Hotel in Levernois, France
Hostellerie de Levernois
425ptsVineyard Manor Dining

About Hostellerie de Levernois
A five-star Relais & Châteaux property set among the Côtes de Beaune vineyards, Hostellerie de Levernois pairs an 18th-century mansion with Michelin-starred dining and a quieter alternative to Beaune's busier hotel stock. Rated 4.8/5 on Google across nearly 1,000 reviews and awarded Gault & Millau Exceptional Hotel status in 2025, it offers two distinct restaurants and rates from US$441 per night.
Stone, Beams, and the Burgundy Countryside
The approach to Levernois sets expectations before you reach the front door. The village sits less than five kilometres south of Beaune, far enough that the A6 traffic fades entirely, close enough that the Hospices de Beaune and the négociant cellars of the city centre remain a short drive. What the road into the property delivers is a shift in register: open vineyard views, then a long tree-lined setting that places the 18th-century mansion in relief against the green of Côtes de Beaune in full growth. This is the architectural and sensory logic that Relais & Châteaux properties in wine country tend to follow, and Hostellerie de Levernois executes it with considerable material fidelity.
Inside, the design language is period-honest rather than period-pastiche. Burgundy stone slabs cover the floors in the main reception areas, exposed timber beams run across the ceilings, and the tile work references the regional vernacular rather than a decorator's approximation of it. The materials are the character here. Comparable French château hotel conversions often overwork the interiors with contemporary interventions that compete with the original fabric; the approach at Levernois reads as more restrained, letting the 18th-century bones carry the atmosphere. The Google review score of 4.8 across 983 assessments, combined with a 2025 Gault & Millau Exceptional Hotel designation, suggests that guest experience aligns with the architectural intention.
Where the Property Sits in the Burgundy Hotel Tier
France's vineyard hotel market has stratified considerably over the past decade. At one end sit the conversion properties with limited rooms, estate-grown wine programs, and dining that competes with standalone restaurant tables — properties like [Les Sources de Caudalie in Bordeaux](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/hotels/les-sources-de-caudalie-bordeaux-hotel) and [Château Lafaurie-Peyraguey Hôtel & Restaurant LALIQUE in Lieu-dit Peyraguey](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/hotels/chteau-lafaurie-peyraguey-htel-restaurant-lalique-lieu-dit-peyraguey-hotel) occupy this bracket in their respective appellations. At the other end sit larger resort-format properties where the hotel function dominates. Hostellerie de Levernois fits the former model: the Relais & Châteaux affiliation signals a cap on scale and a commitment to food and hospitality as primary disciplines, not amenities. Rates from US$441 per night place it at the accessible end of five-star Burgundy accommodation, below the Parisian palace tier represented by properties like [Cheval Blanc Paris](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/hotels/cheval-blanc-paris-paris-hotel), but with a specificity of location and culinary focus that pure city hotels cannot replicate.
The Relais & Châteaux classification matters here as a trust signal rather than a marketing label. The network enforces standards around guest capacity, culinary quality, and architectural character — which is why properties like [Domaine Les Crayères in Reims](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/hotels/domaine-les-crayres-reims-hotel) and [Baumanière Les Baux-de-Provence in Les Baux](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/hotels/baumanire-les-baux-de-provence-les-baux-hotel) attract a similar audience: travellers who want the dining program and the architecture to be inseparable from the accommodation itself.
Two Restaurants, Two Registers
The dining offer at Levernois operates on a split that reflects a broader trend in French château hotels: a Michelin-starred formal room for guests who have come specifically for the table, and a more accessible bistro format that serves the broader appetite for good regional food without ceremony. La Table de Levernois holds the Michelin star, with Chef Philippe Augé working a repertoire anchored in Burgundian tradition and seasonal produce. The seasonal orientation is structural rather than decorative in this context: Burgundy's market produce cycle, from white asparagus in spring through game in autumn, gives a kitchen genuine range to work across a twelve-month calendar.
Second restaurant, Bistrot du Bord de l'Eau, operates from a daily-changing menu built on market produce and vegetables grown on the property. The garden-to-table format here is not an affectation , it reflects the kind of kitchen discipline that Relais & Châteaux membership tends to enforce. Properties like [La Bastide de Gordes in Gordes](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/hotels/la-bastide-de-gordes-gordes-hotel) and [Château de Montcaud in Sabran](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/hotels/chteau-de-montcaud-sabran-hotel) operate comparable dual-format dining structures, where the estate garden functions as a working kitchen resource rather than an ornamental feature.
Levernois as a Base for Côte de Beaune
Property's position in the Burgundy travel context deserves attention. Beaune is the commercial and cultural centre of the Côte de Beaune: the Hospices auction in November draws buyers and collectors from across the wine world, and the négociant houses along the city's ring roads control a significant share of Burgundy's export volume. A hotel five kilometres from that centre, with vineyard views and a starred restaurant, functions differently from accommodation within the city walls. It serves guests who want Burgundy as an immersive experience , who are visiting domaines in Pommard and Volnay, eating across multiple nights, and using the hotel as a calm counterpoint to a full programme of tastings and cellar visits.
