Hotel in Newport, United States
The Cliffside Inn
750ptsHistoric House Hotel

About The Cliffside Inn
A Michelin Key-recognised boutique hotel in Newport's historic district, the Cliffside Inn occupies a restored Victorian house once owned by painter Beatrice Turner. Lark Hotels' 2019 renovation produced 16 rooms that pair gas fireplaces and contemporary bathrooms with Turner's original artwork, placing the property at the more intimate end of Newport's premium accommodation tier. Rates from $321 per night.
Newport's Victorian Tier, and Where the Cliffside Inn Sits Within It
Newport, Rhode Island has accumulated more architectural history per square mile than almost any comparable New England town. The Bellevue Avenue corridor alone contains Gilded Age mansions that defined American wealth at its most theatrical, and the streets running toward the waterfront are dense with Federal, Colonial Revival, and Victorian structures that predate the country's centennial. Against that backdrop, the question for any boutique hotel isn't whether the building has a story — it's whether the interior does justice to it.
The Cliffside Inn sits in Newport's historic district at 2 Seaview Ave, occupying a Victorian house that served as the home of painter Beatrice Turner. That provenance matters here in a specific, non-decorative way: Turner's artwork is integrated into the property's interiors, giving the building a curatorial identity that differentiates it from Newport's broader stock of heritage accommodation. Lark Hotels, the New England-based collection behind the property, recognised a 2024 Michelin Key — a signal that places the Inn within the more serious end of the city's boutique hotel category, alongside properties like Castle Hill Inn and The Chanler at Cliff Walk.
At 16 rooms, the property is deliberately small. That scale positions it apart from larger Newport offerings such as Gurney's Newport Resort & Marina or Brenton Hotel, and closer in character to the low-key, detail-focused model used by properties like The Attwater. Rates from $321 per night reflect the premium tier without reaching the ceiling of Newport's most expensive addresses.
What the 2019 Renovation Actually Changed
Renovation projects in historic New England properties carry a particular set of risks. Strip out too much period character and you lose the point of staying in a Victorian house; leave too much and you end up with charming but functionally dated rooms. The Cliffside Inn's 2019 renovation steered a credible path between those outcomes, producing interiors the database describes as eclectic Victorian-meets-contemporary , a framing that suggests retained architectural bones with updated surfaces rather than wholesale reinvention.
The practical upgrades are evident in the bathrooms, described as stylish and modern, and in amenities like Lather bath products, which signal a considered approach to guest comfort rather than generic hotel-standard provisioning. The distinction between room types matters here: the rooms in the original Victorian house and its carriage house carry a slightly stronger period atmosphere, while the newer Cottage Suites trade some of that character for additional square footage and a greater degree of privacy. For guests whose priority is the historic fabric of the building, the original house rooms deliver more of it. For those who want separation from other guests, the Cottage Suites are the more functional choice.
What unites all 16 rooms is a set of features that lean toward comfort over technology , gas fireplaces in particular carry genuine weight in Newport, where shoulder-season and winter stays are common and the ocean air makes warmth a practical rather than merely aesthetic consideration. The property's Google rating of 4.8 across 222 reviews suggests that consistency across room types is broadly achieved.
The Room as the Point: Overnight Staying at the Cliffside
The case for small boutique hotels in historic properties often rests on what happens in the room itself, and the Cliffside Inn's value proposition is built almost entirely around that overnight experience. This isn't a property oriented around a restaurant, a spa, or an event programme. It's a house , a restored, carefully considered house , where the emphasis is on the quality of sleeping, the texture of the space, and the small rituals that make a two-night stay feel different from checking into a chain property.
Gas fireplaces across the room inventory make the most immediate case. In a property where every room is described as different, the fireplace becomes a consistent thread, providing both warmth and a particular quality of evening atmosphere that electric alternatives can't replicate. The bathrooms, upgraded in the 2019 renovation and stocked with Lather products, represent the point at which Victorian atmosphere and contemporary expectations meet most directly. The Cliffside Inn's peer set in this regard , small, design-led boutique properties in storied American buildings , includes properties like Troutbeck in Amenia and Hilltop Inn, both of which operate within the same logic of historic structure meeting considered modern comfort.
Turner's artwork distributed through the interiors adds a layer that most boutique renovations of comparable properties don't have access to. The paintings function as something between decoration and documentary evidence , they're part of the building's actual history rather than art chosen to evoke a period. That distinction is subtle but perceptible once you know it, and it gives the interior a coherence that's harder to manufacture from scratch.
Breakfast, Wine Hour, and the House Rituals
The Cliffside Inn structures its communal hours around two consistent offerings that reflect the logic of small boutique hospitality: a lavish breakfast served in the house's common spaces each morning, and a complimentary wine service with snacks each evening at five o'clock. These aren't incidental details. At a 16-room property, communal moments in shared spaces shape the character of a stay in ways they simply don't at larger hotels. The five o'clock wine hour in particular functions as a soft social anchor , a reason to return from the Cliff Walk or Bellevue Avenue at a specific time, and a way of experiencing the Victorian common rooms as living spaces rather than passing-through spaces.
