Four Seasons Hotel Los Angeles at Beverly Hills



Four Seasons Hotel Los Angeles at Beverly Hills sits on tree-lined Doheny Drive, offering 285 rooms with private balconies, a saltwater pool, an open-air fourth-floor fitness center, and Culina, an Italian restaurant with al fresco dining. Rated 90.5 points by La Liste Top Hotels 2026, the property sits within walking distance of Robertson Boulevard and Rodeo Drive, with luxury car transfers available within a two-mile radius.
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Beverly Hills at Full Volume: The Four Seasons on Doheny Drive
The luxury hotel corridor in Beverly Hills runs a tighter competitive set than its reputation suggests. Between Doheny Drive and the far side of Rodeo Drive, a cluster of properties competes for the same guest: the well-travelled visitor who wants proximity to the city's fashion and entertainment axis without sacrificing the sense of seclusion that distinguishes a hotel stay from simply renting an expensive room. The Beverly Hills Hotel commands its own mythology on Sunset Boulevard; The Peninsula Beverly Hills trades on precise service architecture; The Maybourne Beverly Hills pitches a more design-forward identity. The Four Seasons Hotel Los Angeles at Beverly Hills answers with scale, greenery, and a food-and-beverage program serious enough to draw guests who are not staying the night.
La Liste ranked this property at 90.5 points in its 2026 Leading Hotels edition, placing it inside a narrow tier of Los Angeles addresses that earn consistent recognition from major international benchmarks. The Google rating sits at 4.6 across more than 2,300 reviews, a volume that provides more statistical weight than properties with fewer data points. These numbers reflect a property that performs reliably rather than one that occasionally dazzles — which is a meaningful distinction when planning a multi-night stay in a city where restaurant and schedule logistics demand a hotel that does not require management of its own.
How a Stay Sequences Here
Arriving at 300 South Doheny Drive, the transition from Los Angeles street noise to the hotel's interior registers immediately through the change in air and light. The lobby opens onto a garden corridor that runs through the property, framing each progression from room to restaurant to pool as a movement through planted space rather than interior corridor. This is a deliberate design choice, and one that earns its keep in a city where outdoor living is not a seasonal amenity but a year-round expectation.
The 285 guest rooms each carry a private balcony, which positions the property differently from Beverly Hills competitors where balcony access is tiered by category or limited to suites. Rooms are fitted with flat-screen televisions, an iPad loaded with the property's in-house app for concierge requests and room service orders, a writing desk, armchair, glass-leading table, armoire, and DVD player. Marble bathrooms and walk-in closets complete the standard configuration. The architecture of the guest room supports a particular kind of Los Angeles stay: one where mornings begin with coffee on the balcony before the city heats up, not in a sealed interior with blackout curtains.
Culina and the Logic of Al Fresco Dining in Los Angeles
Los Angeles has spent the past decade sharpening its Italian restaurant offer. The city's appetite for Italian cooking that treats California produce and Italian technique as complementary rather than competing has produced a set of restaurants serious enough to invite comparison with mid-market Roman or Milanese options. Against this context, Culina at the Four Seasons operates as a hotel restaurant that earns attention on its own terms. The seasonally influenced Italian menu, al fresco patio setting, and a wine list that draws editorial recognition from named publications place it in a different category from the standard hotel dining room, where the menu exists to serve captured guests rather than to attract local diners who chose specifically to be here.
Live music runs Friday and Saturday evenings at Windows Lounge, which provides a social rhythm to the weekend stay that many Beverly Hills properties forgo. In a neighbourhood where the post-dinner hour can feel underprogrammed compared to West Hollywood or Downtown, this is a logistically useful detail for guests whose evenings do not end at dessert. Our full Los Angeles restaurants guide provides broader context on where Culina sits within the city's wider Italian dining landscape.
Pool, Spa, and the Open-Air Fitness Tier
The pool deserves specific attention because its engineering is unusual in the category. The saltwater format distinguishes it from chlorinated alternatives on sensory grounds, and the soft-bottom construction creates a feel underfoot that diverges from the standard tiled pool floor. These are not marketing details but physical facts that affect how a guest actually spends time in the water. Private cabanas on the pool deck extend the usable outdoor space and absorb the gap between a standard sunlounger and a managed private environment.
