10 mejores hoteles de lujo 5 estrellas en Vancouver, Canadá (2026) — Coal Harbour y Downtown
Mejores Hoteles

10 mejores hoteles de lujo 5 estrellas en Vancouver, Canadá (2026) — Coal Harbour y Downtown

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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Vancouver es una de las pocas ciudades del mundo donde puedes esquiar en una montaña de verdad en el desayuno y practicar kayak en el Pacífico a mediodía. La península del centro está apretujada entre el brazo de mar de Burrard y la bahía English Bay, con las cumbres nevadas de la Costa Norte elevándose justo al otro lado del agua — por eso casi todos los hoteles de lujo de la ciudad compiten por las mismas pocas manzanas. Consigue una habitación con vistas al puerto y te despertarás con hidroaviones rozando la bahía frente a una pared de cumbres blancas. Consigue el lado equivocado y estarás mirando un aparcamiento por $700 la noche. Las vistas importan tanto aquí.

Las principales atracciones están a menos de 20 minutos andando. Stanley Park rodea la punta de la península con un circuito de 9 km en la pasarela marítima que los locales utilizan de verdad — alquila una bicicleta en Denman Street y lo recorrerás en 90 minutos pasando junto a tótems y el Lions Gate Bridge. Granville Island está a un ferri de 10 minutos hacia el sur con un concurrido mercado público. El Puente Colgante Capilano y el Grouse Mountain están a un rápido SeaBus hacia North Vancouver. Para un partido o concierto en el BC Place — hogar de los Whitecaps (MLS) y los BC Lions (CFL) y el gran recinto de eventos de la ciudad — reserva un hotel en Yaletown cerca del recinto. Whistler está a dos horas por la autopista Sea-to-Sky para una excursión de un día, y Victoria en la isla de Vancouver está a un vuelo en hidroavión.

Dónde alojarse la primera vez: Coal Harbour es el más bonito — frente al puerto deportivo, vistas a las montañas, paseo hasta Stanley Park. El centro / calle Robson es el epicentro de compras y restaurantes. Waterfront / Canada Place es donde atracan los cruceros. Yaletown es el barrio chic de almacenes reconvertidos con los mejores brunchs.

La gastronomía es de primera y cara. El sushi aquí es el mejor de América del Norte salvo quizás Los Ángeles — Tojo's inventó el California Roll, y la escena omakase del centro cuesta $150-300 por persona. El marisco del Noroeste del Pacífico — gambas spot, cangrejo Dungeness, salmón salvaje — es la especialidad local. Una cena casual con una bebida ronda los $50-70; un menú de degustación empieza alrededor de $180. La propina es del 18-20% esperado, más 5% de GST y 7% de PST añadidos en los restaurantes.

Aspectos prácticos: la mayoría de viajeros (EE. UU., UE, UK, Australia, Japón) solo necesitan una eTA ($7 CAD, online, aprobada en minutos), no un visado. El aeropuerto (YVR) conecta con el centro por el Canada Line SkyTrain en 25 minutos por menos de $10 — evita el taxi. Vancouver es una de las ciudades grandes más seguras de América del Norte, pero el Downtown Eastside alrededor de East Hastings tiene una crisis de drogas al aire libre que puede sorprenderte al pasar rumbo a Gastown — puede ser impactante. Los mejores meses son mayo a septiembre. De octubre a abril es temporada de lluvias — lleva una chaqueta impermeable de verdad, no un paraguas.

A continuación hay 10 hoteles que nosotros mismos reservaríamos, desde el emblemático Fairmont Pacific Rim frente al puerto con su piscina en la azotea y su Botanist con reconocimiento Michelin, pasando por el histórico Rosewood Hotel Georgia donde se alojaron Elvis y Sinatra, el Fairmont Hotel Vancouver de estilo château, hasta el Pan Pacific Vancouver de tejado con forma de vela sobre la terminal de cruceros. Todos son reales, actualmente abiertos y clasificados por reseñas de huéspedes — no comunicados de prensa.

