A 1929 Spanish Colonial estate at the base of Camelback, now the Unbound Collection by Hyatt. T. Cook's remains one of the most romantic dining rooms in the Valley.
Royal Palms Resort and Spa is the historic, romance-first choice on our Scottsdale-area list: a 1929 Spanish Colonial estate on Camelback Road, now a 119-room member of the Unbound Collection by Hyatt. Book it for an anniversary or proposal built around courtyard gardens, the Alvadora Spa and dinner at T. Cook's, not for a big, amenity-packed family resort.
HotelsForKings aggregate 9.1/10, scored on Room & Design, Service, and Location. One editorial opinion, not a user-review average. See our methodology.
Book Royal Palms when you want character and romance over resort scale. It is a 1929 Spanish Colonial estate reworked into a 119-room resort, and the original architecture, white stucco walls, red clay-tile roofs, arched loggias and the namesake royal palms, gives it a sense of place that the Valley's larger, newer resorts simply cannot manufacture. The estate now operates within the Unbound Collection by Hyatt, so World of Hyatt members earn and redeem here while the property keeps its independent, historic feel.
For couples, the intimate scale is the whole point. A resort this size handles an anniversary or proposal personally rather than processing it, and the garden casitas, courtyards and fireside dining make for an evening the bigger resorts cannot match at any price. It earns a strong Service score for exactly that reason: guests are recognised, and the staff run the occasions the property is famous for.
The short version: this began as a private mansion and became one of Arizona's early luxury resorts. New York financier Delos Willard Cooke and his wife completed a Spanish Colonial villa here in 1929, on land that had been a citrus orchard at the foot of Camelback Mountain, and named the estate El Vernadero. After the family era, it opened as a resort on 1 February 1948, adding a cluster of casitas around the original house.
That lineage is not just marketing. Royal Palms is a member of Historic Hotels of America, and the 1929 bones, the courtyards, the fountains, the tiled thresholds, are the reason a stay here feels different from a purpose-built resort. A 2012 renovation of the Valencia casitas and ongoing upkeep have kept the estate current without stripping the period character, which is the balance a historic property has to strike.
The 119 guest rooms, suites and casitas are spread across the original main house, garden casitas and later low-rise additions, all in the residential Spanish Colonial idiom. The garden casitas, with private terraces and direct garden access, are the most romantic rooms on the property and the ones worth requesting for a special occasion. Interiors lean warm and traditional rather than sleek and contemporary, which suits the estate and will not suit a guest who wants a minimalist design hotel.
The Alvadora Spa is the wellness anchor, drawing on Mediterranean herbal traditions with treatment rooms, steam rooms and a quiet courtyard, and it is a genuine reason to book rather than an afterthought. The pool sits within the historic gardens and reads intimate rather than resort-scale, which is a feature for couples and a limitation for families who want a water-park-style pool complex.
Yes, and for many guests it is the reason to stay here. T. Cook's is the resort's Mediterranean-influenced dining room, and between the fireplace, the intimate scale and the courtyard views it is one of the most genuinely romantic restaurants in the Phoenix-Scottsdale area. It has long drawn locals and recognisable names precisely because it offers good food and a sense of quiet privacy rather than a see-and-be-seen scene.
The Mix Up Bar handles cocktails and a lighter menu for a relaxed evening, and the courtyard terrace is the place to be at sunset in the cooler months. For an anniversary dinner or a post-proposal celebration, booking a T. Cook's table, ideally by the fire or on the terrace depending on season, is the single highest-value reservation on the property.
Here is the honest geography: the resort's address is 5200 East Camelback Road, which is technically in Phoenix, on the Camelback Corridor at the base of Camelback Mountain and right on the Phoenix-Scottsdale line. It markets and functions as a Scottsdale-area resort, and Old Town Scottsdale is roughly a 15-minute drive, but it is worth knowing you are just inside Phoenix rather than in Scottsdale proper.
In practice the location is central to the best of the area: Camelback and Mummy Mountain hiking, the Arcadia dining scene, Old Town Scottsdale and Sky Harbor airport are all a short drive away. It is a car-first setting, as most of the Valley is, so plan on driving or ride-hailing for dinners and excursions off the estate.
Royal Palms is a special, characterful resort, but it is not the right fit for every trip.
Royal Palms wins on history, romance and intimacy, and gives ground to the big resorts on amenities, golf and pool scale. Here is how it lines up with the properties ranked around it.
| Hotel | Style | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Royal Palms | 1929 Spanish Colonial estate | Romance, anniversaries, T. Cook's |
| The Phoenician | Grande-dame resort, nine pools | Full-amenity family and golf stays |
| Sanctuary Camelback | Adults-leaning spa retreat | Wellness and mountain-side design |
| Four Seasons Troon North | Desert resort at Pinnacle Peak | Sonoran-desert scenery and hiking |
Pick Royal Palms for the estate romance and the dining; move to The Phoenician for full-resort amenities, or Sanctuary Camelback for a spa-led adults retreat. All appear on our full Scottsdale ranking.
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