconnected to Equinox Sports Clubwalk to Union Square

Picture a luxury hotel tucked into a glass skyscraper on Market Street, San Francisco's main artery — that is the Four Seasons Hotel San Francisco, a 5-star, 277-room hotel occupying floors 5 through 17 of a modern tower, open since 2001. What sets it apart is the floor-to-ceiling glass that pulls the city skyline and San Francisco Bay right into the room; waking up to high-rises and morning fog drifting over the city is the image many guests keep. Rooms are roomy and dressed in warm contemporary tones. On the food side, MKT Restaurant & Bar serves California dishes built on local ingredients in an airy room. The standout is that the hotel connects directly to the Equinox Sports Club, a huge luxury fitness club with an indoor pool, a basketball court and full classes that guests use free. The location is excellent too: a few minutes' walk to Union Square, Yerba Buena Gardens and SFMOMA, with Powell Street station close by. Reviews agree most on the warm, attentive Four Seasons service. Overall 9.0/10.

  • High-rise luxury on Market Street, walk to Union Square and the museums
  • Floor-to-ceiling windows with city and bay views, plus roomy rooms
  • Connected Equinox Sports Club is free, with warm service
  • Design leans classic, not flashy for the price
  • High extras: expensive valet, some dates add a facility fee
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Fairmont San Francisco — hotel No. 3 #3 classic luxury · 1907 landmark on Nob Hill 8.9

📍 On the summit of Nob Hill where 3 cable car lines meet — about 3 to 4 blocks downhill to Union Square, with easy walks to Chinatown and Grace Cathedral.

🏛️ 1907 Beaux-Arts landmark on Nob Hill 🚋 Summit where 3 cable car lines converge 🌉 High Tower rooms see Alcatraz and the bay
1907 historic buildinglegendary grand lobbyAlcatraz and bay views from Tower3 cable car lines meet

Picture a massive white Beaux-Arts stone building that has stood on the crown of Nob Hill since 1907 — that's the Fairmont San Francisco, one of the city's original Big Four luxury hotels and the very first hotel in the entire Fairmont chain. The building was finished right as the great 1906 earthquake struck, so it had to be rebuilt inside before opening a year later. The one thing everyone agrees on is the lobby: soaring ceilings, gold marble columns, crystal chandeliers and a sweeping staircase that feel grandly old-world. Rooms come in two flavors — the original historic building and the 1961 Tower, where many high floors open onto full views of the bay, Alcatraz and Coit Tower. Inside there's also the Tonga Room, a legendary tiki bar with a pool in the middle of the room and fake rain that falls at intervals. Sitting where 3 cable car lines converge makes getting around easy. The trade-off: some older-building rooms read more classic than modern, and as a big hotel it can feel busy at peak times. Overall 8.9/10, best for couples and luxury lovers drawn to historic hotels and bay views.

  • 1907 historic landmark with a legendary grand lobby
  • High Tower rooms frame Alcatraz, Coit Tower and the full bay
  • Nob Hill summit where 3 cable car lines meet, walk to Union Square
  • Some original historic-building rooms read more classic than modern
  • Big hotel that feels crowded at peak times, plus high add-on fees
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The St. Regis San Francisco — hotel No. 4 #4 Luxury · modern luxury next to SFMOMA 9.1

📍 On 3rd Street in downtown SoMa — right next to SFMOMA, about a 2-3 minute walk to Yerba Buena Gardens, 7-10 minutes to Union Square, and 5-7 minutes to Montgomery Street station (BART/Muni).

🖼️ Right next to SFMOMA in the arts district 🛎️ St. Regis butler in every room 🛁 Marble bath with soaking tub + rainforest shower
Modern glass tower in SoMaNext to SFMOMASt. Regis butler serviceSoaking tub + rainforest shower

Picture a modern-luxury hotel tucked into a slim glass tower in the heart of SoMa, where you step out the door and SFMOMA, one of the world's renowned modern-art museums, is right next door — that's The St. Regis San Francisco, a 5-star hotel with 260 rooms occupying part of a 40-storey skyscraper, open since 2005. What sets it apart is a genuinely clean, contemporary kind of luxury: warm, tasteful rooms with floor-to-ceiling windows that pull the city skyline right in, and the thing reviewers mention most — a marble bathroom with a soaking tub and a drenching rainforest shower. The signature touch is a butler assigned to every room, handling everything from ironing and coffee to packing, and guests praise the attention almost unanimously. To unwind there's the Remède Spa and an indoor pool, and you can walk to Yerba Buena Gardens and the Union Square shopping district. Overall 9.1/10 — built for modern-leaning luxury travelers, couples and business guests.

