Skip to main content

    Hotel in Napa, United States

    Meadowood Napa Valley

    1,650pts

    Estate-Scale Wine Immersion

    Meadowood Napa Valley, Hotel in Napa

    About Meadowood Napa Valley

    Set on a 250-acre estate in St. Helena, Meadowood Napa Valley operates in the upper tier of California wine country retreats, holding Michelin 3 Keys (2024) and a La Liste Top Hotels score of 96 points (2026). Thirty-six lodge-style rooms and suites, three pools, a full-service spa, and a dedicated Wine Center make it one of the most programme-dense resorts in the valley, with rates from US$1,239 per night.

    Where the Valley Tucks Itself Away

    The road into Meadowood narrows as the vines thin out and the tree canopy closes overhead. By the time you reach the property's core, St. Helena feels further than it is. That physical compression, the sense of arriving somewhere deliberately removed from the main corridor of Highway 29, is not accidental. It is the central architectural proposition of what 250 acres on the quieter, eastern edge of Napa Valley can offer a guest who has already seen the valley's more exposed properties.

    Napa's premium hotel tier has bifurcated over the past decade. On one side sit the hillside retreats with commanding views and design-forward rooms, properties like Auberge du Soleil and Stanly Ranch, Auberge Resorts Collection. On the other sit the estate-format resorts where the land itself does the work: where you walk through the property rather than simply looking at it. Meadowood belongs firmly to the second category. Thirty-six keys spread across a private valley means a density of space that few comparably priced properties in California can replicate. For reference, properties in a similar price band but with urban footprints, such as The Fifth Avenue Hotel in New York City or Raffles Boston, are solving a fundamentally different problem: density and access. Meadowood is solving for seclusion.

    The Room as the Point

    Meadowood's guest accommodations were designed by Howard Backen, the Napa architect whose vocabulary runs to board-and-batten siding, steep-pitched rooflines, and a studied informality that reads as residential rather than resort-institutional. The 36 rooms, suites, and cottages vary in footprint, but the consistent thread across all of them is a fireplace, and in Northern California, where evenings cool sharply even in harvest season, that detail is not decorative. It is functional.

    The room typology ranges from studios to the Hill House, which includes a two-person soaking tub and separate shower, dual sinks, a dressing area, a private outdoor shower, and an outdoor soaking tub with a fire pit. That outdoor tub with fire is worth dwelling on as a detail: it positions Meadowood's upper room tier alongside wilderness-adjacent retreats like Amangiri in Canyon Point or Post Ranch Inn in Big Sur, properties where the outdoor-indoor boundary dissolves as part of the core experience, rather than urban resort properties where a balcony suffices.

    Bathrooms vary by room category. Entry-level configurations offer a shower and single vanity. Mid-tier rooms add soaking tubs and dual vanities. The product is consistent with what Flamingo Estate bath amenities, in-room espresso machines, and California King beds with down bedding signal collectively: a property that benchmarks comfort against residential luxury rather than hotel-industry norms. French doors opening onto private porches and patios, vaulted ceilings, and built-in window seats recur across categories. These are not generic luxury-hotel details; they are design choices that make the room feel like a well-appointed retreat cottage that happens to have exceptional linen and daily housekeeping.

    Rates begin at US$1,239 per night, with some sources referencing a baseline around US$1,350, placing Meadowood at the upper end of Napa's pricing, above Bardessono Hotel and Spa, North Block, and Milliken Creek Inn, and in the bracket occupied by destination resorts that are the primary reason for a trip rather than a base for regional exploration.

    The Programme Beyond the Room

    What distinguishes Meadowood from comparably priced 36-key properties elsewhere, whether Troutbeck in Amenia or Little Palm Island Resort & Spa in Little Torch Key, is the density of on-property programming. Three pools, added and reconfigured in 2020, cover distinct use cases: an adults-only pool with four cabanas, a fitness pool, and a family activities pool. The 2020 renovation also brought a full-service outdoor café with a bar at pool level. A fitness centre with Peloton bikes, saunas, steam rooms, and dedicated class spaces was refreshed in the same period.

    The spa operates as an all-suite facility, with each treatment suite carrying its own bathroom and steam shower. That format places it in a different tier from hotel spas where treatment rooms are shared corridor spaces. For guests whose primary reason for travel is restorative recovery, the spa programme is the main draw. Canyon Ranch Tucson and Kona Village, A Rosewood Resort in Kailua Kona occupy similar territory in the wellness-resort category at the national level.

    Five Plexipave tennis courts and a resident tennis programme add an amenity that is increasingly rare at wine-country properties that have pivoted entirely to F&B programming. The hiking trail through the estate's wooded hills provides the physical counterpart to the spa's restorative offer.

    Wine, Food, and the St. Helena Context

    St. Helena has a reasonable claim to being California wine country's most concentrated town for serious food. The West Coast branch of the Culinary Institute of America operates there, and the density of wine-educated residents and visitors has sustained a restaurant scene that punches above what a small town would typically support. Meadowood sits at the edge of that ecosystem and draws from it.

    Forum, the property's all-day dining restaurant, sources from Meadowood Farm and local producers. The Terrace Café operates poolside. Neither is the primary reason most guests choose Meadowood over comparable properties, but the sourcing commitment to local produce is consistent with what the broader St. Helena food scene expects at this price point. For a deeper map of the valley's dining and drinking, see our full Napa restaurants guide.

