Hotel in Boca Raton, United States
Tower at The Boca Raton
1,475ptsButler-Scale Resort Luxury

About Tower at The Boca Raton
Tower at The Boca Raton sits at the top tier of Florida's resort hotel hierarchy: a 27-story, 224-room hotel-within-a-hotel that completed a $65 million Rockwell Group redesign in December 2022. Michelin awarded it a Key in 2024, and the property runs on a service model anchored by dedicated butler attendance for every guest. Access to 14 dining venues, a private beach club, and a 50,000-square-foot spa rounds out a self-contained luxury proposition.
Where Butler Culture Meets Resort Scale
Florida's luxury resort category has long been split between two formats: the intimate boutique property, where personalised service is a function of small scale, and the sprawling mega-resort, where headcount tends to overwhelm hospitality culture. Tower at The Boca Raton makes a deliberate case that both can coexist. The 27-story building, the tallest on the century-old Boca Raton Resort estate, reopened in December 2022 after a $65 million transformation and operates as a hotel-within-a-hotel, insulating its 224 rooms and suites from the broader resort's foot traffic while keeping all resort amenities within reach. In 2024, Michelin awarded Tower its first Key, a signal that the property competes in a different tier than the wider South Florida luxury market.
The physical approach signals what follows. The 27-story tower reads as a vertical counterpoint to Boca Raton's otherwise horizontal Mediterranean architecture. Inside, Rockwell Group, the New York firm responsible for some of the more carefully considered luxury hotel interiors in the United States, has worked in a register that suits the coastal setting without defaulting to predictable beach-house clichés. Neutral linen fabrics, fluted feature walls, classic moldings, and built-in window seating anchor a palette that frames the views rather than competing with them. At this height, those views are the room's primary amenity: 360-degree sightlines covering the Atlantic coastline and the estate below, available from rooms that flex between studio and one-bedroom configurations, with entire-floor bookings available for groups.
The Service Architecture
In American luxury hospitality, dedicated butler service has historically been reserved for top-category suites at individual properties. Tower extends it to every guest, which positions the property closer to the Aman New York end of the service-intensity spectrum than to the standard resort model. The logic is deliberate: in a property of this scale, where guests might otherwise feel anonymous, the butler relationship creates a single point of contact across every request, from room configuration to dining reservations across the resort's 14 venues.
The second-floor Tower Lounge extends that logic into communal space. Access is restricted to Tower guests, and throughout the day it cycles through complementary morning pastries, afternoon bites, and a weekend sundae bar. The lounge also houses a library curated in partnership with Assouline, listening stations equipped with Master and Dynamic headphones, and a selection of board games. The effect is less hotel lounge and more members' club annex, a space where the friction of resort-scale living is replaced with something quieter. Properties such as The Fifth Avenue Hotel in New York City and Raffles Boston use similar private-lounge logic to create layered belonging for top-tier guests; Tower's version adds the visual advantage of South Florida light.
A detail worth noting for families traveling with younger children: the property fields two robot butlers named Johnnie and Ethel, an homage to the original owner's pet monkeys, deployed for deliveries to younger guests. It is a calculated piece of programming that softens the formality of a high-service environment without compromising the tone elsewhere.
Dining Inside a Gated Estate
Access to Tower's dining is limited to resort guests and club members, which shapes the experience considerably. Dining at a property with 14 restaurants and bars means the variety typically spread across a neighbourhood is concentrated within a single gated estate. For guests who prefer to stay on property, that equation removes any pressure to venture into central Boca Raton. The roster includes Principessa Ristorante for lakeside Italian, Japanese Bocce Club for modern Japanese cuisine, MB Supper Club for live entertainment, and four Major Food Group restaurants, including The Flamingo Grill chophouse and Sadelle's, a New York import known for its all-day format. For a wider look at what the city offers beyond the resort gates, see our full Boca Raton restaurants guide.
The concentration of dining options places Tower in an interesting competitive position relative to peers. Properties like Hotel Bel-Air in Los Angeles or Auberge du Soleil in Napa offer a single flagship dining room that anchors the property's culinary identity. Tower at The Boca Raton takes the opposite approach: variety over depth, with Major Food Group's involvement lending some external credibility to the overall dining program.
Beyond the Rooms
The resort amenities available to Tower guests are substantial enough to reshape what a multi-day stay looks like. Spa Palmera, at 50,000 square feet, draws design reference from Spain's Alhambra Palace and operates a service menu that spans traditional massage and facials alongside mindfulness and Ayurvedic treatments. The Harborside Pool Club, adjacent to the Tower, runs three pools, a lazy river, two waterslides, and a FlowRider wave simulator. For families, the Banyan Bunch Kids' Club accepts children aged four to twelve, while a dedicated teen space called The Break accommodates ages eleven to fifteen with virtual reality gaming and a recording booth.
