A village of white clapboard, weathered shingle, and a presidential compound on the rocks. New England seaside in its most refined and unembarrassed form.
Ranked by overall occasion score. Every property verified, priced, and visited in 2025–2026.
"The only Relais and Chateaux property in Maine. The dining barn alone is worth the journey — but the cottages do the romance."
"Sixty wooded acres, individual cottages, a treehouse spa. The most original honeymoon address on the New England coast."
"The dining room looks straight at Walker's Point. No hotel in Kennebunkport sells the Maine view more honestly."
"The only true beachfront hotel in Kennebunkport. Goose Rocks's three-mile sand crescent is right outside your room."
"An 1812 sea captain's home with widow's walk, working fireplaces, and the most decorated B&B in Maine. Romance, restored."
"Bungalow rooms on the Kennebunk River with private patios. Walk to Dock Square in five minutes; watch the schooners glide past."
"The heart of Dock Square, in a former sea-captain mansion. Step out the front door and you are inside the village postcard."
"Sixteen rooms in a Federal-period sea captain's home in the Historic District. A quieter, more literary alternative to Dock Square."
"A modern reimagining in Lower Village — heated outdoor pool, courtyard fire pits, and a short walk to the harbour."
"Pastel waterfront cottages with private decks and complimentary kayaks. The most photographed honeymoon picture in Kennebunkport."
Kennebunkport was made for anniversaries — quiet, walkable, the sort of place where dinner ends with a slow walk along the river and not a cab queue. The village rewards couples who already know each other. Our verdict: White Barn Inn for the iconic four-course evening that defines Maine fine dining; Cape Arundel Inn for the dining-room view of Walker's Point that still stops conversation; and Captain Lord Mansion for couples who want a fireplace, a four-poster, and silence after nine.
The Relais and Chateaux flagship of Maine. Tasting menu of record. From $1,000/night.
Walker's Point at sunset, a fireplace inside. From $625/night.
An 1812 sea-captain's home, restored to museum condition. From $475/night.
Honeymoons in Kennebunkport tend toward the unhurried — long mornings, lobster rolls at noon, an afternoon on the water, a tasting menu by candlelight. The hotels here understand the assignment. White Barn Inn remains the iconic choice — its cottage suites and the legendary dining barn together. Hidden Pond offers the more original honeymoon: a private cottage in the birches, a treetop spa, and Earth restaurant beside the kitchen garden. Tides Beach Club wins for couples who want sand outside the door and salt in the air.
Sixty wooded acres, treehouse spa, individual cottages. Privacy first.
The only true beachfront in town — Goose Rocks's white sand, three miles of it.
Our ranked list, with the one-sentence verdict on each.
The only Relais and Chateaux in Maine — the dining barn and the cottage suites that defined New England fine hospitality.
Cottages tucked into a birch forest, a treetop spa, and Earth — Sam Hayward's farm-to-table room of record.
A clifftop dining room facing Walker's Point — the most legitimate ocean view in the village.
Boutique beachfront on Goose Rocks — three miles of white sand and the only hotel that opens straight onto it.
An 1812 Federalist mansion with a widow's walk — the most awarded historic B&B on the Maine coast.
Bungalow rooms on the Kennebunk River with private patios — the schooners practically pass at eye level.
A 19th-century mansion at the centre of Dock Square — the most walkable address in town.
Sixteen rooms in a Federal-period sea captain's home — elegant, literary, gently understated.
Lower Village's modern boutique — heated outdoor pool, courtyard fire pits, a short walk to the harbour.
Pastel waterfront cottages with kayaks at the dock — the most photographed honeymoon set-piece in the Kennebunks.
High summer — late June through early September — is when Kennebunkport runs at full pitch: warmest water, every lobster shack open, every schooner sailing, every restaurant booked. Mid-September through mid-October is the connoisseur's window. The crowds thin, the maples turn, and Maine's foliage rates briefly outrun the summer peak. May and early June are the locals' secret — pre-crowd, gardens in full bloom, prices fifteen to twenty percent below high season. The first weekend of December brings the Kennebunkport Christmas Prelude, the village strung in white lights and nearly every inn fully booked. Most peripheral properties close from January through April; only a handful of hotels in town stay open through deep winter.
Dock Square is the village's beating heart — boutiques, restaurants, the river, the bridges. Stay here at Kennebunkport Inn or The Grand Hotel if you want everything at the front door. Cape Arundel is the clifftop drive that passes Walker's Point, the Bush family compound. The Cape Arundel Inn sits along Ocean Avenue with unobstructed views of the property and the open Atlantic — the postcard side of town. Goose Rocks Beach, six miles north, is the white-sand answer for couples and families who want true beachfront — Tides Beach Club is the only hotel positioned on it. Cape Porpoise is the working harbour two miles east, lobster boats unloading every morning and the village's best raw-bar dining at The Ramp and Pier 77. Lower Village, just across the bridge from Dock Square, holds the boutique inns — Hidden Pond, Yachtsman, White Barn Inn — slightly removed from the crowds but still easily walkable to the centre.
Top-end Kennebunkport runs from $400 to $2,500-plus per night depending on property, season, and room category. White Barn Inn cottage suites peak at $1,800–$2,500 in high summer and around foliage weekends; their shoulder rates start around $1,000. Hidden Pond cottages run roughly $850–$1,800 depending on bedroom count. Mid-tier boutique inns — Yachtsman, Cape Arundel Inn, Captain Lord Mansion — sit in the $475–$900 band in summer. Historic B&Bs run $395–$650. Foliage weekends in early October and the Christmas Prelude weekend command rates approaching summer peak. Off-season (November, early spring) discounts of 30–40% are typical at properties that stay open. Maine's lodging tax of 9% applies on top of quoted rates.
Book six months ahead for any summer weekend or for the Christmas Prelude in early December — the village runs at functional 100 percent occupancy through both windows. White Barn Inn dinner reservations should be secured at the moment you confirm your room; the dining barn books out independently of accommodation. The most efficient airport is Portland International Jetport (PWM), about thirty minutes north. Boston Logan (BOS) is the larger gateway, an hour and a half south by car — useful if you are pairing the visit with Cambridge or Salem. Cape Cod is roughly four hours southwest. A car is non-optional — Cape Arundel, Goose Rocks, and Cape Porpoise are not walkable from each other, and rideshare in Kennebunkport is unreliable outside the village core. Maine lobster season runs roughly June through October at peak — earlier or later visits will still find lobster on every menu, but availability and pricing are best in the warmer months.
Standard American tipping applies. Restaurants: 18–20% on pre-tax total at hotel dining rooms; 15–18% at casual lobster shacks. Housekeeping: $5–10 per day, left on the bedside table. Porter receiving luggage: $3–5 per bag. Concierge for dinner reservations or whale-watch bookings: $10–20 depending on difficulty. Captain and crew on chartered schooner sails: 15–20% of the trip cost. Lobster-roll counter staff and ice-cream parlours: optional, but the tip jar is appreciated.
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Tell us your occasion and we'll narrow it down. Anniversary, honeymoon, family summer, or autumn retreat — Kennebunkport has the right inn for each.
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