  • Modern luxury right next to SFMOMA, walk to the gardens and shopping
  • St. Regis butler in every room, praised almost unanimously in reviews
  • Marble bathroom with a soaking tub and rainforest shower
  • High rates plus extras — SF valet parking is very expensive
  • Some SoMa corners feel quiet or run-down after dark
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Four Seasons Hotel San Francisco at Embarcadero — hotel No. 5 #5 Luxury · 360-degree skyline views from floors 38-48 9

📍 On the high floors of the 345 California Center tower (entrance at 222 Sansome Street) in the heart of the Financial District — about a 1-2 minute walk to the California cable car line, 5-7 minutes to Montgomery station (BART/Muni), and 8-12 minutes to the Embarcadero waterfront and Ferry Building.

🌆 Floors 38-48 with near-360-degree panoramic views 🏙️ Heart of the Financial District 🚋 Walk to the California cable car line
floors 38-48 of 345 California Centerpanoramic 360-degree city and bay viewsheart of the Financial Districtwalk to the California cable car

Picture a luxury hotel that doesn't just take the lower floors of a building but claims floors 38 through 48 of a Financial District skyscraper outright — that's Four Seasons Hotel San Francisco at Embarcadero, a compact 155-room 5-star perched atop 345 California Center (entrance at 222 Sansome Street). It used to be the Loews Regency before being reworked into the city's second Four Seasons. What everyone talks about is the panorama: sitting almost at the top of the tower, the big windows open onto the city, the Bay Bridge, San Francisco Bay and the skyline in a sweep that's close to 360 degrees, and morning fog drifting over the skyscrapers is the kind of view people remember for a long time. The small room count keeps things private, and review after review praises the warm, attentive Four Seasons service. You can walk to the California cable car line that climbs Nob Hill, and it's a short stroll to the Embarcadero waterfront and the Ferry Building. Overall 9.0/10 — great for couples, business travelers, and luxury guests who want the highest views and a central Financial District base.

  • Near-360-degree panorama from floors 38-48, the highest in the city
  • Heart of the Financial District, walk to the cable car and the waterfront
  • Just 155 rooms, so it stays private with warm service
  • Fairly classic decor, not the flashy-new look the price suggests
  • Financial District goes quiet on weekends, plus pricey valet parking
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Palace Hotel, a Luxury Collection Hotel, San Francisco — hotel No. 6 #6 Classic luxury · 1875 landmark + Garden Court 8.8

📍 Corner of Market St and New Montgomery in the Financial District/SoMa — about a 2 to 3 minute walk to Montgomery station (BART/Muni), with Union Square and Yerba Buena Gardens an easy stroll away.

🏛️ Landmark hotel opened 1875, rebuilt 1909 🪟 The Garden Court under a stained-glass dome 🏊 Indoor pool beneath a glass skylight
Landmark opened 1875, rebuilt 1909Garden Court stained-glass domeIndoor pool under skylightSteps from Montgomery BART

Picture a grand hotel that has held its corner of Market Street since 1875 — through the city's boom years, the great earthquake of 1906, and a full rebuild that brought it back in 1909. That's the Palace Hotel, one of San Francisco's oldest and most storied addresses, now part of Marriott's Luxury Collection. The piece everyone agrees on is The Garden Court, a high-ceilinged dining room crowned by a stained-glass dome of more than 70,000 pieces, ringed by crystal chandeliers and marble columns. Plenty of guests say an afternoon tea under that dome alone is worth the visit. The other signature is a large indoor pool under a glass skylight that pours in natural light. Rooms lean classic and high-ceilinged, with a period feel newer hotels can't fake. The location, on the corner of Market and New Montgomery in the Financial District/SoMa, puts Montgomery BART and Union Square a few minutes' walk away. The trade-off: it's a big hotel where some rooms feel more classic than modern, and there are extra fees worth checking first.