Dónde alojarse — barrios

Vancouver es una de las pocas ciudades del mundo donde puedes esquiar en una montaña de verdad en el desayuno y practicar kayak en el Pacífico a mediodía. La península del centro está apretujada entre el brazo de mar de Burrard y la bahía English Bay, con las cumbres nevadas de la Costa Norte elevándose justo al otro lado del agua — por eso casi todos los hoteles de lujo de la ciudad compiten por las mismas pocas manzanas. Consigue una habitación con vistas al puerto y te despertarás con hidroaviones rozando la bahía frente a una pared de cumbres blancas. Consigue el lado equivocado y estarás mirando un aparcamiento por $700 la noche. Las vistas importan tanto aquí.

Las principales atracciones están a menos de 20 minutos andando. Stanley Park rodea la punta de la península con un circuito de 9 km en la pasarela marítima que los locales utilizan de verdad — alquila una bicicleta en Denman Street y lo recorrerás en 90 minutos pasando junto a tótems y el Lions Gate Bridge. Granville Island está a un ferri de 10 minutos hacia el sur con un concurrido mercado público. El Puente Colgante Capilano y el Grouse Mountain están a un rápido SeaBus hacia North Vancouver. Para un partido o concierto en el BC Place — hogar de los Whitecaps (MLS) y los BC Lions (CFL) y el gran recinto de eventos de la ciudad — reserva un hotel en Yaletown cerca del recinto. Whistler está a dos horas por la autopista Sea-to-Sky para una excursión de un día, y Victoria en la isla de Vancouver está a un vuelo en hidroavión.

Dónde alojarse la primera vez: Coal Harbour es el más bonito — frente al puerto deportivo, vistas a las montañas, paseo hasta Stanley Park. El centro / calle Robson es el epicentro de compras y restaurantes. Waterfront / Canada Place es donde atracan los cruceros. Yaletown es el barrio chic de almacenes reconvertidos con los mejores brunchs.

La gastronomía es de primera y cara. El sushi aquí es el mejor de América del Norte salvo quizás Los Ángeles — Tojo's inventó el California Roll, y la escena omakase del centro cuesta $150-300 por persona. El marisco del Noroeste del Pacífico — gambas spot, cangrejo Dungeness, salmón salvaje — es la especialidad local. Una cena casual con una bebida ronda los $50-70; un menú de degustación empieza alrededor de $180. La propina es del 18-20% esperado, más 5% de GST y 7% de PST añadidos en los restaurantes.

Aspectos prácticos: la mayoría de viajeros (EE. UU., UE, UK, Australia, Japón) solo necesitan una eTA ($7 CAD, online, aprobada en minutos), no un visado. El aeropuerto (YVR) conecta con el centro por el Canada Line SkyTrain en 25 minutos por menos de $10 — evita el taxi. Vancouver es una de las ciudades grandes más seguras de América del Norte, pero el Downtown Eastside alrededor de East Hastings tiene una crisis de drogas al aire libre que puede sorprenderte al pasar rumbo a Gastown — puede ser impactante. Los mejores meses son mayo a septiembre. De octubre a abril es temporada de lluvias — lleva una chaqueta impermeable de verdad, no un paraguas.

A continuación hay 10 hoteles que nosotros mismos reservaríamos, desde el emblemático Fairmont Pacific Rim frente al puerto con su piscina en la azotea y su Botanist con reconocimiento Michelin, pasando por el histórico Rosewood Hotel Georgia donde se alojaron Elvis y Sinatra, el Fairmont Hotel Vancouver de estilo château, hasta el Pan Pacific Vancouver de tejado con forma de vela sobre la terminal de cruceros. Todos son reales, actualmente abiertos y clasificados por reseñas de huéspedes — no comunicados de prensa.

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.

Fairmont Pacific Rim — hotel No. 1 #1 luxury flagship · Coal Harbour waterfront 9.3

📍 On the Coal Harbour waterfront right beside Canada Place — about a 3-5 minute walk to Waterfront Station (SkyTrain, SeaBus, Canada Line), with the Seawall path running right outside the hotel.