The fitness center occupies the hotel's fourth-floor terrace, making it open-air by design. In a city where year-round sunshine is the operational baseline, this positions the fitness offer as a direct engagement with the climate rather than a retreat from it. The contrast with the sealed, air-conditioned fitness floors found in vertically stacked urban hotels is clear. Properties like Canyon Ranch Tucson or Post Ranch Inn in Big Sur have built entire reputations around outdoor wellness architecture; the Four Seasons Beverly Hills applies the same logic at a smaller scale within a dense urban context.
Spa carries both indoor treatment rooms and outdoor treatment options, adding a further layer to what amounts to a coherent wellness sequence: outdoor fitness, saltwater pool, cabana recovery, and spa treatment, all on property without requiring a car. The salon and nail suite complete a full-day program for guests who prefer not to move between venues.
Location and the Neighbourhood Logic
Doheny Drive sits at the western boundary of Beverly Hills, within walking distance of Robertson Boulevard's fashion retail and a short drive from Rodeo Drive. This geography matters because Beverly Hills' luxury accommodation market increasingly segments by what a guest wants to be near. Guests prioritising the fashion axis of Robertson and Rodeo are differently served than those whose priority is West Hollywood's restaurant concentration or Downtown's arts programming. The Four Seasons Beverly Hills addresses the former directly: the hotel's location makes the shopping district the primary neighbourhood amenity, with West Hollywood accessible quickly by car.
The property offers luxury car transportation within a two-mile radius, which covers a substantial portion of the immediate Beverly Hills grid, Robertson Boulevard, and the southern edge of West Hollywood. This removes the friction of street parking or rideshare timing for short trips, a practical detail that earns its weight during the gap between checkout and a late lunch reservation or a boutique appointment.
For travellers whose itinerary extends beyond Beverly Hills, the Los Angeles luxury hotel market offers distinct alternatives depending on orientation: Hotel Bel-Air for garden-retreat seclusion, Chateau Marmont for West Hollywood positioning, Downtown LA Proper Hotel for the arts district axis, and L'Ermitage Beverly Hills or The Sun Rose West Hollywood for more boutique formats. Each serves a different kind of Los Angeles trip.
Guests travelling with pets should note that the property accepts dogs under fifteen pounds, with amenities that include Evian water bowls and hotel-provided pet beds. This is a specific operational detail that affects booking decisions for a defined segment of travellers, and the weight limit is a hard constraint worth confirming at the time of reservation.
Planning Your Stay
The Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts global booking infrastructure means reservations are accessible through the brand's central channels, with concierge services reachable via the in-room iPad app. For comparison against other Four Seasons properties in the United States, Four Seasons at The Surf Club in Surfside represents the brand's Florida positioning. International alternatives in a similar tier include Aman New York, Badrutt's Palace Hotel in St. Moritz, and Aman Venice, each occupying a different segment of the global luxury hotel market. For those who prioritise design-led farm-to-table formats, SingleThread Farm Inn in Healdsburg or Auberge du Soleil in Napa represent the Northern California alternative. Weekend live music at Windows Lounge runs Friday and Saturday; Culina's al fresco terrace operates independently of those evenings and draws non-hotel guests, which means securing a patio table during peak weekend hours requires planning ahead.
Booking and Cost Snapshot
A quick comparison pulled from similar venues we track in the same category.
| Venue | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Four Seasons Hotel Los Angeles at Beverly Hills | This venue | ||
| Hotel Bel-Air | Michelin 3 Key | ||
| The Beverly Hills Hotel | Michelin 3 Key | ||
| Chateau Marmont | Michelin 2 Key | ||
| The Peninsula Beverly Hills | Michelin 2 Key | ||
| The Sun Rose West Hollywood | Michelin 2 Key |
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Light-filled rooms with balconies, tranquil pool deck and gardens, elegant terrace dining with warm attentive service.