  • The Garden Court, a legendary stained-glass dome room that's a genuine landmark
  • Historic hotel opened in 1875 plus an indoor pool under a skylight
  • Corner of Market and New Montgomery, a 2 to 3 minute walk to Montgomery BART
  • Some rooms feel more classic than modern, with upkeep in the old building uneven in spots
  • Big hotel that hosts frequent events, plus high resort fee and valet parking
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1 Hotel San Francisco — hotel No. 7 #7 Eco-friendly · On the bay next to the Ferry Building 8.6

📍 On the Embarcadero next to elevated Highway 1 — a few minutes' walk along the bay to the Ferry Building, about 8-10 minutes on foot to Embarcadero station (BART/Muni), close to the Financial District.

🌿 Eco design with reclaimed wood and live greenery 🌉 Skyline and Bay Bridge views on the waterfront 🔑 Holds a MICHELIN Key
Eco urban-rustic designWaterfront by the Ferry BuildingSkyline & Bay Bridge viewsMICHELIN Key holder

Picture a 5-star hotel where you walk into the lobby and find reclaimed old-wood walls, lush greenery hanging overhead and natural light pouring through the whole building. That's 1 Hotel San Francisco, a 1 Hotels property on the Embarcadero that builds its eco concept right into the design rather than just slapping on a label. Around 200 rooms are done in a warm, earthy urban-rustic style of wood and stone, and many open onto full views of San Francisco Bay, the city skyline and the Bay Bridge. The standout is the waterfront spot beside the Ferry Building — an easy walk along the bay to the market and restaurants — plus the Terrene restaurant built around local seasonal produce and a rooftop bar facing the bridge. A MICHELIN Key backs up the stay. The trade-off: the building sits next to an elevated freeway, so some rooms catch road noise, and the look leans raw rather than flashy. Overall 8.6/10 for design and waterfront lovers.

  • Eco urban-rustic design done for real building-wide — reclaimed wood plus live greenery
  • Waterfront spot by the Ferry Building with skyline and Bay Bridge views
  • Terrene restaurant on local produce plus a rooftop bar, and a MICHELIN Key
  • Building sits beside an elevated freeway, so some rooms hear traffic
  • Raw, pared-back design feels less luxurious than the price to some guests
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Taj Campton Place San Francisco — hotel No. 8 #8 boutique luxury · next to Union Square 8.8

📍 On Stockton Street in the heart of Union Square — a few steps to Macy's, Neiman Marcus and the designer stores, and about a 3-5 minute walk to the Powell Street cable car and the Powell BART/Muni station.

🛍️ A few steps to the heart of Union Square Michelin-rated Campton Place restaurant 🛎️ Boutique service reviewers unanimously praise
boutique luxury in Union SquareMichelin Campton Place restaurantattentive staff who remember namesopen-air rooftop fitness terrace

Picture a small, classic luxury hotel tucked onto Stockton Street just a few steps from the middle of Union Square — step out the door and you are facing Macy's and a row of designer stores. That is Taj Campton Place San Francisco, a boutique of roughly 110 rooms under India's Taj Hotels. The draw is not flash but quiet, detail-focused luxury: warm cream-and-brown rooms in a classic-contemporary style, tall windows that pull in light, and staff who reviewers unanimously call warm and attentive, remembering names and going beyond what you would expect. The other heart of the place is the Michelin-rated Campton Place restaurant, known for contemporary California food with an Indian accent, plus an easy little bar. Up top sits an open-air rooftop fitness terrace. The Powell Street cable car and Powell station (BART/Muni) are a 3-5 minute walk. Trade-offs: some rooms run small, there is no pool, and the area quiets down at night. Overall 8.8/10.

