A 1929 Mediterranean estate at the foot of Camelback. Casitas, citrus groves, and T. Cook's — the most romantic dining room in Arizona.
"The estate the Cunard family built in 1929, now a 119-room boutique resort under Camelback. Where the Biltmore is grand and the Phoenician is corporate, Royal Palms is intimate. Dinner at T. Cook's is the reason couples drive in from out of state."
Built in 1929 as the personal Mediterranean winter estate of Cunard steamship executive Delos Cooke, Royal Palms is the rare American resort that began life as a private home and never quite lost the feeling of being one. The original villa, with its terracotta roofs, hand-laid stonework, and stone-walled courtyards, still anchors the property at 5200 East Camelback Road in the Arcadia neighbourhood. Camelback Mountain rises directly behind. The grounds are planted with citrus groves the original gardeners installed nearly a century ago, and the irrigation channels still run on the same lines.
Today the property operates under Hyatt's boutique division but is run with intentional remove from the corporate cadence of its larger neighbours. Where the Arizona Biltmore is a destination resort with hundreds of rooms and several restaurants, and the Phoenician is a sprawling 645-room operation aimed at conferences and golf groups, Royal Palms holds itself to 119 keys spread across the main villa, a series of low-rise wings, and the standalone casitas — private one- and two-bedroom houses with their own walled gardens, fireplaces, and outdoor showers. The casitas are the format guests return for. Couples take them for anniversaries and never want to leave.
T. Cook's is the defining amenity. The dining room occupies the original villa's main hall — exposed beams, a working fireplace, hand-painted Mediterranean tile, and tall windows that open onto the citrus courtyard. The kitchen serves a refined Mediterranean menu with strong emphasis on wood-fired technique and house-cured charcuterie, and the wine list is one of the deepest in Arizona. Reserve the courtyard terrace at dusk in spring or fall — it is, by reasonable consensus, the most romantic dining room in the state. The Mix Up Bar adjoining the restaurant is the right address for a late drink before bed.
Alvadora Spa is built into a Mediterranean-style stone outbuilding at the rear of the property, with a small garden of herbs and citrus the therapists harvest for in-room treatments. The signature offering is a hammam ritual that runs ninety minutes and is built around heated stone, eucalyptus, and Moorish-tradition exfoliation. The spa is intimate by design — eight treatment rooms — and that intimacy is the point. The fitness centre is functional rather than ambitious, but the property's real exercise is the Cholla Trail, which begins at the base of Camelback a short drive away and is the city's most rewarding morning hike.
What makes Royal Palms work, ultimately, is scale. The property is large enough to deliver full resort amenities — pool, spa, restaurant, bar, concierge — and small enough that the staff knows your name by the second morning. The grounds invite slow movement: stone paths between citrus trees, fountain courtyards, the original villa's small reading rooms with their period tile and dim leather chairs. Camelback Mountain views are best from the casitas on the eastern edge of the property and from the main pool deck at sunset. For couples who want Phoenix at its most romantic and least corporate, this is the address that has been answering the question since 1929.
For significant anniversaries, Royal Palms is the Phoenix address. Book a casita with a private courtyard, dinner at T. Cook's on the terrace, and a sunset hour at the Mix Up Bar before. The concierge keeps a discreet record of returning guests and remembers preferences from prior stays — wine, room location, late check-out. For tenth or twenty-fifth anniversaries, request the original villa-side casitas with the working fireplaces. The property does milestone marking with restraint rather than fanfare, which is the point.
A casita honeymoon at Royal Palms is the antidote to a beach resort. Mornings begin in your private walled courtyard with citrus from the trees outside; afternoons are spent at the pool with Camelback Mountain framing the deck; evenings unfold over a long dinner at T. Cook's. The concierge will arrange a sunrise hike up Cholla Trail, an in-casita couples treatment from Alvadora, and a private vintage convertible for the drive to Sedona. Quiet, warm, and deeply romantic — the right Phoenix honeymoon.
For a focused wellness stay, the Alvadora hammam ritual paired with morning hikes up Camelback and Cholla Trail is the structure to build a long weekend around. The kitchen will accommodate any dietary brief without ceremony, the casitas have outdoor showers and small private gardens conducive to morning practice, and the spa books treatments tailored around guest schedules rather than the other way around. Less programmatic than Miraval, more personal than Canyon Ranch — Royal Palms is the boutique alternative for self-directed restoration.
Rates checked May 2026. Price may vary by date.
Royal Palms has been hosting them since 1929. Camelback Mountain at the back, T. Cook's at the heart, and a casita with your name on it for the weekend.
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