Hotel in Charleston, United States
Planters Inn
150ptsPeriod-Authentic Charleston Lodging

About Planters Inn
Planters Inn occupies a prime position on North Market Street in Charleston's historic district, drawing guests with its antebellum architecture and period-appropriate interiors. Rated 4.5 across 446 Google reviews and holding an EP Club member rating of 4.6/5, the property sits in the mid-to-upper tier of Charleston's boutique hotel market, with rates from US$238 per night.
Where Charleston's History Meets Considered Hospitality
North Market Street runs through the geographic and cultural center of Charleston's historic district, and the buildings that line it carry the weight of two centuries of commerce, conflict, and reinvention. Planters Inn, at 112 N Market St, occupies a particularly telling position on that stretch: close enough to the City Market to feel embedded in the city's living history, yet set apart from the tourist churn that can overwhelm the surrounding blocks. For properties in this tier, address is part of the product, and this one earns its place in the neighbourhood.
Charleston's premium boutique hotel market has consolidated around two distinct postures in recent years. One cohort leans into contemporary design, using locally sourced materials and restrained palettes to signal a kind of forward-looking Southern sophistication. The other maintains a more literal relationship with the city's antebellum and colonial inheritance, working with historic decor and architectural fabric rather than around it. Planters Inn sits firmly in the second tradition. The interiors draw on historic Charleston references rather than abstracting them, and the result is a property that reads as a continuation of the built environment rather than an intervention into it.
Among Charleston's comparable boutique offerings, this positioning is deliberate and legible. Properties like The Loutrel and The Pinch Charleston occupy a more design-forward register, while HarbourView Inn competes on waterfront access. Planters Inn's competitive anchor is its combination of central placement and period authenticity, a pairing that appeals to a specific traveller: one who wants Charleston's history to be the immersive backdrop of a stay, not merely a framed print in the lobby.
The Historic District as Context for Responsible Travel
Any conversation about historic preservation in Charleston necessarily touches on stewardship. Properties that occupy buildings with this kind of cultural and architectural significance carry an implicit responsibility to the city's heritage record. The history referenced in Planters Inn's highlights is not merely decorative — South Carolina's founding story, its plantation economy, its role in American colonial and antebellum history, is complex and contested. Hotels that invoke that history thoughtfully, as context rather than nostalgia, position themselves differently from those that flatten it into atmosphere.
The central location on North Market Street is also an argument for low-impact travel logistics. Charleston International Airport sits approximately 19 kilometres from the property, and Charleston's train station is around 10 kilometres out, making the property accessible without requiring a car once guests have arrived. The historic district's walkability means that most of what a visitor comes to Charleston for — the Church Street architecture, the antebellum streetscapes, the restaurants of the Lower Peninsula , is reachable on foot. That kind of location-based sustainability, where proximity to cultural sites reduces the need for vehicles, is undervalued in most hotel coverage but materially relevant to how a stay actually feels.
For context on how other American properties handle the intersection of location, heritage, and environmental responsibility, the contrast with resort formats is instructive. Amangiri in Canyon Point and Post Ranch Inn in Big Sur approach sustainability through land stewardship and construction philosophy in remote settings. Urban historic properties like Planters Inn face a different calculus: the building itself is the resource being preserved, and the act of maintaining rather than demolishing or substantially altering it carries its own conservation logic.
Peer Set and Price Position
At rates from US$238 per night, Planters Inn sits in the accessible end of Charleston's boutique premium tier. Properties like Hotel Bennett Charleston and The Dewberry occupy higher price brackets with correspondingly broader amenity sets. At the other end, 86 Cannon Charleston and The Spectator Hotel offer distinct boutique experiences at comparable or nearby price points. The 4.5 Google rating across 446 reviews and the EP Club member rating of 4.6/5 place Planters Inn in solid standing relative to its direct competitors, and those numbers are consistent across a volume of reviews large enough to carry statistical weight.