  • Boutique-luxury location in the heart of Union Square, a few steps from the department stores and big-name shops
  • Michelin-rated Campton Place restaurant plus staff who remember your name
  • Open-air rooftop fitness terrace and a quiet, upscale atmosphere
  • No swimming pool and no full-service spa in the hotel
  • Some rooms run small and the price sits fairly high
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InterContinental Mark Hopkins San Francisco — hotel No. 9 #9 Classic luxury · 1926 landmark with Top of the Mark on Nob Hill 8.7

📍 On the top of Nob Hill at the corner of California & Mason — the California Street cable car stops right in front, it is about 4 to 5 blocks downhill to Union Square, and Chinatown and Grace Cathedral are an easy walk.

🏛️ 1926 landmark hotel on top of Nob Hill 🍸 Top of the Mark, 19th floor, 360-degree view 🌉 Higher floors see the Golden Gate and the bay
1926 landmark buildingTop of the Mark 360 viewNob Hill cable car at the doorVictorian fine-wood rooms

Picture a grand 19-floor hotel that has stood on the highest point of Nob Hill since 1926, on the plot that once held the mansion of Mark Hopkins, one of California's railroad "Big Four" barons. This is the InterContinental Mark Hopkins San Francisco, a legend that has been part of the city's skyline for decades. What made it famous worldwide is Top of the Mark, the 19th-floor sky lounge open since 1939, with wraparound glass windows that hand you a true 360-degree view of the Golden Gate Bridge, San Francisco Bay and a sea of city rooftops. Rooms wear fine wood and Victorian-era detailing for a classic, old-world kind of luxury, and many of the higher floors open their curtains onto a full bay view. The cable car on the California Street line runs right past the door at California & Mason, and it is a short walk downhill to Union Square and Chinatown. The trade-off: it is an old building with no pool. Score 8.7/10.

  • 1926 landmark building with a classic, story-rich luxury mood
  • Top of the Mark on the 19th floor, 360-degree view of the Golden Gate and bay
  • Top of Nob Hill, cable car at the door, walk to Union Square
  • Some rooms in the old tower feel more classic than modern
  • No pool, plus a high destination fee and valet parking
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The Battery — hotel No. 10 #10 exclusive · 14 suites inside a Jackson Square members' club 8.9

The Battery

From ~$429

📍 In the heart of Jackson Square, San Francisco's oldest red-brick district — an easy walk to the Financial District and North Beach, and close to the Embarcadero along the bay.

🔑 14 suites inside an exclusive members' club 🎨 Every room designed by Ken Fulk ♨️ Japanese-style soaking tub plus natural stone
14-suite members' club boutiqueKen Fulk designJackson Square red-brick districtJapanese-style soaking tub

Picture an old red-brick building in Jackson Square, one of the prettiest historic pockets of San Francisco, with an exclusive members' club hidden inside — that's The Battery, and the lodging side holds just 14 suites in the entire building. The draw isn't scale; it's rare privacy paired with design that has a story. Every room was done by Ken Fulk, one of the city's best-known designers, so each one feels more like a tasteful art collector's home than a hotel room: art on the walls, furniture chosen piece by piece, and the highlight — a Japanese-style soaking tub with natural stone in some suites that turns a bath into a proper wind-down. Better still, guests get member-style run of the club itself: spa, gym, library and an art collection displayed throughout. The mood stays quiet, private and very insider. The trade-off is that this is a boutique inside an old building, without the full facilities of a big hotel. Overall 8.9/10 — best for couples and luxury travelers after an exclusive stay with a story rather than flash.

  • A boutique of just 14 suites inside a members' club — rare privacy
  • Every room designed by Ken Fulk, plus a Japanese-style soaking tub
  • Member access to the club's spa, gym, library and art collection
  • A boutique in an old building, without big-hotel facilities
  • High price and an exclusive-club mood that won't suit everyone
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📊Comparativa · 10 hoteles