Active programming extends to an 18-hole golf course, 16 tennis courts, and 6 pickleball courts at the Racquet Club. The private Beach Club provides direct access to a section of golden sand that remains off-limits to the general public. Properties elsewhere in the country that operate a similar all-in amenity model, including Canyon Ranch Tucson and Kona Village, A Rosewood Resort in Kailua Kona, tend to price the self-contained experience as an argument against leaving the property at all. Tower makes the same case, with South Florida's climate as the supporting variable for most of the year.
Tower sits within The Boca Raton resort, and travelers choosing between the different accommodation tiers on the estate should consider how the Bungalows at The Boca Raton compare in terms of format and privacy. The Tower's vertical orientation and butler-service model represent one distinct hospitality philosophy; the Bungalows offer a more lateral, low-density alternative on the same grounds.
For those calibrating Tower against other Leading Hotels of the World members across the country, reference points include Amangiri in Canyon Point, Post Ranch Inn in Big Sur, Little Palm Island Resort and Spa in Little Torch Key, Amangani in Jackson Hole, Bernardus Lodge and Spa in Carmel Valley, SingleThread Farm Inn in Healdsburg, Troutbeck in Amenia, Chicago Athletic Association, Ambiente, A Landscape Hotel in Sedona, Sage Lodge in Pray, Alpine Falls Ranch in Superior, 1 Hotel San Francisco, and Four Seasons at The Surf Club in Surfside. Each occupies a distinct niche; Tower's argument is resort scale delivered through a boutique service lens, validated by its 2024 Michelin Key. For international comparison, Aman Venice and Badrutt's Palace Hotel in St. Moritz represent the European end of the grand-resort-with-intimate-service spectrum.
Planning Your Stay
Tower is located at 501 East Camino Real, Boca Raton, FL 33432, within The Boca Raton's private gated estate. The property is a member of Leading Hotels of the World (2025) and holds a Michelin Key awarded in 2024. Room count is 224 across studios and one-bedroom configurations, with whole-floor bookings available for larger groups. Guest reviews on Google average 4.5 from 57 ratings. Prospective guests should factor in that dining across the resort's 14 venues is accessible only to resort guests and club members, which makes the on-property experience genuinely self-contained but reduces spontaneous access to outside visitors.
Frequently Asked Questions
What room category do guests prefer at Tower at The Boca Raton?
Rooms configured around the 360-degree coastal and ocean views tend to be the primary draw, with built-in window seating designed specifically to frame those sightlines. Flexible configurations, ranging from studios to one-bedroom suites, mean solo travelers and multi-generational families can both find an appropriate fit. Whole-floor takeovers are available for large groups or those seeking maximum privacy. The Rockwell Group redesign, completed in 2022, applied a consistent design language across all 224 rooms, so category differences are more about space and configuration than finish quality.
What is Tower at The Boca Raton leading at?
The property's strongest credential is its service architecture: dedicated butler service extended to every guest, not just top-suite occupants, backed by a private Tower Lounge accessible only to Tower guests. That model, combined with a Michelin Key awarded in 2024 and Leading Hotels of the World membership, places Tower in the upper tier of South Florida resort hotels. The sheer volume of amenities available within the gated estate, from a private beach to 14 dining venues and a 50,000-square-foot spa, adds operational depth that smaller boutique properties cannot match.
How hard is it to get in to Tower at The Boca Raton?
If demand outpaces availability, the 224-room count gives Tower more capacity than most ultra-luxury boutique properties, so booking lead times are generally shorter than those at smaller competitors. That said, peak South Florida season runs from December through April, and the December reopening anniversary aligns with high demand. Groups seeking whole-floor configurations should plan further ahead, as that format is subject to individual negotiation. The resort's gated nature means walk-in access is not available; bookings must be made in advance through the property's official channels.
Does Tower at The Boca Raton have age-appropriate amenities for both young children and teenagers?
The property programs for a broad age range within the same stay. The Banyan Bunch Kids' Club operates for children aged four to twelve with supervised childcare, while The Break is a dedicated teen space for ages eleven to fifteen with virtual reality gaming and a recording booth. The Harborside Pool Club, adjacent to the Tower, includes a lazy river and waterslides suited to younger guests, and Kiddie Cabanas with themed setups are available for booking. Two robot butlers, Johnnie and Ethel, handle deliveries for younger guests as a piece of distinct, property-specific programming.
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