🌊 Coal Harbour waterfront, right next to Canada Place 🏊 Level-5 rooftop pool and hot tub with harbour views 🍸 Lobby Lounge & RawBar plus Michelin-recognized Botanist
Coal Harbour waterfront by Canada PlaceNorth Shore mountain and harbour viewsaward-winning Willow Stream Sparooftop pool and Michelin-recognized dining

Fairmont Pacific Rim is Fairmont's Forbes Five-Star flagship in Vancouver, a curved glass tower on the Coal Harbour waterfront set right beside Canada Place. It opened in 2010, in time for the Winter Olympics. The view is what hooks everyone: water-facing rooms look out over the blue harbour stretching to the snow-dusted North Shore mountains, with hydroplanes lifting off and landing all day like a postcard that moves. The hotel goes all in — the award-winning Willow Stream Spa, a level-5 rooftop pool with hot tub and cabanas, the Michelin-recognized Botanist restaurant, and the Lobby Lounge & RawBar that has become one of the city's liveliest gathering spots, plus a curated contemporary art collection spread through the building. Real guest reviews agree on the view, the warm and easygoing service, and the fun energy of the public spaces. It scores 9.3/10 and suits couples, luxury travelers, and business guests who want a walk-everywhere downtown waterfront base.

  • Best harbour and North Shore mountain view in the city
  • Award-winning Willow Stream Spa plus a level-5 rooftop pool
  • Botanist and Lobby Lounge are the liveliest bar scene in town
  • High room rates and steep extras for valet parking and breakfast
  • Lobby bar carries down to lower floors near the lobby
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Rosewood Hotel Georgia — hotel No. 2 #2 classic luxury · 1927 downtown landmark 9.3

📍 801 West Georgia Street in the heart of the Downtown core, directly across from the Vancouver Art Gallery — about a 3 to 5 minute walk to the SkyTrain Vancouver City Centre station and the Robson shopping street.

🏛️ 1927 Georgian Revival heritage building 🍽️ Hawksworth, one of the city's best restaurants 🏊 Indoor saltwater pool plus Sense spa
1927 heritage building$55 million restorationHawksworth restaurantindoor saltwater pool

Picture a 1927 hotel that was once one of Vancouver's great landmarks, the kind of place that put up Hollywood stars and names like Elvis Presley, Frank Sinatra and Katharine Hepburn — earning it the nickname "stopover for the stars." Then it got a full $55 million-plus restoration and came back gleaming. That is the Rosewood Hotel Georgia, reopened in 2011 under the Rosewood luxury brand. The Georgian Revival building sits in the Downtown core on West Georgia Street, directly across from the Vancouver Art Gallery, and it keeps its 1920s character carefully — dark walnut woodwork, high ceilings, chandeliers, a dignified lobby — paired with contemporary furniture and Canadian art. There are 156 rooms and suites, the Sense spa with an indoor saltwater pool, and chef David Hawksworth's restaurant, which locals and guests alike rate among the city's best. The SkyTrain and Robson shopping street are both a few minutes' walk. Reviews agree on the warm, attentive service and the pull of the historic building. 9.3/10.

  • 1927 heritage building restored to a shine — rare classic character
  • Heart of downtown, a few minutes' walk to the SkyTrain and Robson
  • Hawksworth restaurant plus the Prohibition bar, warm service
  • Some standard room types are not large and most lack a notable view
  • Luxury rates and extras like valet parking run high
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Fairmont Hotel Vancouver — hotel No. 3 #3 classic château · 1939 historic building 8.8

📍 Corner of West Georgia and Burrard in the heart of Downtown — about a 3-minute walk to Burrard SkyTrain station (Expo Line), 4 minutes to Robson Street shopping, and 10 minutes to the Coal Harbour waterfront.

🏰 Copper-roofed château from 1939 🚉 3-min walk to Burrard SkyTrain 🐶 Canine ambassadors greet guests
Iconic 1939 château buildingCentral Downtown, walk everywhere3-min walk to Burrard SkyTrainCanine ambassadors greet guests

Picture a brooding green copper-roofed château standing among the glass towers of downtown Vancouver — that is the Fairmont Hotel Vancouver, which locals have long called the "Castle in the City". The château-style building was put up by Canadian Pacific Railway and opened in 1939, finished just in time to welcome King George VI and Queen Elizabeth on their visit to Canada. Its steep copper roof and carved stonework make it one of the city's most recognizable landmarks. A roughly $75 million renovation wrapped in 2019, bringing a new lobby, all 557 upgraded rooms and a plush Heritage Suite floor. The pull is the central location — about a 3-minute walk to the Burrard SkyTrain station and 4 minutes to Robson Street. Inside you get the Notch8 restaurant with its well-known afternoon tea, an indoor pool, Absolute Spa, a Fairmont Gold floor and a charming canine-ambassador program. Real reviews agree on the building's character, the location and the warm staff. It scores 8.8/10.