#HotelEstrellasPuntuaciónDesde / nocheZonaDestacado
1The Ritz-Carlton, San Francisco59.2~$500The California Street cable car line stops right out front; Union Square is about a 2-block walk.#1 classic luxury · 1909 building on Nob Hill
2Four Seasons Hotel San Francisco59.0~$357Powell Street station (BART/Muni Metro)#2 Luxury · high-rise luxury on Market Street
3Fairmont San Francisco58.9~$314Sits on the Nob Hill summit where 3 cable car lines converge (California Street plus Powell-Mason and Powell-Hyde); Union Square is about 3 to 4 blocks downhill.#3 classic luxury · 1907 landmark on Nob Hill
4The St. Regis San Francisco59.1~$371Montgomery Street station (BART/Muni Metro), about a 5-7 minute walk, with a direct BART ride to SFO airport.#4 Luxury · modern luxury next to SFMOMA
5Four Seasons Hotel San Francisco at Embarcadero59.0~$386California cable car line about a 1-2 minute walk; Montgomery station (BART/Muni) about a 5-7 minute walk, with a direct BART ride out to SFO airport.#5 Luxury · 360-degree skyline views from floors 38-48
6Palace Hotel, a Luxury Collection Hotel, San Francisco58.8~$271Corner of Market St and New Montgomery. Montgomery station (BART + Muni Metro) is about a 2 to 3 minute walk.#6 Classic luxury · 1875 landmark + Garden Court
71 Hotel San Francisco58.6~$371Embarcadero station (BART/Muni) about 8-10 minutes on foot; the Ferry Building is a few minutes' walk along the bay.#7 Eco-friendly · On the bay next to the Ferry Building
8Taj Campton Place San Francisco58.8~$243Powell Street cable car plus the Powell BART/Muni station, about a 3-5 minute walk.#8 boutique luxury · next to Union Square
9InterContinental Mark Hopkins San Francisco58.7~$257Top of Nob Hill at California & Mason. The California Street cable car line passes right in front of the hotel, and Union Square is about 4 to 5 blocks downhill.#9 Classic luxury · 1926 landmark with Top of the Mark on Nob Hill
10The Battery58.9~$429In the heart of Jackson Square#10 exclusive · 14 suites inside a Jackson Square members' club

Cuál elegir — por estilo de viaje

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#1 classic luxury · 1909 building on Nob Hill
The Ritz-Carlton, San Francisco

#1 The Ritz-Carlton, San Francisco is classic luxury inside a historic 1909 building atop Nob Hill, with legendary service that makes you feel important - stronger on location, building and service than on room views or amenities like the pool it doesn't have.

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#2 Luxury · high-rise luxury on Market Street
Four Seasons Hotel San Francisco

#2 The Four Seasons San Francisco sells a stay in a glass tower on Market Street where you wake to the city and bay through full-height windows, walk to Union Square and the museums, and use the huge connected Equinox Sports Club free — strong on location, high-rise views and warm service rather than flashy design.

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#3 classic luxury · 1907 landmark on Nob Hill
Fairmont San Francisco

#3 The Fairmont San Francisco is a night inside a 1907 historic landmark atop Nob Hill, with a legendary grand lobby and bay views from the high floors — it shines for the building, the classic atmosphere and the location more than for the modernity of its older-building rooms.

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#4 Luxury · modern luxury next to SFMOMA
The St. Regis San Francisco

#4 The St. Regis San Francisco is modern luxury where you wake to city views through floor-to-ceiling glass, soak in a marble bathroom with a rainforest shower, and lean on a St. Regis butler reviewers praise almost unanimously, all right beside SFMOMA — stronger on service, room design and the arts-district location than on any buzz in its common areas.

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#5 Luxury · 360-degree skyline views from floors 38-48
Four Seasons Hotel San Francisco at Embarcadero

#5 Four Seasons Hotel San Francisco at Embarcadero is about sleeping on floors 38 to 48 of a Financial District skyscraper and waking up to a full-window panorama of the city and San Francisco Bay, with a sky-high lobby and an easy walk to the cable car and the Embarcadero waterfront, all done the Four Seasons way — the draw is the highest views in town, the financial-district location and the service, more than any flashy new design.

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#6 Classic luxury · 1875 landmark + Garden Court
Palace Hotel, a Luxury Collection Hotel, San Francisco

#6 The Palace is about sleeping inside one of San Francisco's oldest hotels, home to the legendary glass-domed Garden Court and an indoor pool under a skylight — the draw is the building, the classic mood and the central location more than any modern flash in the rooms.