    The Wine Center is the more differentiated programme. A team of published educators runs courses and tastings calibrated to guest knowledge level, from introductory sessions to in-depth explorations of winemaking. Napa's wine education offer has grown significantly as properties compete for guests who want structured immersion rather than just cellar access. The Wine Center at Meadowood formalises that offer in a way that most valley hotels do not, giving it a point of distinction in a market where wine access is table stakes but wine education is not. The Star Wine List recognition (2026) validates the programme's seriousness at an independent level.

    Guests should note that public transportation to St. Helena is limited. The practical reality of wine country travel is that a rental car or pre-arranged car service is necessary once outside San Francisco. The property does not accommodate pets. For context on the regional geography, Meadowood sits on Meadowood Lane off the Silverado Trail, a quieter parallel road to Highway 29 that runs the valley's eastern edge.

    Recognition and Peer Position

    Meadowood holds Michelin 3 Keys (2024), the hotel-category recognition that Michelin introduced to sit alongside its restaurant star system. A La Liste Leading Hotels score of 96 points (2026) and a Google review average of 4.7 across 493 reviews place it in consistent agreement across independent evaluation frameworks. The property reopened in August 2021 following closure, and the renovation that preceded that reopening addressed pools, the fitness centre, and the Backen-designed room inventory.

    Within Napa's premium hotel set, Meadowood's competitive peer group includes properties like Alila Napa Valley and Andaz Napa, by Hyatt at the brand-hotel end, though Meadowood's independent estate format and multi-generational status as a valley institution distinguish it structurally. At the national level, properties that occupy a similar position as destination resorts anchored by landscape, a serious spa, and a wine or food education programme include Sage Lodge in Pray, SingleThread Farm Inn in Healdsburg, and internationally, Aman Venice and Badrutt's Palace Hotel in St. Moritz as properties where the estate or setting is inseparable from the guest proposition.

    For guests considering California alternatives, Hotel Bel-Air in Los Angeles and 1 Hotel San Francisco solve for different priorities: urban access and brand positioning over estate seclusion. Meadowood's argument is the opposite, and it makes it with 250 acres.

    Planning Your Stay

    Rates start from US$1,239 per night. The property can be reached at +1 707 967 1235 or via meadowood@relaischateaux.com. The address is 900 Meadowood Lane, St. Helena, California 94574. Travel from San Francisco takes approximately 90 minutes by car; there is no practical public transit option for the final leg into St. Helena. Harvest season, broadly September through November, is peak demand; booking well in advance for that window is advisable. The property is a Relais & Chateaux member, which may affect loyalty programme considerations for guests who use that network.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What room should I choose at Meadowood Napa Valley?

    The room category depends on how much of the stay you plan to spend outdoors. The Hill House tier, at the upper end of the 36-room inventory, includes a private outdoor soaking tub with a fire pit, making it the strongest choice for guests whose primary mode is slow, private retreat. Mid-tier rooms with soaking tubs and dual vanities cover most guests' needs at a lower rate. All categories include a wood-burning fireplace and California King beds, which is the baseline rather than an upgrade at Meadowood. The Michelin 3 Keys recognition (2024) and La Liste 96-point score (2026) apply to the property as a whole, not to a specific room type.

    Why do people go to Meadowood Napa Valley?

    Most guests are choosing between Napa's estate-format resorts and its more accessible valley-floor hotels. Meadowood draws the segment that wants a property you do not leave for the day: with three pools, a spa, a tennis programme, the Wine Center, a hiking trail, and two dining outlets on 250 acres, it functions as a self-contained retreat. Rates from US$1,239 per night position it as a primary-destination spend rather than a base hotel. The Star Wine List recognition (2026) and Michelin 3 Keys (2024) both signal that the wine and hospitality programming are substantive rather than incidental.

    Do I need a reservation for Meadowood Napa Valley?

    Meadowood operates 36 rooms and suites on a property that is in high demand during Napa's harvest season (September through November) and summer weekends. Advance booking is advisable, particularly if the Hill House or upper suite categories are required. Contact the property directly at +1 707 967 1235 or meadowood@relaischateaux.com, or through the Relais & Chateaux reservation network. If Meadowood is fully committed for your dates, comparable estate-format alternatives in the valley include Rancho Caymus Inn or the hillside position at Auberge du Soleil.

    What's Meadowood Napa Valley a good pick for?

    Meadowood works leading for stays where the property itself is the programme. Guests who want a structured wine education through the Wine Center, a restorative spa stay in all-suite treatment facilities, or a multi-generational trip with pool options for different age groups will find the format directly suited to those purposes. At rates from US$1,239 per night with Michelin 3 Keys (2024) and La Liste 96 points (2026), it sits in the tier of properties where the decision is about what kind of luxury rather than whether to spend it.

    What is the Wine Center at Meadowood, and who is it for?

    The Wine Center at Meadowood Estate is a dedicated wine education programme led by a team of published educators, offering courses and tastings calibrated to guests across knowledge levels, from those new to Napa Cabernet to guests with significant existing wine backgrounds. This is a structured educational offer, not a standard hotel wine-pairing dinner, and it is the feature most likely to distinguish a Meadowood stay for guests who travel specifically to understand California wine regions. The Star Wine List recognition (2026) provides independent confirmation of the programme's quality. It is worth treating the Wine Center as a bookable programme in its own right rather than an amenity you discover on arrival.

    Recognized By

    Keep this place

    Save or rate Meadowood Napa Valley on Pearl

    Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.