Access logistics are manageable. The A6 autoroute is minutes away, making the property viable as a stop between Paris and Lyon on a longer French itinerary. Beaune's TGV-adjacent position on the Paris-Lyon-Marseille axis also means rail access is practical, though road travel gives more flexibility for the kind of vineyard circuit that most guests are building around a stay here. For those assembling a broader French wine country itinerary, the contrast with Champagne-focused properties like [Royal Champagne Hotel & Spa in Champillon](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/hotels/royal-champagne-hotel-spa-champillon-hotel) or alpine alternatives like [Four Seasons Megeve in Megève](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/hotels/four-seasons-megeve-megve-hotel) underlines how specifically calibrated Levernois is to a Burgundy-first travel logic.
Planning a Stay
Rates begin at US$441 per night, which for a Relais & Châteaux five-star property in one of France's most visited wine regions represents a competitive entry point, particularly when the Michelin-starred dinner and the estate setting are factored against standalone alternatives in Beaune. The property can be contacted directly at levernois@relaischateaux.com or by telephone at +33 (0)3 80 24 73 58, and the full room inventory and availability are accessible at levernois.com. Booking directly through the property or the Relais & Châteaux platform tends to offer the most flexibility for multi-night packages that combine accommodation with the Table de Levernois dinner program. For broader context on dining and accommodation in the area, see [our full Levernois restaurants guide](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/cities/levernois).
November, during the Hospices de Beaune auction weekend, is the region's peak demand period and books well in advance. The spring and early summer months, when the vineyards are in growth and the white asparagus season is running, represent a strong alternative window for guests who want the Burgundy atmosphere without the auction-week pricing pressure. Those travelling across France's luxury hotel circuit more broadly might also consider how Levernois fits alongside coastal properties such as [Hotel Du Cap-Eden-Roc in Cap d'Antibes](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/hotels/hotel-du-cap-eden-roc-antibes-hotel), [The Maybourne Riviera in Roquebrune-Cap-Martin](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/hotels/the-maybourne-riviera-roquebrune-cap-martin-hotel), or [La Réserve Ramatuelle in Ramatuelle](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/hotels/la-rserve-ramatuelle-htel-spa-and-villas-ramatuelle-hotel) as part of a longer French itinerary where each property anchors a distinct regional chapter.
Frequently Asked Questions
What's the general vibe of Hostellerie de Levernois?
The atmosphere is quiet and unhurried, calibrated to guests who have come for the vineyards, the table, and the 18th-century architecture rather than activity programming. The Relais & Châteaux classification sets a tone of restrained formality , attentive without being stiff , and the rural Levernois setting reinforces that register. Given the 4.8/5 Google score across nearly 1,000 reviews and the 2025 Gault & Millau Exceptional Hotel designation, the consistency of that atmosphere appears to hold across seasons and guest types.
What room category do guests prefer at Hostellerie de Levernois?
Room preferences at Relais & Châteaux mansion properties in wine country tend to favour rooms with direct garden or vineyard orientation, where the estate setting is part of the accommodation experience rather than incidental to it. At Levernois specifically, the Gault & Millau Exceptional Hotel recognition and the 5-star classification indicate that the room product across categories meets a high threshold, though guests paying at the upper end of the rate range (above the from-US$441 entry point) are typically seeking the larger or more characterful rooms where the period architectural detail is most present. Contacting the property directly at levernois@relaischateaux.com allows for guidance on specific room positioning within the 18th-century mansion structure.
What makes Hostellerie de Levernois worth visiting?
The combination of a Michelin-starred restaurant, a Gault & Millau Exceptional Hotel rating (2025), and a five-star Relais & Châteaux classification within five kilometres of Beaune's city centre is a concentration of credentials that few single properties in Burgundy can match at this price entry point. For travellers building a Côte de Beaune itinerary, the estate's vineyard position and the dual-restaurant format mean that both the serious food programme and the informal garden-produce bistro are available on-site, which reduces the logistical burden of an itinerary already dense with domaine visits and cellar appointments.
What's the leading way to book Hostellerie de Levernois?
Direct booking via levernois.com or through the Relais & Châteaux platform gives the most complete view of room categories and package options. The property's email is levernois@relaischateaux.com and the telephone is +33 (0)3 80 24 73 58. Booking directly is advisable if you want to coordinate the Table de Levernois dinner reservation alongside the room booking, particularly during high-demand periods like the November Hospices de Beaune auction. Rates start from US$441 per night.
Does Hostellerie de Levernois suit guests who are not primarily wine-focused travellers?
The property's Michelin-starred restaurant, garden-driven bistro, and 18th-century architectural character make it a viable destination for guests whose primary interest is gastronomy or historic French country house accommodation rather than vineyard access specifically. The Gault & Millau Exceptional Hotel designation in 2025 reflects the hospitality and food offer as standalone credentials, not merely as wine-country adjacencies. That said, the location in Levernois rather than a city means that guests without a car will find the surrounding area less accessible , the estate is self-contained by design, and the programme works leading for those who want a deliberate retreat rather than a base for urban exploration.
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