  • Iconic 1939 château building with rare classic character
  • Central Downtown location, walk to SkyTrain and Robson Street
  • Warm staff, charming canine ambassadors and a well-known afternoon tea
  • Some entry-level rooms are small and bathrooms feel older than the price
  • Pool and fitness get mixed reviews, and downtown parking is pricey
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Wedgewood Hotel & Spa — hotel No. 4 #4 Legendary boutique · on Robson Square 9

📍 Heart of Downtown directly across from Robson Square — a 2-minute walk to the Robson Street shopping strip, with the Vancouver Art Gallery next door and the Vancouver City Centre station (Canada Line) about a 5-minute walk away.

🏛️ Legendary boutique, opened 1984 🌸 Antiques and fresh flowers throughout 🍷 Michelin-listed Bacchus restaurant
Only Relais & Châteaux in the cityPrivate balcony in every roomMichelin-listed BacchusFamily-run for 40 years

Picture a small hotel in the heart of Downtown Vancouver that feels less like a big chain and more like the private mansion of old money throwing its doors open for you — that's Wedgewood Hotel & Spa, a boutique of around 89 rooms that Eleni Skalbania, a Greek-born woman from the island of Santorini, built up in 1984 from an old apartment building across from the courthouse, and which her family still runs to this day. What makes people fall for it is that every room has a private balcony looking out over Robson Square, with antique furniture, original art and vases of fresh flowers swapped out daily filling the lobby and rooms. The ground-floor Bacchus, done up in Venetian style, sits in the Michelin guide, and the location is about as central as it gets — walk out to Robson Street shopping, the art gallery and the Canada Line. Reviews agree on the warm, name-remembering service and the comfortably roomy spaces. Overall 9.0/10, best for couples and anyone who wants boutique character over a modern build.

  • Central location on Robson Square, walkable to everything
  • Private balcony in every room, plus roomy, comfortable spaces
  • Warm service that remembers your face and name
  • Classic antique style may not suit fans of modern design
  • Some rooms' balconies look out only onto the building opposite
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Fairmont Waterfront — hotel No. 5 #5 5-star · harbour views across from Canada Place 9

Fairmont Waterfront

From ~$360

📍 On Coal Harbour at 900 Canada Place Way, directly across from Canada Place — a walkway tunnel connects straight into the Vancouver Convention Centre, and Waterfront SkyTrain station is about a 5-minute walk.

🌊 Rooms with harbour and North Shore mountain views 🏊 Heated 50-foot outdoor pool on the roof, open year-round 🐝 Rooftop herb garden and beehives feeding the kitchen
harbour and North Shore mountain viewsheated rooftop outdoor poolrooftop herb garden and beehiveslinked to convention centre and cruise terminal

Fairmont Waterfront is a curved, 23-storey glass tower sitting right on Coal Harbour directly across from Canada Place. It opened in July 1991 and has become one of the waterfront hotels Vancouverites know best. The selling point is the view — most of the 489 rooms face the harbour, looking out at cruise ships at the dock, seaplanes touching down on the water, the North Shore mountains, and leafy Stanley Park not far off. Up on the roof there's a heated outdoor pool that runs 50 feet and stays open all year, plus a 24-hour fitness room with mountain views. The most distinctive piece is the 2,100-square-foot rooftop herb garden paired with beehives that keep more than 250,000 bees, feeding ingredients straight into the kitchen at ARC restaurant. A walkway tunnel links the hotel directly to the Vancouver Convention Centre and Canada Place without stepping outside. Reviews call the staff warm and the location hugely convenient. Overall 9.0/10.

  • Most rooms face the harbour and North Shore mountains, floor to window
  • Heated rooftop pool stays open all year, even in winter
  • Walkway tunnel connects straight to the convention centre and cruise terminal
  • Classic 1990s rooms are still being renovated in stages
  • Fees and overnight valet parking add up fast
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The Loden Hotel — hotel No. 6 #6 Luxury boutique · heart of Coal Harbour 9

The Loden Hotel

From ~$254

📍 Heart of Coal Harbour on Melville Street — about an 8-10 minute walk to Stanley Park and the Coal Harbour marina, with Burrard station (Expo Line) roughly a 7-minute walk away.