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 San Francisco segura para los turistas en 2026?
Los barrios turísticos principales — Nob Hill, Union Square de día, Embarcadero, Fisherman's Wharf, el Marina — son seguros y están bien vigilados. El Tenderloin y partes de la calle Market y SoMa al sur de la 6 son visiblemente conflictivos, con consumo de drogas al aire libre y mendigos agresivos. Usa Uber o Lyft después de las 9 de la noche en esas zonas, guarda el teléfono en el transporte y nunca dejes nada visible en un coche aparcado — el robo con rotura de ventanilla es el delito más típico de la ciudad.
¿Cuál es la mejor época para visitar San Francisco?
De finales de septiembre a octubre es el período ideal — cielos despejados, tardes cálidas en torno a los 22°C, poca niebla y la energía de la Fleet Week. El verano es famosamente neblinoso y frío, especialmente en los barrios del oeste (la cita de Mark Twain sobre el invierno más frío que pasó es real). La primavera es suave y verde. De diciembre a febrero es la temporada de lluvias, pero rara vez hiela — lleva capas y un impermeable de verdad durante todo el año.
¿Qué barrio es mejor para los visitantes primerizos?
Nob Hill o Union Square. Nob Hill es más tranquilo y tiene un aire más residencial, con el Fairmont, el Ritz-Carlton y el Mark Hopkins como anclas, más teleféricos para moverse por el resto de la ciudad. Union Square te pone a pasos de tiendas, teatros y la mayoría de los grandes restaurantes, pero es más ruidoso y concurrido. Evita el Tenderloin completamente para alojarte, y descarta Fisherman's Wharf a menos que ver los leones marinos cada mañana sea el sueño — es la zona más turística de la ciudad.
¿Cómo llego desde el aeropuerto SFO hasta el centro?
El BART es la mejor opción por $11,40 y 30 minutos hasta las paradas de Powell (Union Square), Montgomery y Embarcadero. Uber y Lyft cuestan $55-75 en tráfico normal, más en hora punta. Las furgonetas lanzadera del aeropuerto son obsoletas y lentas. Si llevas mucho equipaje o viajas en familia, el rideshare gana por el servicio puerta a puerta — la mayoría de los hoteles de lujo no tienen aparcamiento cómodo, y un coche con conductor de unos $90-110 vale la pena para la experiencia del bordillo al bordillo.
¿Cuánto hay que dejar de propina en San Francisco?
Las propinas son obligatorias, no opcionales. En los restaurantes se espera un 18-22% (los camareros cobran un salario por debajo del mínimo en California). Los baristas reciben $1-2 por bebida, los maleteros del hotel $2-3 por bolsa, el servicio de habitaciones $3-5 por noche y los conductores de Uber un 15-20%. Algunos restaurantes añaden un recargo del 4-6% por el seguro médico de los empleados — eso no es una propina, aún así hay que propinar aparte. Muchos lugares muestran ahora niveles de propina sugeridos del 18/22/25% en el datáfono; el 20% es el término medio seguro.
¿Necesito visa para entrar en EE. UU. desde Tailandia o Europa?
Los ciudadanos tailandeses necesitan visa B1/B2 solicitada con anticipación — el proceso tarda de 4 a 12 semanas e incluye una entrevista presencial. La mayoría de los viajeros europeos, británicos, japoneses, australianos y surcoreanos se acogen al programa de exención de visa ESTA, solicitado en línea por $21 con al menos 72 horas de anticipación antes de volar. El ESTA es válido 2 años y para visitas ilimitadas de hasta 90 días. Ten la dirección del hotel y los detalles del vuelo de regreso listos en inmigración — las preguntas son de rutina.
¿Qué es exclusivo de San Francisco y merece la pena probar?
El pan de masa madre, los burritos de Mission y el cangrejo Dungeness en invierno son la santísima trinidad. Sube al menos una vez en teleférico — la línea Powell-Hyde o California Street. Toma el ferry a Sausalito para la vista del puente desde el agua. Visita Alcatraz en el tour nocturno si puedes reservarlo. Toma dim sum en Chinatown para desayunar. Y prueba la Anchor Steam o un cóctel de Trick Dog — ambas son de aquí.
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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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