
Lighthouse by Brown Hotels sits at Ben Yehuda Street 1, where the northern tip of Tel Aviv's beachfront grid meets the Mediterranean directly. The property holds MICHELIN Selected status in the 2025 guide, placing it within a compact tier of Tel Aviv hotels recognised for consistent quality. For visitors who want the coastline within steps and the city's commercial and cultural core within walking distance, the address does most of the work.
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- Address
- Ben Yehuda St 1, Tel Aviv-Yafo, 6380101, Israel
- Phone
- +972 3-766-0500
- Website
- brownhotels.com

Where the Street Grid Meets the Sea
Ben Yehuda Street runs the length of Tel Aviv's coastal corridor, and its first address puts Lighthouse by Brown Hotels at the precise point where that urban grid ends and the Mediterranean begins. In a city where proximity to the beach is a genuine variable, some hotels are a ten-minute walk from the waterfront, others are across the road, this position in the northern reaches of the shoreline removes the calculation entirely. The promenade, the beach itself, and the open water are immediate neighbours rather than destinations.
Tel Aviv's hotel market has consolidated around a handful of distinct positions: large-footprint international brands along the seafront, design-led boutique properties in the White City interior, and a smaller set of independent or semi-branded properties that hold prime coastal addresses without the corporate scale. Brown Hotels, the Israeli group behind this property, belongs to that third category. The group operates multiple addresses across Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, each positioned at the accessible end of the boutique tier. Lighthouse sits within that portfolio as the address most directly defined by its geography.
The MICHELIN Selected Designation and What It Signals
In the 2025 MICHELIN guide for hotels, Lighthouse by Brown Hotels appears under the Selected category, the guide's notation for properties that meet a threshold of quality and consistency without carrying a formal Key distinction. For context, MICHELIN Selected hotels in Tel Aviv are recognised, inspected, and positioned below the Key tier.
Within Tel Aviv specifically, the MICHELIN hotel list is short enough that inclusion represents a meaningful filter. The city has a competitive set of well-regarded independent and boutique hotels, among them Poli House, Alma Hotel, and Hotel Montefiore, and the MICHELIN designation helps distinguish properties that have passed an independent quality check from those operating on reputation alone. For the Brown Hotels group specifically, the recognition extends a pattern: Brown TLV Urban Hotel represents the group's original Tel Aviv footprint, while Lighthouse marks its most coastal and location-defined property.
The Neighbourhood Logic of a Northern Seafront Address
The northern end of Tel Aviv's beachfront operates differently from the hotel-dense central stretch near Gordon Beach and Frishman. Fewer large-scale resort properties anchor the area, the promenade is less congested, and the transition into the everyday city fabric happens faster. From Ben Yehuda 1, the walk south covers Tel Aviv's full waterfront sequence, from quieter northern stretches down through the busier central beaches and eventually toward Jaffa, the historic port district that has developed its own significant hospitality presence in recent years, anchored by properties like Soho House Tel Aviv, Jaffa.
Inland from the address, Ben Yehuda Street itself provides direct access to the Bauhaus-influenced White City districts, the market corridors of HaCarmel, and the restaurant concentration around Rothschild Boulevard and Florentin. Tel Aviv's dining scene rewards pedestrian access: the city's most-talked-about restaurants tend to cluster in neighbourhoods best reached on foot or by bicycle rather than taxi. A northern seafront address covers both the coast and the urban interior without requiring a vehicle.
Positioning Within the Brown Hotels Group and the Broader Market
Brown Hotels has built a recognisable position in the Israeli market by operating design-conscious properties at price points that sit below the full-luxury tier occupied by addresses like Dan Tel Aviv and David InterContinental Tel Aviv. The group's properties share a consistent visual language, considered interiors, compact footprints, an emphasis on public spaces and communal areas, that places them closer to the European boutique hotel model than to the resort conventions of large beachfront operators.
Lighthouse fits that template while carrying the group's most location-defined name. The lighthouse reference is geographic rather than decorative: the address at the northern point of the coastal strip historically served as a navigation reference for ships approaching Tel Aviv's port, and the name connects the property to that maritime function rather than to a generic design motif. Among the group's Tel Aviv properties, this one occupies the most distinct physical position. For guests choosing between Brown Hotels addresses, Sam&Blondi and Lily & Bloom Hotel offer alternative Brown-adjacent positions in different neighbourhood contexts.
Planning a Stay: Practical Considerations
Tel Aviv operates year-round as a destination, but the Mediterranean climate creates clear windows. Spring (March through May) and autumn (September through November) offer the most manageable temperatures for combining beach access with city exploration. Summer brings high humidity and peak occupancy; winters are mild by European standards but rainy enough to reduce the seafront appeal. The address at Ben Yehuda 1 is directly served by the coastal bus routes and within reasonable distance of Tel Aviv's central train station, which connects to Ben Gurion International Airport in roughly 25 minutes by rail.
Booking for Lighthouse follows the pattern of the wider Brown Hotels group: the portfolio is available through the group's own channels and major third-party platforms. MICHELIN Selected status means the property appears on the Michelin guide's hotels listing, which some travellers use as an independent booking filter. Given the property's direct seafront proximity, rooms facing the Mediterranean are the more requested configurations, and lead time for those positions tends to extend during summer months and Israeli public holidays, when domestic travel from Jerusalem and other cities adds to international demand.
At a Glance
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Price | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Lighthouse by Brown HotelsThis venue — the venue you are viewing | $$$ | |
| Poli House | $$$ | Nachalat Binyamin, Experimental luxury boutique hotel blending 1930s Bauhaus heritage with contemporary design innovation. |
| The Vera Hotel | $$$$ | Newe Ẕedeq, Hyperlocal industrial-chic boutique in historic building blending raw textures with modern ease. |
| Hotel in the Basel Complex | $$$ | Basel Complex, Large mixed‑use urban complex with an integrated upscale hotel component above or alongside luxury residences and retail.[7][9][11][1] |
| Brown TLV Urban Hotel | $$$ | City Centre, urban boutique with 70s faded glam |
| The Setai Tel Aviv | $$$$ | Jaffa, Historic luxury boutique in restored Ottoman buildings |
At a Glance
- Modern
- Trendy
- Whimsical
- Lively
- Romantic Getaway
- Weekend Escape
- Rooftop Pool
- Panoramic View
- Terrace
- Wifi
- Fitness Center
- Spa
- Pool
- Room Service
- Concierge
- Restaurant
- Waterfront
- Skyline
Lively and modern with rich navy and emerald tones, metallic accents, and a hip atmosphere blending mid-century modern aesthetics with contemporary whimsy.














