The 192-room glass tower on the tallest of Amman's seven hills, between the Abdoun and Sweifieh neighbourhoods, and the only Forbes Five-Star hotel in Jordan.
"The diplomatic and corporate address of Amman, twenty years in, still the easiest call for any visiting head of state, deal team, or honeymoon couple who want the most quietly competent operation in the kingdom."
Four Seasons Hotel Amman opened in March 2003 inside a 15-storey tower designed by the late Jafar Tukan, Jordan's most decorated modern architect, and was the first hotel in the kingdom to enter the Forbes Five-Star list. The site is the highest of the seven Sweifieh hills, a five-minute drive from the embassy belt of Abdoun and ten minutes from downtown Amman, and the building was conceived from the brief as a vertical hotel rather than the sprawling resort that the parcel could have accepted. The result is a property where every category above the standard king has a long line of sight across the western half of the city and, on clear winter mornings, across the Dead Sea valley to the hills of Palestine.
The 192 rooms and suites run from a 40 square metre Premier King at entry to the 360 square metre Royal Suite on the top floor, with a colour palette of warm sand, oak, and bronze that the property refreshed across a soft renovation finished in 2022. Every room has marble bathrooms with double vanities, a separate rain shower and tub, an entry foyer, and a desk dimensioned for the diplomatic and corporate clientele that anchors the house. The Executive Club Lounge on the fourteenth floor (six pressed services through the day) sets the tone for the upper tier and is, on balance, the best of its category in the Levant.
The food offer is unusually deep for a 192-room hotel. La Capitale is the all-day Mediterranean room, white tablecloth, oyster bar at lunch, and the city's most consistent breakfast. Vivace is the property's Italian restaurant, run by an Italian executive chef and stocked with a wine list deeper than anything outside the embassy residences. Olea is the Lebanese mezze and grill room with a quiet terrace overlooking the pool, and Sufra serves classical Jordanian on a more formal frame. Combined with the Library Lounge for afternoon tea, the Burj Al Hamam in the lobby for shisha and Arabic coffee, and the Pool Bar, the property is a self-contained dining city in a market where good restaurants are scattered.
Service is what keeps Four Seasons Amman ahead of three credible challengers in the city. The staff-to-room ratio is roughly two and a half to one, retention runs at fifteen years average for the senior front office, and the property holds a level of recognition (your driver, your usual table, your child's preferred breakfast pastry) that the chain still treats as the operating standard but few houses execute at this consistency. Add the indoor and outdoor pools, the 2,000 square metre Spa with eight treatment rooms and a hammam, a 24-hour fitness centre, and the largest ballroom in the diplomatic quarter, and the case for booking here over any competitor closes itself.
For business in Amman the Four Seasons is the unambiguous booking, with the Executive Club Lounge, the largest ballroom in the diplomatic quarter, six restaurants and lounges to host meals across the day, and a concierge desk that handles same-morning visa appointments, embassy access, and Royal Court protocol with no friction. The tower position above Sweifieh keeps you fifteen minutes from the Free Zone and ten from the King Abdullah business district.
For a milestone anniversary in Amman, book a corner suite on a high floor for the Dead Sea valley sunset, take dinner at Vivace, and arrange a private hammam circuit through the Spa the following morning. The hotel will discreetly handle the room set, the flowers, and a Royal Suite upgrade where availability permits; the operating culture rewards advance notice with the kind of execution that has become rare in the chain.
For an Amman honeymoon paired with Petra or the Dead Sea, the Four Seasons is the city anchor. Book the Premier King for the entry and graduate to the Diplomatic Suite on the return; the housekeeping team handles bath setups, in-room dining at a serious level, and a discreet sequence of small surprises that have been refined over twenty years of running the category. Pair with a private driver to Wadi Rum and the property's car will be waiting on the dawn return.
Al-Kindi Street 5
Al-Sweifiyah Hill
11183 Amman, Jordan
12 minutes to downtown; 35 minutes to Queen Alia International Airport
192 rooms and suites
Premier King from JOD 220/night
Executive Suites from JOD 540/night
Diplomatic Suite from JOD 1,100/night
Royal Suite to JOD 2,400/night
Check-in: 3:00 PM
Check-out: 12:00 PM
Opened 2003; Jafar Tukan architecture; Forbes Five-Star
Indoor pool and heated outdoor pool
2,000 sqm spa with hammam
Six restaurants and lounges
Executive Club Lounge
Largest ballroom in the diplomatic quarter
Complimentary high-speed WiFi
From JOD 220/night. Executive Suites and Diplomatic Suites book three to four months ahead for spring and autumn deal seasons; the Royal Suite is held for diplomatic missions and books six months out.
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The 280-room W in the New Abdali district, the design and nightlife address of the city, all-day rooftop pool culture.
Last updated June 11, 2026
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