🛎️ Michelin Key service reviewers praise 🚗 Free in-city house car and bikes to borrow 🌳 Walk the waterfront to Stanley Park
77-room boutique in Coal HarbourName-remembering service reviewers praiseFree in-city house car and bikesFrench Tableau Bar Bistro

The Loden Hotel is a luxury boutique of just 77 rooms tucked away on Melville Street in the heart of Coal Harbour, one of the most upscale and quietest waterfront pockets of Vancouver. It opened in 2009 in a modern curved glass tower that reads sleek rather than flashy. What makes the place special isn't grandeur — it's service so warm that reviews agree on it almost across the board. Staff remember guests' names and sweat the small details, enough to earn a Michelin Key two years running and the number-one ranking in Vancouver on Tripadvisor. Rooms are done in warm contemporary tones, and the extras win travelers over: a free in-city house car, bikes to borrow for a ride along the water, a 24-hour fitness room, a spa, and the French Tableau Bar Bistro off the lobby. The location walks easily to Stanley Park and the Coal Harbour marina. Overall 9.0/10, best for couples and luxury travelers who value friendly service and a waterfront spot over a big full-service hotel.

  • Warm, name-remembering service, a Michelin Key two years running
  • Coal Harbour spot, walk the water to Stanley Park
  • Free in-city house car and bikes to borrow
  • Small boutique with no swimming pool
  • Breakfast and parking cost extra
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JW Marriott Parq Vancouver — hotel No. 7 #7 copper-clad tower · next to BC Place in Yaletown 8.9

📍 39 Smithe Street, in the heart of the downtown entertainment district next to BC Place and Rogers Arena — about a 5-minute walk to both, with the Stadium–Chinatown SkyTrain station (Expo/Millennium lines) 3 to 5 minutes away and Yaletown plus the False Creek Seawall a few minutes on foot.

🏟️ Next to BC Place & Rogers Arena, a 5-minute walk 🌿 Rooftop JW Garden park with real beehives 🧖 Rooftop Spa by JW with a city-view hot tub
next to BC Place & Rogers Arenarooftop park with beehivesrooftop Spa by JWHoney Salt by Elizabeth Blau

JW Marriott Parq Vancouver is one of the two towers in the Parq Vancouver entertainment complex, instantly recognizable for its curved copper walls that have become a new downtown landmark. It opened in 2017 right next to BC Place and Rogers Arena, the city's two biggest venues, in an entertainment district that puts chic Yaletown and the Seawall along False Creek just a few minutes' walk away. What sets it apart from the usual luxury hotel is the rooftop park — a large sky garden with herbs grown for the hotel kitchen, a pollinator garden, and real beehives. One level up is Spa by JW, with an outdoor hydrotherapy hot tub and panoramic city views, a big gym, a yoga zone, and a eucalyptus steam room. Dining is led by chef Elizabeth Blau at Honey Salt and The Victor. The 329 rooms and suites are done in white oak and floor-to-ceiling glass, some facing False Creek. Real reviews consistently praise the spotless housekeeping, the walk-everywhere location, and the modern design. Overall 8.9/10.

  • Walk to BC Place and Rogers Arena in about 5 minutes
  • Rooftop park with real beehives plus a rooftop spa with city views
  • Spotless modern rooms and good food at Honey Salt
  • Extra fees for parking, Wi-Fi and the lounge add up fast
  • No full swimming pool, and it sits above a casino
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The Sutton Place Hotel Vancouver — hotel No. 8 #8 classic luxury · heart of Downtown on Burrard 8.7

📍 Heart of Downtown on Burrard Street, between Smithe and Robson — about a 2-minute walk to the Robson Street shopping strip, and roughly 6 minutes to SkyTrain Vancouver City Centre station.

