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Austin

Explore Austin

Hotels (10)
Restaurants (9)
Spa (3)

Where to Stay

1. Commodore Perry Estate, Auberge Collection

2 Michelin Keys· Forbes Five-Star

This 1928 Italianate mansion on ten acres of Austin parkland once hosted Gatsby-era parties thrown by its namesake owners. Designer Ken Fulk preserved that glamour while adding hand-painted murals and Texas antiques from Round Top. The 50-foot oval pool channels Slim Aarons, while Lutie's restaurant serves Southern cooking amid formal gardens. Cocktail classes in the apothecary and ice cream bikes add playful touches for families.

2. Austin Proper Hotel

1 Michelin Key· Forbes Five-Star

Kelly Wearstler's interiors draw on Texas colors and local artisan work, from vintage carpet patchwork lining the wooden staircase to the gingham-patterned lobby ceiling. The fifth-floor pool overlooks Shoal Creek, while a 2,000-square-foot gym faces Lady Bird Lake. McGuire Moorman Hospitality runs The Peacock, serving Mediterranean plates like harissa beef and Aleppo garlic Gulf shrimp. Families and design-focused travelers find equal appeal.

3. Four Seasons Hotel Austin (Austin)

Forbes Five-Star

Perched along Lady Bird Lake with downtown Austin at its doorstep, this renovated property draws musicians and celebrities to interiors that marry rustic Texas character with the city's vibrant art scene. Richard Sandoval's Ciclo delivers modern Texan cuisine with Latin influences, while the indoor-outdoor Live Oak lounge channels Guadalajara. Families find children's amenities thoughtfully provided; pets up to sixty pounds stay fee-free with dedicated menus and housemade biscuits.

4. Hotel ZaZa Austin

1 Michelin Key

Hotel ZaZa Austin channels the city's creative energy through an eclectic design mixing bohemian and modernist influences, pointedly avoiding Texan clichés. The seventh-floor Group Therapy restaurant opens onto a pool deck where live music sessions capture Austin's signature spirit. ZaSpa welcomes both guests and locals, while art installations punctuate the 159 rooms. A spirited choice for travelers seeking urban sophistication with genuine local character.

5. Soho House Austin

1 Michelin Key

Soho House's first southern U.S. outpost occupies South Congress Avenue with 46 adults-only rooms that layer Texas modernism against antique Spanish details. The outdoor pool anchors a social scene extending to Club Cecconi's terrace, while a 46-seat screening room, vinyl listening bar, and intimate music venue reflect the creative-industry clientele Austin now attracts. Contemporary art threads through every corridor.

6. The LINE Austin

Architect Michael Hsu converted a mid-century motor lodge on Lady Bird Lake into this 428-room industrial-chic property, where full-length windows frame either water or skyline views. Top Chef winner Kristen Kish helms Arlo Grey, applying French-Italian technique to American comfort classics, while the rooftop bar and cult-favorite Alfred coffee draw a design-conscious crowd. Pet-friendly, with an outdoor pool and garden terrace.

7. Lake Austin Spa Resort (Austin)

Ranked among America's finest wellness retreats, Lake Austin Spa Resort delivers an adults-only sanctuary for guests fourteen and older seeking comprehensive restoration. The all-inclusive program pairs healthy gourmet cuisine with an extensive roster of activities—from lakeside fitness classes to creative workshops—complementing signature spa treatments. Pet-friendly garden accommodations welcome four-legged companions, an uncommon touch in the wellness sphere.

8. Austin Motel

South Congress Avenue's iconic 1938 sign now fronts a 41-room boutique retreat where bold orange beds, countertops, and wallpaper create unapologetic retro interiors softened by Tivoli radios and minimalist furnishings. The former parking lot has become an open-air lounge anchored by tropical-themed Rocky's Bar, while the original pool retains its vintage charm. Pet-friendly, with complimentary bikes and EV charging, this Bunkhouse property suits travelers who prefer personality over polish.

9. Frame Hotel - SoCo

Twenty suites orbit a courtyard garden where koi drift beneath a trickling fountain—the sole communal gathering point at this adults-only retreat on South Congress Avenue. Frame Hotel strips hospitality to its essentials: no front desk, no elevator, no restaurant. Japanese-inflected interiors feature built-in oak furniture and Sferra linens, while sliding glass doors open onto private wood-lined verandas. Pure minimalism for travelers seeking stillness amid Austin's busiest stretch.

10. Frame Hotel - Treehouse

Seven rooms compose this adults-only retreat in SoCo, where Austin architects crafted a multi-level Zen structure with climate-conscious features—rain screen façade, strategic window placement to temper Texas heat. Inside, local artwork shares space with Arne Jacobsen Egg chairs and Euroluce fixtures. The keyless, front-desk-free concept suits independent travelers who prefer digital check-in and serene, design-forward surroundings.

Where to Eat

1. Barley Swine

★ Michelin

Behind a casual, come-as-you-are façade on Burnet Road, Barley Swine delivers one-Michelin-starred cooking rooted in Southwestern traditions yet globally fluent. The seasonal tasting menu moves from hiramasa with caramelized apple through wood-fired grouper in creamy curry to wagyu ribeye with crispy black garlic—each course balancing refinement with playful invention. Produce grown onsite and rainwater-fed gardens underscore a genuine commitment to sustainability.

2. Craft Omakase

★ Michelin

Behind an unassuming Rosedale façade, Chefs Charlie Wang and Nguyen Nguyen orchestrate a Michelin-starred omakase where Japanese-sourced fish receives meticulous, restrained treatment. The progression moves from pink shrimp aguachile through hamachi crudo brightened with yuzu-honey, to ocean trout crowned with furikake crafted from its own crisped skin. Shima aji arrives with shiso and ume—each piece a study in textural precision.

