Ian Schrager's Mid-Beach EDITION, with a basement bowling alley, ice rink and nightclub, and the Tropicale pool deck.
"Ian Schrager's 2014 Mid-Beach EDITION, home to The Basement: the design-led address for a Miami bachelor or bachelorette weekend that wants its night in-house."
Why this rank: The Miami Beach EDITION opened in 2014 inside the restored 1955 Seville Hotel on Mid-Beach Collins Avenue, Ian Schrager's first Miami EDITION with Marriott. Its 294 rooms include 28 bungalow rooms and suites with terraces and a rooftop penthouse, which are the floor plans a group should target. The reason it lands on a bachelor or bachelorette list is The Basement: a bowling alley, an ice rink and a nightclub stacked on one lower level, so a night can run from cocktails through bowling to the club without anyone leaving the building. Jean-Georges Vongerichten's Matador Room and the casual Market cover dining, and Tropicale runs the pool deck by day. The trade-off is its temperament: the EDITION is a polished, design-forward hotel rather than a party resort, and a rowdy group will feel its restraint. Best for a stylish weekend that wants the late night handled on site.
Best room: a bungalow suite with a terrace, or the rooftop penthouse for the lead group
"Ian Schrager's Mid-Beach edition, basement bowling alley and ice-skating rink, Tropicale pool club."
The Miami Beach EDITION's case for a group celebration is The Basement, and it is a strong one. On a single lower level the hotel stacks a bowling alley, an ice rink and a nightclub, which means the evening can run from drinks to bowling to the club without anyone ordering a car or losing the group between venues. That self-contained format is rare on Miami Beach, where most nights are spent shuttling between clubs. The hotel itself opened in 2014 in the restored 1955 Seville building, Ian Schrager's first Miami EDITION with Marriott, and its 294 rooms include 28 bungalow rooms and suites with terraces plus a rooftop penthouse, the right shapes for a party booking together. Jean-Georges Vongerichten's Matador Room covers the dressed-up dinner, the Market handles the casual one, and Tropicale runs the pool deck through the day. The honest caveat is character: this is a restrained, design-led hotel rather than a party resort, the rooms are sleek but not enormous, and Mid-Beach is quieter than South Beach. A group that wants chaos should look south; a group that wants one polished base with the night built in should book here.
Ask for a bungalow suite with a terrace for the core of the group, and the rooftop penthouse if the budget stretches for the lead couple. The standard rooms are handsome but compact, so book enough of them rather than crowding one suite.
Reserve The Basement and a bowling lane before you arrive; weekend slots go early and walk-ins are not guaranteed. Hold the Matador Room for the dress-up dinner, and start the day late on the Tropicale pool deck rather than fighting for South Beach loungers.
EDITION Miami Beach sits within our broader Top 20 Hotels in Miami for a Bachelorette list. It scored an aggregate 9.7/10 across the three editorial criteria, competitive against the field but, on a bachelorette-specific factors, the angle above is what earned its rank. For the alternatives in the same Miami neighbourhood, see Mid-Beach and adjacent. For a different city entirely, see the related lists below.
Have firm dates? Book roughly twelve weeks ahead, and earlier for a group needing adjoining rooms. The bungalow suites with terraces are the first to go, and Miami's December-to-April high season tightens availability to months rather than weeks. Summer dates are both easier and noticeably cheaper.
Editorial · #20 on the Top 20 Bachelor and Bachelorette Hotels 2026 list
The Miami Beach EDITION's case for a bachelor or bachelorette weekend rests on The Basement, on the hotel's lower level. It combines a bowling alley, an ice rink and a nightclub on one footprint, so an evening can run from cocktails on the pool deck to bowling to the club without the group ever changing venues. That continuity is the point: it keeps a party together and saves the time most Miami nights lose to cars and queues.
For a group, the rooms to book are the bungalow suites with terraces and, for the lead couple, the rooftop penthouse. The hotel's 294 rooms sit in the restored 1955 Seville building, so even the standard rooms read as polished rather than generic.
Dining runs from Jean-Georges Vongerichten's Matador Room, the dressed-up option, to the casual Market, with Tropicale on the pool deck by day through the December-to-April high season. The Mid-Beach setting on Collins Avenue is calmer than South Beach, which is the honest trade-off: it is the right base for a stylish weekend and the wrong one for a group that wants the strip outside its door. Best for a Miami celebration that wants its late night handled in-house.
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