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Austrian Alps, Austria

Interalpen-Hotel Tyrol

Price≈$421
Size274 rooms
GroupLiebherr Group
NoiseQuiet
CapacityLarge
La Liste
Michelin
Forbes
Preferred Hotels
Virtuoso

Sitting at 1,300 metres on a secluded plateau above Seefeld, Interalpen-Hotel Tyrol is a five-star superior property that earned Falstaff's Best Hotel in Austria designation and a Michelin star in the Michelin Guide Austria 2025. With 283 rooms and suites, a 57,000-square-foot spa, and a La Liste score of 98.5 points for 2026, it positions itself firmly within Austria's upper tier of grand alpine hotels.

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Address
Doktor-Hans-Liebherr-Alpenstraße 1, 6410 Telfs
Phone
+43 50 80930
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Interalpen-Hotel Tyrol hotel in Austrian Alps, Austria
About

A Grand Lodge at 1,300 Metres

The approach to Interalpen-Hotel Tyrol along the Doktor-Hans-Liebherr-Alpenstraße tells you something about the category this property occupies: the road climbs away from the valley floor, the tree line thins, and the building arrives not as a surprise but as a logical conclusion to the altitude. At 1,300 metres above sea level on a plateau near Seefeld, the hotel sits above the immediate noise of Tyrolean resort towns without being genuinely remote. Innsbruck is accessible, the ski terrain of the Seefeld Olympic region is close, and yet the plateau delivers the kind of spatial separation that smaller valley hotels in this price tier cannot replicate.

The Architecture of the Interior

Grand alpine hotels across Austria and Switzerland have spent decades negotiating between two competing design vocabularies: the maximalist hunting-lodge register, heavy with antler motifs and dark timber, and the cleaner Scandinavian-inflected minimalism that arrived in the 1990s and has dominated alpine new-builds since. Interalpen-Hotel Tyrol sits emphatically in the first tradition. The grand lobby is organised around a wooden imperial staircase of significant scale, framed by ornate columns and chandeliers of a size that requires a ceiling height most alpine properties cannot achieve. Antique-style tapestries and paintings reinforce the register. Warm timber runs through the public spaces consistently, and fresh flowers anchor the arrangement in the present rather than letting it slip into pure pastiche.

The effect is closer to a Viennese palatial sensibility transposed into alpine materials than to the rustic Stube aesthetic found at mid-market Tyrolean properties. It is a property that has chosen scale and grandeur over the intimate farmhouse idiom that defines places like Naturhotel Waldklause in Längenfeld or the design-led approach at Bergland Sölden in Solden.

Rooms: Scale and Outlook

The 283 rooms and suites span a wide range, from approximately 312 square feet at the entry end to more than 2,600 square feet in the largest suites. Every unit includes a private balcony or terrace, which is the functional core of the room offer: the plateau position means that mountain views are available from nearly every orientation, and floor-to-ceiling windows are standard rather than an upgrade feature. Timber accents and alpine furnishings continue the lobby's material logic into the guest rooms, while bathrooms in much of the inventory run to marble finishes, walk-in rain showers, and deep soaking tubs, with heated floors in many configurations.

At the upper end, suites such as the Panorama Suite add private spa facilities, walk-in closets, and expanded living areas. This tier of room competes with comparable suite configurations at Rosewood Schloss Fuschl in Hof bei Salzburg and, at the urban end of Austrian five-star accommodation, Hotel Sacher Wien in Vienna. The distinction at Interalpen is that the view, rather than historical association or design concept, is the primary luxury delivered at that price point.

The Spa: Scale as a Differentiator

Within the Austrian alpine spa category, property size has become a meaningful differentiator. Smaller wellness hotels, such as Aktiv & Wellnesshotel Bergfried in Tux or Alpen-Wellness Resort Hochfirst in Obergurgl, deliver focused, intimate spa programming with a defined philosophy. Interalpen operates in a different register: at 57,000 square feet, the spa here is one of the largest in the Alps by floor area. The inventory includes a panorama pool with direct mountain outlook, a dedicated Sauna Village running from bio-sauna to saltwater grotto, and an extensive treatment menu. The logic is abundance rather than curation: guests with several days on property can work through the offer without repetition, which suits the longer-stay guest more than the weekend visitor who might prefer the more focused programming at Alpenresort Schwarz in Obermieming.

Dining: A Michelin Star on the Plateau

Alpine hotel dining has historically divided between rustic in-house huts serving regional staples and more formal dining rooms chasing international recognition. Interalpen runs both formats concurrently. The Interalpen Mountain Hut handles the hearty Tyrolean register, while Wintergarten delivers more refined cuisine with the panoramic outlook the building's position affords. The Wintergarten carried a Michelin star in the Michelin Guide Austria 2025, which places the property in a relatively small group of Austrian alpine hotels able to offer that standard of kitchen alongside a full resort facility set. The Fireplace Bar rounds out the evening offer as a wind-down space. For those exploring the wider Tyrolean dining scene, the Austrian Alps guide covers the regional context in more depth.

Recognition and Competitive Position

The property holds a La Liste score of 98.5 points for 2026. Falstaff, the Austrian food and lifestyle publication with authoritative standing in the German-speaking hospitality market, designated it Leading Hotel in Austria. These signals together locate Interalpen in a competitive set that includes Austria's most recognised properties: Grand Tirolia Kitzbühel, Hotel Almhof Schneider in Lech, and Schloss Mönchstein in Salzburg each occupy distinct regional niches, but the Falstaff national designation puts Interalpen at the head of that peer group by that particular measure. Google reviewer sentiment across more than 1,300 reviews sits at 4.8 out of 5, which for a 283-room property at this price point indicates consistent delivery rather than isolated excellence.

Activities and Seasons

The plateau location supports a dual-season model. Winter access to the Seefeld Olympic region's ski terrain is the primary draw for cold-weather guests, and the hotel is structured accordingly, with facilities and programming that assume skiing as a baseline activity. Summer opens the surrounding terrain to hiking, mountain biking, and guided nature walks, which the hotel facilitates through its position as a trailhead-adjacent property. The year-round mountain view remains constant across both seasons, which means the core atmospheric offer, the plateau isolation and the alpine outlook, does not vary significantly with the calendar. LEADING Hotel Hochgurgl, may offer stronger winter-sport adjacency, but Interalpen's broader facility set makes the summer case more persuasively than most dedicated ski hotels.

Planning a Stay

Alpine Resort Sacher Seefeld, which occupies a closer geographic position to the Seefeld village itself, or Falkensteiner Schlosshotel Velden for a lake-district alternative within Austria's luxury tier.

Frequently asked questions

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At a Glance
Vibe
  • Elegant
  • Scenic
  • Sophisticated
  • Cozy
Best For
  • Wellness Retreat
  • Romantic Getaway
  • Family Vacation
Experience
  • Panoramic View
  • Destination Spa
Amenities
  • Spa
  • Pool
  • Sauna
  • Fitness Center
  • Room Service
  • Concierge
  • Wifi
Views
  • Mountain
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelQuiet
CapacityLarge
Rooms274
Check-In15:00
Check-Out11:00
PetsAllowed

Light-filled spaces with natural woods, stone, and roaring fireplaces create a warm, grand yet inviting mountain retreat atmosphere.