🍽️ Boulevard Kitchen (Michelin recommended) 🍸 Gerard Lounge, a legendary celebrity bar 🏊 Indoor pool under a glass roof + Vida Spa
classic European style in the city centerBoulevard Kitchen Michelin recommendedGerard Lounge celebrity bar2-minute walk to Robson shopping

The Sutton Place Hotel Vancouver is a 5-star, classic-European hotel in the heart of Downtown on Burrard Street, between Smithe and Robson. It has run since 1986 (originally Le Méridien), so it feels more like a warm old manor than a cold glass tower. The detail people always mention is the location — a few steps gets you to Robson Street, one of Canada's best-known shopping strips, and the theatre and arts district sits close by. Inside there's Boulevard Kitchen & Oyster Bar, a Michelin-recommended West Coast seafood room from chef Alex Chen; Gerard Lounge, a dim wood-panelled bar long known for drawing Hollywood stars during film-festival season; an indoor pool under a glass roof with a whirlpool; and a Vida Spa reviewers like. The 397 rooms run warm tones and dark-wood furniture, with reviews praising soft beds and friendly staff. Overall 8.7/10 — a fit for couples and travelers who like classic luxury in the middle of the city.

  • Heart of Downtown — Robson shopping is a 2-minute walk
  • Boulevard Kitchen is Michelin recommended, plus the legendary Gerard Lounge
  • Warm staff and soft beds — reviews agree on both
  • Classic design reads older than newer hotels; some rooms look dated
  • Some reviews hit uneven room upkeep
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L'Hermitage Hotel — hotel No. 9 #9 French boutique · Robson corner, good value 8.8

L'Hermitage Hotel

From ~$177

📍 Corner of Richards & Robson in the heart of downtown, at 788 Richards Street — about a 4-5 minute walk to Pacific Centre mall and the Vancouver Art Gallery, with Vancouver City Centre / Granville SkyTrain stations (Expo Line) roughly 5 minutes on foot.

🇫🇷 French-style boutique, ~60 rooms 🏊 Rooftop outdoor pool + hot tub 🛍️ Robson corner, walk to Pacific Centre
French boutique downtownRichards & Robson walkable cornerrooftop pool & marble bathroomsL'Orangerie praised breakfast

L'Hermitage Hotel is a French-style luxury boutique of around 60 rooms tucked onto the lower floors of a 31-storey condo tower on the corner of Richards and Robson in downtown Vancouver, open since 2008. What sets it apart from the big chains is a warm, private, European-boutique feel — classic French decor in gold, deep brown, and cream, rooms with Italian-marble bathrooms, plush robes, and beds reviewers call genuinely easy to sleep in. The surprise that wins people over is a rooftop outdoor pool with a hot tub and a small garden terrace, rare for a hotel this size in the middle of the city, backed by a 24-hour gym, a steam room, free loaner bikes, and L'Orangerie Dining Room & Lounge, where the breakfast — Belgian waffles and BC smoked salmon — gets singled out. You can walk to Pacific Centre, the Vancouver Art Gallery, and Robson shopping in minutes. It scores 8.8/10 and suits couples, business travelers, and city-walkers who want a boutique feel for less than the 5-star tariff.

  • Richards & Robson corner — walk to shopping, sights, and SkyTrain in every direction
  • Rooftop pool and Italian-marble bathrooms at a good-value price
  • Warm service and a breakfast at L'Orangerie reviewers single out
  • Lobby and common areas are small and plain, not grand
  • Some rooms are blocked by buildings and parking is a separate valet charge
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Pan Pacific Vancouver — hotel No. 10 #10 bay views · sail-roof building on Canada Place 8.7

📍 On top of Canada Place on the Coal Harbour waterfront — a 2-minute walk to Waterfront SkyTrain Station, with an elevator running straight down to the cruise ship terminal.

Sail-roof building on Canada Place 🏔️ Coal Harbour bay views plus the mountains 🏊 Year-round heated saltwater rooftop pool
on top of Canada Placefull Coal Harbour bay viewsyear-round saltwater rooftop pool2-min walk to Waterfront Station

Pan Pacific Vancouver sits right on top of Canada Place — the five white sail-shaped fabric roofs that make up the most recognizable waterfront landmark in the city. The selling point every review agrees on is the view: floor-to-ceiling glass opens onto the deep-blue Coal Harbour bay, Harbour Air seaplanes lifting off and landing all day, huge cruise ships docked directly below, and the North Shore mountains as the backdrop. The location is a roughly 2-minute walk to Waterfront Station, which bundles the SkyTrain, SeaBus and Canada Line in one spot, and you can stroll straight into the historic Gastown district. Cruise passengers take the elevator straight down to the terminal. Inside there is a year-round heated saltwater rooftop pool, the large Spa Utopia, and the water-view fine-dining room Five Sails. Overall 8.7/10 — a fit for couples, business travelers and anyone boarding a cruise who wants a waterfront base in the middle of town.

