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Amman, Jordan

The St. Regis Amman

LocationAmman, Jordan
Michelin
Forbes
World Travel Awards

Positioned at Amman's Fifth Circle, the commercial and diplomatic hub of Jordan's capital, The St. Regis Amman places 258 rooms within reach of the city's main cultural sites, upscale retail, and historic neighbourhoods. The property carries the St. Regis brand's New York lineage while incorporating locally sourced materials and Jordanian culinary programming across four distinct dining venues. Rates begin at $265 per night. Google reviewers rate it 4.6 from 3,546 reviews.

The St. Regis Amman hotel in Amman, Jordan
About

Fifth Circle and What That Address Actually Means

Amman organises its luxury hotel tier around a series of numbered roundabouts running west from the city centre, and the Fifth Circle has become the address of choice for the capital's flagship international properties. The Fairmont Amman, the Four Seasons Hotel Amman, and the Ritz-Carlton, Amman all operate within the same district, making this corridor a concentration of the city's most formal hotel infrastructure. What distinguishes a stay in this pocket is less about any single property and more about what the postcode unlocks: the western neighbourhoods' retail and dining stretch in one direction, and a taxi ride east opens up Rainbow Street, the Jordan Museum, and the Roman-era ruins of the Amman Citadel.

The St. Regis Amman, on Shafiq Al Hayek Street, occupies a sandstone-toned high-rise whose exterior reads as restrained in the context of the area's architectural ambitions. That understatement is partly deliberate. The St. Regis brand carries a specific New York inheritance, tracing back to the original St. Regis on Fifth Avenue, and the Amman property works within that tradition while adapting it to a Jordanian context. Across the global St. Regis portfolio, properties like The Fifth Avenue Hotel in New York City or comparable flagships in other capitals set the formal template; the Amman iteration pulls that formality into the Middle East without erasing local reference points entirely.

Rooms, Materials, and the Logic of 258 Keys

At 258 rooms, The St. Regis Amman operates at a scale that keeps it firmly in the full-service luxury tier rather than the boutique segment occupied by design-led independents. Compare that footprint to smaller properties like Castello di Reschio in Lisciano Niccone or Casa Maria Luigia in Modena, where key counts often stay below 40, and the difference in guest experience logic becomes clear. At this scale, the hotel supports multiple restaurants, a full spa operation, meeting infrastructure, and 24-hour room service simultaneously, which is precisely the point for business travellers and leisure guests who want a complete in-house offering rather than a more curated residential experience.

Room finishes reflect both the brand standard and a deliberate local sourcing decision. Frette linens and marble bathrooms are consistent with what St. Regis delivers across its portfolio, from Aman New York-adjacent price tiers down through the broader Marriott International luxury tier. The Amman property's specific differentiation comes through the bathroom programme: Trinitae products, a Jordan-based line enriched with Dead Sea minerals, appear throughout guest rooms. It is a small but pointed decision that places the property's material culture closer to its geography than a purely imported luxury standard would allow. The John Jacob Astor suite, named for the founder who commissioned the original New York property, represents the leading of the room hierarchy here.

Four Restaurants and the Range They Cover

Luxury hotels at this scale in Amman typically support multi-outlet dining programmes, and the St. Regis runs four distinct venues covering Italian, French-influenced Californian, Jordanian, and rooftop grilled formats. That breadth is a function of the hotel's size and its dual role serving both hotel guests and Amman's dining-out population.

Mercado anchors the Italian position with a breakfast buffet that inspects well for both range and quality, set against a black-and-white marble interior with yellow seating. Segreta moves into French brasserie territory with California-inflected touches, operating in an alfresco format with a garden-inspired setting and natural light as its primary design asset. Tamara addresses Jordanian cuisine with a more atmospheric treatment, candlelit and plush-seated in a way that positions it as the property's date-night offering. For a broader picture of where these restaurants sit within the city's dining scene, our full Amman restaurants guide maps the wider field.

Zenith, the rooftop venue, operates in the flame-grilled format now common across luxury hotel rooftops regionally, pairing city views with a menu that runs from charcoaled Korean eggplant through whiskey- and wasabi-aged beef. The rooftop position gives Zenith an atmospheric advantage that the ground-floor restaurants cannot replicate, though that advantage is weather-dependent in a city where summer temperatures frequently reach the high thirties Celsius.

Spa, Pool, and the Private Wellness Model

The spa infrastructure here follows a hybrid model common in the St. Regis tier globally. The Iridium Spa brand operates across multiple St. Regis properties, providing a consistent treatment menu that includes massages, body treatments, and facials. What distinguishes the Amman implementation is the exclusive-use wellness suite — a circular sauna, steam room, and whirlpool combination that can be reserved for private 45-minute blocks at no additional charge. That reservation-required model shifts the wellness experience from shared-facility to exclusive-use, which changes the calculus for guests who would otherwise weigh the spa against a hotel like Hotel Du Cap-Eden-Roc in Cap d'Antibes or Badrutt's Palace Hotel in St. Moritz for wellness depth.

The outdoor pool terrace is screened by manicured greenery and equipped with cube-shaped cabanas available for private hire, creating a degree of visual separation from the surrounding city. In a desert capital where midday temperatures are a practical consideration for most of the year, the pool operates as a functional asset rather than a decorative one. That practicality is what distinguishes a well-positioned hotel pool from a symbolic one.

Positioning Within Amman's Luxury Hotel Set

Amman's luxury hotel tier has consolidated around a small number of international brands, each operating within the same Fifth Circle geography but pulling on different brand identities. The W Amman occupies a younger, more design-expressive position in the same market. The Ritz-Carlton, Amman operates at the formal end of the Marriott International portfolio, as does the St. Regis, though the two brands target slightly different guest profiles. The St. Regis lineage leans into butler service, historical formality, and the Astor legacy as identity markers, which places it closer in spirit to Cheval Blanc Paris or Hotel Plaza Athénée in Paris in terms of formal aspiration, even if the scale and context differ considerably.

Rates start at $265, which positions the property competitively within the Amman luxury bracket. For context on what else the city offers at adjacent price points, our full Amman hotels guide covers the complete field. For those extending into Jordan's south, Bratus Hotel in Aqaba represents a contrasting regional option. The St. Regis currently holds a Google rating of 4.6 across 3,546 reviews, a volume that provides meaningful signal about consistent performance rather than selective satisfaction.

Planning a Stay

The Fifth Circle address works leading for guests whose itinerary combines western Amman's commercial and retail activity with day excursions east toward the old city, Rainbow Street, and the Citadel. Those travelling with cars or relying on taxis will find the central location logical; the property is not within comfortable walking distance of the historic sites but is well-placed for the city's wider geography. The bars guide for Amman, wineries guide, and experiences guide provide complementary programming for guests looking to extend beyond the hotel's in-house offering. Amenities include a gym, meeting rooms, and 24-hour room service alongside the spa, pool, and four restaurant outlets, making the property largely self-sufficient for guests who prefer to orient their stay around the hotel rather than the city beyond its walls.

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