3. Hestia

★ Michelin

A twenty-foot hearth dominates the open kitchen at this one-Michelin-starred downtown address, where live fire shapes every course. Texas produce receives the flame treatment throughout—'embered' cantaloupe arrives with green tomato and shiso blossoms, while the signature seared scallop gains drama from a tableside pour of beef tallow over mushroom gelée. Both tasting menu and à la carte reward adventurous palates.

4. Apt 115

Michelin Selected

This intimate East Austin wine bar earned its Michelin Plate through dishes that drift between Mexican influences and European technique. Tuna sashimi arrives bright with grapefruit ponzu and chili crisp, while duck confit comes deeply satisfying alongside spaetzle and purple carrots in black tea jus. A cheese plate with house-made strawberry-jalapeño spread and warm baguette suits the unhurried mood, and strawberry panna cotta with moscato syrup closes evenings gently.

5. Fabrik

Michelin Selected

Chef Je Wallerstein's intimate East Austin dining room showcases vegan cooking at its most inventive, built around a seasonally driven tasting menu that spotlights Texas purveyors by name. Dishes reveal careful technique: house-made green gondolini with garlic confit and yuzu, bold Carolina Gold rice congee, and a finale of Persian lime sherbet dusted with chili and macadamia. Ambitious, produce-forward, and quietly essential.

6. Jeffrey's

Michelin Selected

Clarksville's historic calm sets the stage for Jeffrey's, where contemporary American cooking arrives with polished confidence. The kitchen demonstrates real finesse—English pea tortellini enriched with morels and sweetbreads, Pekin duck breast finished au poivre with crackling skin. Steakhouse classics receive thoughtful updates: creamed spinach brightened by Fresno chili, steak frites served alongside horseradish aïoli. Intimate tables and gracious service complete a refined neighborhood retreat.

7. Ling Kitchen

Michelin Selected

Chef Ling Qi Wu hosts just twenty guests per evening in her kitchen for an intimate tasting menu of contemporary Chinese cuisine. The procession unfolds with whimsical touches—animal-shaped dumplings filled with steamed lobster, turmeric beef, and crawfish in XO sauce; duck crowned with foie gras and caviar alongside a playfully cut bao. Each course balances technical precision with a convivial, dinner-party atmosphere.

8. Tare

Michelin Selected

Behind an unmarked door in a North Austin office building, chef Michael Carranza orchestrates a kappo-style counter experience where dry-aged fish from Japan meets Texas ingenuity. The omakase centers on embellished nigiri—Spanish tuna, New Zealand ocean trout, Hokkaido scallop brightened with chorizo and shiro dashi aioli. A piece of chicharron cradling toro tartare captures the kitchen's cross-cultural confidence.

9. Toshokan

Michelin Selected

Behind a wall of books inside Holey Moley—an adult playground of mini golf and tiki cocktails—Chef Saine Wong runs a soundproof omakase counter seating barely a handful. The irreverence carries through to the nigiri: hamachi dressed with jalapeño, lime zest, and salt channels a spicy margarita, while wagyu topped with grated egg yolk nods playfully to steak and eggs.

What to Do

1. Fairmont Spa Austin

Forbes Five-Star

Texas Hill Country botanicals anchor the treatment menu at this sixth-floor retreat, where local brands Olive + M and Candle Daddy supply the product line and therapists craft house-made aromatherapeutic scrubs. Mid-session surprises—chilled cucumber slices, eucalyptus towels, a flute of bubbles—arrive with uncanny timing. The women's relaxation lounge channels Slim Aarons' 1950s Palm Springs aesthetic, while a saline hot tub frames downtown's skyline.

2. The Spa at Four Seasons Hotel Austin

Forbes Five-Star

A pink Himalayan salt wall anchors the relaxation lounge at this 4,000-square-foot lakeside retreat, its mineral surface credited with neutralizing stress-inducing ions. The signature Turquoise Sage Arnica Deep Tissue Massage draws on native botanicals—lavender, arnica, sage—while floor-to-ceiling glass panels in the fitness center slide open to Lady Bird Lake breezes. Eucalyptus steam rooms and a heated saltwater pool complete the restorative circuit.

3. Verbena Spa at Austin Proper Hotel

Forbes Five-Star

Kelly Wearstler's fourth-floor retreat wraps guests in burlap, linen, and natural wood across five treatment rooms. The signature Tequila, The Proper Way ritual opens with a sip of LALO agave spirit and guided meditation before dry brushing and a botanical massage infused with cypress, vetiver, and citrus, palo santo smoke drifting through the space. A wellness bar offers CBD tea and housemade vegan muffins; locker rooms gleam with marble, brass, and Aesop products.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which Austin neighborhoods offer the best hotel locations?

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Downtown along Congress Avenue provides walkable access to the State Capitol and Sixth Street entertainment district. The Second Street District offers proximity to Lady Bird Lake trails. South Congress appeals to travelers seeking boutique properties amid eclectic shops, while East Austin suits those drawn to the city's creative scene and emerging restaurant corridor.

What defines Austin's dining scene compared to other Texas cities?

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Austin's culinary identity blends Central Texas barbecue traditions with a farm-to-table movement supported by Hill Country producers. The city's Mexican food heritage runs deep — breakfast tacos are a daily ritual — while newer establishments incorporate influences from Southeast Asian and Japanese cuisines, reflecting the city's tech-driven demographic shifts over the past decade.

When is the best time to visit Austin?

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Spring brings mild temperatures and wildflower season, when bluebonnets blanket the surrounding Hill Country. Autumn offers relief from summer heat and coincides with Austin City Limits festival in October. Winter remains pleasant by national standards, though South by Southwest in March transforms the city with its convergence of music, film, and technology conferences.