  • Coal Harbour bay and mountains fill the window
  • On Canada Place, a 2-min walk to the SkyTrain
  • Year-round saltwater rooftop pool plus Spa Utopia
  • City and parking-lot view rooms are far cheaper but ordinary
  • Rates spike hard during cruise season
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📊Comparativa · 10 hoteles

#HotelEstrellasPuntuaciónDesde / nocheZonaDestacado
1Fairmont Pacific Rim59.3~$443About a 3-5 minute walk to Waterfront Station (Expo Line, Canada Line to the airport, and the SeaBus to North Vancouver).#1 luxury flagship · Coal Harbour waterfront
2Rosewood Hotel Georgia59.3~$414SkyTrain Vancouver City Centre station, about a 3 to 5 minute walk.#2 classic luxury · 1927 downtown landmark
3Fairmont Hotel Vancouver48.8~$354Burrard SkyTrain station (Expo Line)#3 classic château · 1939 historic building
4Wedgewood Hotel & Spa59.0~$320Vancouver City Centre station (Canada Line)#4 Legendary boutique · on Robson Square
5Fairmont Waterfront59.0~$360Waterfront SkyTrain station (Expo and Canada Line, which runs straight to YVR airport) is about a 5-minute walk.#5 5-star · harbour views across from Canada Place
6The Loden Hotel59.0~$254Burrard station (Expo Line)#6 Luxury boutique · heart of Coal Harbour
7JW Marriott Parq Vancouver58.9~$337Stadium–Chinatown SkyTrain station (Expo/Millennium lines) about a 3 to 5-minute walk; connects to the Canada Line for YVR airport.#7 copper-clad tower · next to BC Place in Yaletown
8The Sutton Place Hotel Vancouver58.7~$280SkyTrain Vancouver City Centre station (Canada/Expo Line)#8 classic luxury · heart of Downtown on Burrard
9L'Hermitage Hotel48.8~$177Vancouver City Centre / Granville stations (Expo Line) about a 5-minute walk; the Expo Line connects through to Gastown and onward to Vancouver airport (YVR).#9 French boutique · Robson corner, good value
10Pan Pacific Vancouver58.7~$206Waterfront Station (SkyTrain / SeaBus / Canada Line) is a 2-minute walk, with the Canada Line running direct to YVR airport.#10 bay views · sail-roof building on Canada Place

Cuál elegir — por estilo de viaje

🏨
#1 luxury flagship · Coal Harbour waterfront
Fairmont Pacific Rim

#1 Fairmont Pacific Rim is about waking up over Vancouver's prettiest stretch of harbour, with the North Shore mountains and hydroplanes touching down filling the window — alongside an award-winning spa, a rooftop pool, and the busiest bar scene in town, it leans more on location, view, and lively public energy than on quiet seclusion.

🏨
#2 classic luxury · 1927 downtown landmark
Rosewood Hotel Georgia

#2 Rosewood Hotel Georgia is about sleeping inside a 1927 landmark restored to a shine in the heart of downtown — the draw is the historic building, the warm service reviewers keep praising, and the city-level restaurant and bar, more than the view or big rooms.

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#3 classic château · 1939 historic building
Fairmont Hotel Vancouver

#3 Fairmont Hotel Vancouver is a chance to sleep inside the copper-roofed castle that has been the face of the city for more than 80 years — the steep green roof and freshly renovated classic lobby win out over flashy rooms, with a central downtown location and warm service complete with greeting dogs.

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#4 Legendary boutique · on Robson Square
Wedgewood Hotel & Spa

#4 Wedgewood is a boutique as warm as an old-money friend's mansion — single-family-owned and run for 40 years, every room with a balcony, packed with antiques and fresh flowers, leaning on private charm and service that remembers your face and name rather than cutting-edge modern style.

