← Top 50 World · Rank #15 · Miami

Why Four Seasons Hotel at The Surf Club is · #15 · in the world

Four Seasons Hotel at The Surf Club ranks #15 on our 2026 list of the best luxury hotels in the world. The case below explains why — the architecture, the operating standard, the rare quality of personal service at scale, and the alternatives we measured it against.

“Richard Meier's white modernism, draped over a 1930 Russell Pancoast clubhouse. Two Michelin Keys earned, not bought.”

The hotel itself

The Surf Club opened in 1930 on a stretch of beach in Surfside, twelve miles north of South Beach, as a private club for a particular kind of Northeastern winter visitor. The original Russell Pancoast clubhouse — Mediterranean Revival, low-slung, with a ballroom that has played host to Sinatra, Churchill, and Elizabeth Taylor — was preserved when the property was redeveloped between 2010 and 2017. Around it, the architect Richard Meier designed two soaring white modernist towers and a hotel that occupies the lower levels of one of them. The result is the most architecturally serious five-star property in the metropolitan area.

The hotel itself is small — 77 keys, all suites or terrace rooms — and that scale is the asset. The corridors are quiet because the corridors are short. The pool decks, which face nine acres of private beach, are populated by guests rather than crowds. The cabanas are a mix of historic Surf Club cabanas (some held in private long-term lease by Miami families since the 1950s) and hotel cabanas reserved daily by guests. The terraces on the rooms are large enough to be rooms in their own right; many include outdoor showers and built-in lounge seating.

The food is the second of the Surf Club's twin reputations. Le Sirenuse Miami, the Florida outpost of the Positano original, is widely held to be the most ambitious Italian restaurant in the city. Lido at the Surf Club, the all-day dining room within Pancoast's original arcade, runs a bistro programme as good as anywhere in the metro area. The Champagne Bar, in the original clubhouse foyer, is the most refined cocktail experience in Miami at the price point. The hotel holds two Michelin Keys, a recognition that places it in the top tier of US properties.

Four Seasons Hotel at The Surf Club — interior Four Seasons Hotel at The Surf Club — view

Why it earns the rank

Hotels in great cities live or die on the bar at midnight. The lobby has to compete not just with other hotels but with the city outside it: the people who could be anywhere have a thousand other places to go. The hotels that earn world-list inclusion in city formats do something the city itself doesn't — give you a private room with a Michelin restaurant in it, a spa that erases the morning's flight, and a bar where the right people drink because they've drunk there for fifty years.

Four Seasons is the operating system most luxury hotels are quietly compared against. Founded in Toronto in 1961 by Isadore Sharp and now controlled by Bill Gates and Saudi Arabia's PIF, the brand defines the corporate-luxury floor. On a world list Four Seasons matters because the best Four Seasons hotels exceed even their own group standard: a few of the resorts and the European city flagships are widely judged the best in their cities, period.

Service operates at the Four Seasons standard the brand has spent six decades calibrating. The check-in is conducted in private, with no front desk. The beach service involves a personal attendant, lunch from Lido delivered to the cabana, and a quiet attentiveness that does not require asking for anything twice. The spa runs a small but rigorously executed treatment menu. The fitness centre is staffed by trainers who suit either a recreational guest or a professional athlete. The pool service, dining, and beach attendants all deliver the same impression: nothing is left to chance.

A solo trip to Miami is, traditionally, a contradiction in terms. The Surf Club resolves the contradiction. The property's deliberate quietness, its small scale, and the natural civility of Surfside as a neighbourhood produce the conditions for the kind of private week that solo travel requires: long mornings, room service that arrives without delay, beach attendants who recognise you on day two, and a Le Sirenuse counter seat that turns dinner into a single-occupancy experience without making it lonely. The terrace rooms, with outdoor showers and full daybeds, are the best inventory for the purpose. Other solo retreat hotels →

Where it sits in the global field

The most direct comparisons in this top-50 are Cheval Blanc Randheli in Maldives (#14), Aman Venice in Venice (#16), Four Seasons Hotel Singapore in Singapore (#13). Four Seasons Hotel at The Surf Club earns the higher rank for one or two specific reasons we cover in the verdict above. The other hotels are not lesser properties — on a different lens (occasion, region, hotel type) the order would shuffle. See our occasion-specific Top 50s for the alternative views.

Practical: getting in

Address: 9011 Collins Ave, Surfside, FL 33154, USA. World-list-tier hotels book three to nine months ahead, longer for the suite categories that book peer-pressure tight in peak season. The full review at the hotel page has current rates, the room categories worth paying up for, and any signature programmes worth booking pre-arrival. Use our Miami city guide for what else to do while you’re there.

Read the full hotel review → More in Miami →

Other contenders

Sibling entries on the Top 50 World list with full editorial cases:

#14 · Cheval Blanc Randheli · Maldives#16 · Aman Venice · Venice#13 · Four Seasons Hotel Singapore · Singapore#17 · Aman Tokyo · Tokyo
View the full Top 50 World ranking →