This model , where the house provides structured moments rather than full-service hospitality , is a deliberate one. It places the Cliffside Inn in a category of properties that assume guests will eat dinner elsewhere, keeping the dining offer simple and the property's energy focused on morning and early evening. Bellevue Avenue's restaurant concentration, just a few blocks west, makes that arrangement practical rather than limiting. For a fuller view of Newport's dining options across all price points and cuisines, the EP Club Newport restaurant guide maps the relevant choices.
Location: Seaview Ave, the Cliff Walk, and What's Within Reach
The address at 2 Seaview Ave puts the Cliff Walk at the end of the street. Newport's Cliff Walk is a 3.5-mile path along the Atlantic coastline, running past the rear facades of the Bellevue Avenue mansions and providing sustained ocean views that the mansions' front-facing visitors miss entirely. Access from the Cliffside Inn is a short walk, making it among the more practically positioned properties for guests whose primary reason for visiting Newport includes the walk itself.
Bellevue Avenue's restaurant concentration lies a few blocks west , walkable in most weather conditions. Newport's compact historic district means that most of what matters in the city is accessible on foot from Seaview Ave, which reduces the logistical friction of a car-dependent stay. For guests arriving from Boston, Newport is roughly 75 miles south, making it a viable long weekend from Raffles Boston or comparable properties. For those building a wider New England or East Coast itinerary, the Cliffside Inn fits into a tier of historically-grounded boutique properties that also includes The Fifth Avenue Hotel in New York City and Aman New York, though the Newport property operates at a significantly different scale and price point than either.
For guests comparing across the full range of Lark Hotels' New England portfolio, or weighing the Cliffside against Newport's other Michelin-recognised options including The Vanderbilt, Auberge Resorts Collection, the differentiator is almost always scale and tone. The Vanderbilt operates at a different register of service and amenity. The Cliffside Inn's argument is intimacy, curatorial identity, and a house that has something specific to say about the person who once lived in it.
Planning Your Stay
The property operates 16 rooms across the main Victorian house, the carriage house, and the Cottage Suites, with rates from $321 per night. The 2024 Michelin Key recognition places it in the acknowledged upper tier of Newport's boutique accommodation, and at that price point it sits below the ceiling of the city's premium market. Newport's peak season runs from late June through August, when the summer crowd arrives for the folk and jazz festivals and the harbour fills with sailing traffic; shoulder-season stays in May, September, or October offer better availability and a quieter version of the city, with the Cliff Walk and mansions considerably less crowded. Booking directly through Lark Hotels is the standard channel for this type of property. Given the 16-room inventory, availability in peak periods narrows quickly, and advance planning of six to eight weeks during summer is advisable.
Frequently Asked Questions
What's the vibe at The Cliffside Inn?
The Cliffside Inn reads as a considered house hotel rather than a full-service resort. At 16 rooms in Newport's historic district, the atmosphere is quiet and residential in character, with communal moments structured around morning breakfast and a five o'clock wine hour rather than around a lobby bar or restaurant programme. The 2024 Michelin Key recognition and a 4.8 Google rating confirm that the property delivers on its format consistently. Rates from $321 per night place it in Newport's premium boutique tier.
What's the leading suite at The Cliffside Inn?
Cottage Suites offer the most space and the greatest degree of separation from other guests, making them the practical choice for guests prioritising privacy. The rooms in the original Victorian house and carriage house carry more period character, which may matter to guests drawn by the property's Beatrice Turner provenance and the Michelin Key-recognised atmosphere. The 2019 renovation brought all room types to a comparable standard in terms of bathrooms and amenity, so the decision comes down to space versus architectural authenticity. Rates reflect the premium tier from $321.
What's The Cliffside Inn leading at?
Property's strongest case is the overnight room experience: gas fireplaces, renovated bathrooms with Lather products, and the integration of Beatrice Turner's original artwork into a Victorian house that received a 2024 Michelin Key. At 16 rooms in Newport's historic district, it operates in the intimate end of the city's boutique accommodation category. Guests looking for full-service resort amenities should consider larger Newport properties; guests whose priority is a well-considered historic house hotel at around $321 per night will find the Cliffside Inn well-matched to that brief.
Can I walk in to The Cliffside Inn?
Walk-in availability at a 16-room boutique property in a high-demand market like Newport is unreliable, particularly during the summer season from late June through August. The Michelin Key recognition and strong reviews have raised the property's profile, which compresses available inventory further. If a specific date matters, advance booking is the practical approach. Contact Lark Hotels directly for current availability and pricing from $321 per night.
Does The Cliffside Inn have a connection to local art history?
The property occupies the former home of Beatrice Turner, a Newport painter whose artwork is displayed throughout the interiors. This isn't a generic decorative scheme: the paintings are part of the building's documented history, giving the Cliffside Inn a specific curatorial identity that most boutique renovations in comparable Victorian properties can't replicate. For guests interested in Newport's artistic and architectural heritage alongside the 2024 Michelin Key recognition, this provenance adds a layer of context that extends beyond the usual boutique hotel offer.
Recognized By
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