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#5 5-star · harbour views across from Canada Place
Fairmont Waterfront

#5 Fairmont Waterfront is waking up to mountains, cruise ships and Vancouver's harbour filling the window, with a rooftop pool and the hotel's own herb garden and beehives — stronger on waterfront views and the direct link to the convention centre and cruise terminal than on full-blown classic luxury.

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#6 Luxury boutique · heart of Coal Harbour
The Loden Hotel

#6 The Loden is a compact luxury boutique that sells warm, name-remembering service and a Coal Harbour spot where you can walk the water to Stanley Park, leaning on attentive care and extras like a free house car rather than the grandeur of the building.

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 Vancouver segura para los turistas?
Sí — una de las grandes ciudades de América del Norte más seguras para los visitantes. Los delitos violentos contra turistas son raros. La advertencia honesta: el Downtown Eastside alrededor de East Hastings tiene una crisis de personas sin hogar y consumo de drogas al aire libre muy visible que puede resultar impactante. Puede que pases por sus bordes de camino a Gastown. No llames la atención con objetos de valor, mantente alerta y estarás bien.
¿Cuándo es mejor visitar Vancouver?
De mayo a septiembre es el momento ideal — seco, suave (18-25°C / 65-77°F), largos días y todo abierto. Julio y agosto son la temporada alta y cara. Junio y septiembre son los meses del viajero inteligente: mismo tiempo, menos gente, tarifas de hotel más bajas. De octubre a abril llueve de verdad — lleva una chaqueta impermeable de verdad. Diciembre tiene un ambiente navideño acogedor pero espera cielos grises.
¿En qué barrio debería alojarme en mi primera visita?
Coal Harbour para las mejores vistas y accesibilidad a pie al Stanley Park (Fairmont Pacific Rim, The Loden). El centro alrededor de la calle Robson para compras y restaurantes (Rosewood Hotel Georgia, Fairmont Hotel Vancouver). Waterfront / Canada Place si coges un crucero a Alaska (Fairmont Waterfront, Pan Pacific). Yaletown para la vida nocturna y el estadio BC Place para partidos de los Whitecaps, los BC Lions y conciertos.
¿Cómo llego del aeropuerto YVR al centro?
Toma el Canada Line SkyTrain — directo desde el aeropuerto al centro (Waterfront, Vancouver City Centre) en unos 25 minutos por alrededor de $9 CAD. Los trenes salen cada 6-10 minutos desde las 5 de la mañana hasta la 1 de la madrugada. Los taxis tienen tarifa fija de $35-45 CAD y tardan 25-35 minutos. Uber y Lyft operan ambos. Sáltate el coche de alquiler salvo que vayas a conducir a Whistler o la isla de Vancouver.
¿Cuál es la moneda y cómo funcionan las propinas?
Dólares canadienses (CAD), aproximadamente 35 THB por dólar. Las tarjetas funcionan en todas partes — Vancouver está casi sin efectivo. La propina es esperada: 18-20% en restaurantes, 15% para los taxis, $2-5 por bolsa para los maleteros. Los restaurantes añaden 5% de GST más 7% de PST sobre el precio del menú, así que una cena de $50 cuesta alrededor de $66 con impuestos y propina. Los datáfonos suelen sugerir un porcentaje de propina — el 20% es el estándar para un servicio excelente.
¿Necesito visado para Canadá?
La mayoría de visitantes de corta estancia (EE. UU., UK, UE, Australia, Japón) no necesitan visado — solo una Autorización Electrónica de Viaje (eTA), $7 CAD, solicitada online en 10 minutos. Los titulares de pasaporte tailandés, indio y de muchos países del Sudeste Asiático necesitan una Visa de Residente Temporal (TRV) completa con datos biométricos — solicítala al menos 6 semanas antes. Los ciudadanos de EE. UU. entran solo con pasaporte válido, sin eTA.
¿Qué comida debo probar en Vancouver?
El sushi y la cocina japonesa — los mejores de América del Norte fuera de Los Ángeles, con serios omakase en el centro ($150-300 por persona) e izakayas casuales por todas partes. Las gambas spot del Pacífico en mayo-junio, el cangrejo Dungeness y el salmón salvaje todo el año. Un Japadog de un puesto callejero para la versión barata e icónica. El Mercado Público de Granville Island para un almuerzo de paseo. El café local de tercera ola rivaliza con Melbourne.
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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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