For travellers benchmarking Charleston against other American cities, the entry price here compares favourably with properties of similar historic pedigree in markets like Boston or New York. Raffles Boston and Aman New York in New York City both occupy higher tiers on every metric. Charleston offers historic-district positioning at a price that reflects the city's relative cost base rather than the premium commanded by gateway cities.
Internationally, the comparison is similarly telling. Properties that combine city-centre historic architecture with boutique scale , such as Aman Venice in Venice , tend to price at multiples of the Charleston rate. The value argument for a stay on North Market Street is genuine, not manufactured.
Planning a Stay
Planters Inn is located at 112 N Market St, Charleston, SC 29401. Guests arriving by car can follow Meeting Street south, turn left on Hayne Street, then right on Church Street and right onto North Market Street. Charleston International Airport is approximately 19 kilometres from the property. The closest train access is Charleston's station, roughly 10 kilometres away. The GPS coordinates are 32.7809, -79.9313.
Rates begin at US$238 per night. Given the property's EP Club member rating of 4.6/5 and its position in Charleston's historic district, demand is consistent across the city's peak travel windows , spring and fall are the heaviest seasons, and booking ahead is advisable during the city's festival calendar. For a broader look at where Planters Inn sits within Charleston's wider hotel and restaurant offering, see our full Charleston restaurants guide.
Travellers comparing Charleston hotel options in a similar boutique and historic-property register may also want to consider Post House for its inn-format approach, or look further afield at Troutbeck in Amenia and SingleThread Farm Inn in Healdsburg for comparable historic-property experiences in other American markets. Those considering resort-based sustainability models may find Canyon Ranch Tucson in Tucson, Sage Lodge in Pray, or Kona Village, A Rosewood Resort in Kailua Kona instructive as contrasts in approach. For coastal luxury comparisons, Little Palm Island Resort & Spa in Little Torch Key, Four Seasons at The Surf Club in Surfside, and Hotel Bel-Air in Los Angeles each represent a different register of American luxury hospitality. The Fifth Avenue Hotel in New York City, Auberge du Soleil in Napa, and Badrutt's Palace Hotel in St. Moritz round out the spectrum of properties against which a stay in Charleston's historic district can be meaningfully measured.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Planters Inn leading at?
The property's primary strengths are its central position in Charleston's historic district and its period-appropriate interiors, which place it in a distinct peer group from design-forward contemporaries like The Loutrel or The Pinch Charleston. With an EP Club member rating of 4.6/5 and a 4.5 Google score across 446 reviews, it performs consistently within the mid-to-upper tier of Charleston boutique hotels. Rates from US$238 per night represent accessible pricing for the location and quality tier.
What is the leading room type at Planters Inn?
Specific room categories are not detailed in available data. Given the property's historic architecture and its positioning around Charleston décor and South Carolina history, rooms that emphasise the building's original fabric rather than updated finishes are likely to align most closely with the property's core identity. Direct contact with the property is the most reliable path to room-specific guidance.
Do I need a reservation at Planters Inn?
As a hotel rather than a restaurant or ticketed experience, Planters Inn operates on standard advance booking. Charleston's historic district sees consistent demand, particularly in spring and fall, when the city's festival calendar and moderate climate drive occupancy across the boutique hotel tier. Booking ahead is advisable for peak-season visits. Contact details are not available in EP Club's current data; direct outreach via the property's website is the appropriate channel for availability and rates.
Recognized By
Related editorial
- Best Fine Dining Restaurants in ParisFrom three-Michelin-star icons to the next generation of Parisian chefs pushing boundaries, these are the restaurants that define fine dining in the world's culinary capital.
- Best Luxury Hotels in RomeFrom rooftop terraces overlooking ancient ruins to Michelin-starred hotel dining, these are the luxury hotels that make Rome unforgettable.
- Best Cocktail Bars in KyotoFrom sleek lounges to hidden speakeasies, Kyoto's cocktail scene blends Japanese precision with global influence in ways you won't find anywhere else.
Save or rate Planters Inn on Pearl
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.


