Hotel in Catskills U0026 Hudson Valley, United States
The Roxbury at Stratton Falls
150ptsTheatrical Theme Rooms

About The Roxbury at Stratton Falls
Selected by the Michelin Guide for its 2025 Hotels & Stays list, The Roxbury at Stratton Falls sits on County Highway 41 in the Catskills, where the region's long tradition of theatrical, design-driven escapes finds one of its more committed expressions. The property draws repeat visitors who return for the same reason: a deliberately constructed remove from the ordinary, set against upstate New York's wooded topography.
Where the Catskills' Design Tradition Gets Theatrical
The Catskills have always attracted a particular kind of traveler: one who drives three hours from New York City specifically to feel like they have ended up somewhere else entirely. For decades, that impulse ran through summer bungalow colonies and old-school resort towns. In the contemporary version of that tradition, it runs through properties that treat the guest room itself as the spectacle. The Roxbury at Stratton Falls, on County Highway 41 in Delaware County, sits near the outer edge of that movement, at the point where whimsical interior design becomes the primary experience rather than an accent to hiking trails and farm dinners.
This is a Michelin Selected property on the Guide's 2025 Hotels & Stays list, which places it in a peer set defined less by thread counts and more by coherence of concept. In the Catskills, that cohort includes properties like Callicoon Hills and Bluebird Hunter Lodge, each of which signals its identity through a strong design or programming position rather than through room count or brand affiliation. The Roxbury operates in that same register, though its particular idiom, rooms themed around pop culture, Hollywood maximalism, and retro-futurist fantasy, makes it the most visually committed of the group.
What Keeps Regulars Coming Back
The guests who return to The Roxbury at Stratton Falls are not the ones seeking a neutral canvas for a weekend away. They are the ones who booked a specific room the first time, felt that the space delivered on its premise, and have since developed a rotation. This is the defining characteristic of the property's loyal clientele: they are suite-specific, not hotel-loyal in the conventional sense. They are returning to a room, to a fantasy environment they have already tested and approved.
That kind of attachment is relatively rare in the broader Catskills hotel market, where most repeat visitors are returning to a general atmosphere, a landscape, a cluster of restaurants. At properties like Eastwind Hotel in the Oliverea Valley or Camptown Catskills, the draw is partly environmental: the specific valley, the fire circles, the proximity to trailheads. The Roxbury's regulars are motivated differently. The falls on the property, the surrounding woodlands, and the quiet of Delaware County matter, but the room is the anchor. For design-driven properties globally, from Hotel Lilien in the Hudson Valley to Amangiri in Canyon Point, the same pattern holds: when a property commits deeply to a visual and spatial identity, it builds a different kind of repeat customer than properties where the draw is primarily outdoor or culinary.
The unwritten menu at The Roxbury is essentially a suite-by-suite curriculum. First-timers are deciding which room to try. Those returning are deciding what to try next, or whether to return to a favorite. That dynamic sustains a conversation between guest and property that most hotels never achieve.
The Setting and What It Adds
Delaware County sits further west and higher in elevation than the more trafficked parts of the Hudson Valley, and that distance is part of what the property sells. The drive from the city passes through the Catskill Preserve, into territory that feels genuinely removed rather than strategically rural. The Stratton Falls location adds a natural feature, the waterfall on the property, that distinguishes it from Roxbury's other site in the village itself. For guests at the suite-focused, design-centric end of the market, a working natural feature of that kind grounds an otherwise theatrical concept in something irreducibly real.
This is one of the patterns that separates the Catskills' stronger design-led properties from those that feel like the concept overwhelmed the setting. Compare that to destinations like Post Ranch Inn in Big Sur or Sage Lodge in Pray, where the natural environment is so dominant that the property design exists in dialogue with it. The Roxbury inverts that ratio, but the presence of the falls gives the property a natural register it would otherwise lack entirely.
Planning a Stay: Practical Notes
The property is on County Highway 41, which requires a car. The nearest major access point is the Catskill Mountain corridor off Route 28, and the drive from New York City runs approximately three to three and a half hours depending on departure time and traffic through the Bronx and Westchester. Weekend bookings, particularly during fall foliage season in October and early November, move quickly across the Catskills market at this tier, and the Roxbury's room-specific demand pattern means that popular suites can disappear well ahead of a given weekend. Booking several weeks in advance is standard practice for prime dates. The same seasonal pressure applies at comparable properties: Hotel Kinsley in Kingston and AutoCamp Catskills both see compressed availability in autumn. For visitors planning around shoulder-season visits, late March through May offers the falls at higher flow and the property with thinner crowds, before the summer wave begins.
For guests who want to extend the trip beyond a single property, the Hudson Valley's design-led hotel circuit includes Bedford Post Inn to the south and Troutbeck in Amenia further toward the Connecticut border. The full context of what the region offers is covered in our full Catskills and Hudson Valley guide.
In the broader American range of design-driven boutique hotels, the Michelin Selected designation places The Roxbury at Stratton Falls in a nationally significant peer set. Properties at that level nationally include names like SingleThread Farm Inn in Healdsburg and Meadowood Napa Valley. The Roxbury's position in that company signals that the concept, however eccentric its surface presentation, holds up against criteria that extend beyond novelty.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What is the leading suite at The Roxbury at Stratton Falls?
- The property is known for its themed suites, each designed as a distinct spatial environment rather than a variation on a standard room. The Stratton Falls location specifically includes suites with private outdoor access that take advantage of the waterfall setting. Michelin's 2025 Hotels & Stays selection confirms the overall property meets a threshold of quality and concept coherence. For current suite availability and specific room details, checking the property's booking channel directly is the most reliable approach, as the offering at this kind of design-driven property can evolve.
- What is the defining characteristic of The Roxbury at Stratton Falls?
- The defining characteristic is the depth of commitment to themed, design-specific rooms in a genuinely remote Catskills location. The combination of a waterfall on the property, a Michelin Selected designation for 2025, and a suite-by-suite concept model places it in a narrow tier of upstate New York hotels where the room itself is the primary reason to visit. It is not primarily a wellness property, a restaurant-destination inn, or an outdoor-sports base, though the surrounding Delaware County landscape supplies all of those options nearby.
- Can I walk in to The Roxbury at Stratton Falls?
- Walk-in availability at a Michelin Selected property of this type and scale is unlikely, particularly on weekends from May through November. The Catskills market at this tier operates on advance reservation, and the room-specific demand pattern at the Roxbury means that popular suites fill ahead of available dates. Contacting the property directly to check short-notice availability is possible, but arriving without a reservation and expecting a room is a reasonable bet only deep in the off-season.
- Is The Roxbury at Stratton Falls suitable for a winter stay in the Catskills?
- Winter in Delaware County brings genuine cold and snowfall, and the property's position on County Highway 41 means road conditions should factor into travel planning from December through February. For guests who have visited in warmer months, a winter stay offers a substantively different atmosphere: the falls and surrounding woodland read differently under snow, and the indoor focus of the suite experience becomes more central. The Michelin Selected designation applies year-round, and the property's design-led concept is arguably better suited to the inward orientation of a winter weekend than properties where outdoor programming is the main draw.
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