Hotel in Park County, United States
Chico Hot Springs
150ptsRemote Montana resort, surprisingly good dining.

About Chico Hot Springs
Chico Hot Springs is a historic Montana resort in Paradise Valley, best booked for its natural geothermal hot spring pools and proximity to Yellowstone. Easy to reserve, strong on atmosphere, and a genuine option for couples or families wanting a remote Rocky Mountain escape. Not a polished luxury property, but delivers on what matters: the soak, the scenery, and a dining room that holds up for its remote location.
The Verdict
Chico Hot Springs is easy to book and worth the effort if you're planning a Montana mountain escape, particularly in winter when the natural hot spring pools are at their most appealing and the surrounding Absaroka Range delivers serious scenery. This is not a slick luxury resort — expect a historic, character-heavy property in Pray, MT that has been drawing visitors since 1900. If you want a polished spa campus with resort-level service, look at Canyon Ranch Tucson instead. If you want a genuine Rocky Mountain hot spring retreat with a dining room that punches above its weight for a remote location, Chico is hard to beat in its category.
Pool, Spa, and Wellness
The headline draw is the geothermal hot spring pool — a large outdoor soaking pool fed by natural spring water, open year-round. In winter, soaking in hot mineral water while snow falls on the surrounding peaks is the reason most guests book here, and it delivers. There is also a smaller, warmer pool. The spa facilities are direct rather than resort-scale: treatments are available, but this is not a destination wellness campus. Think of the pool as the wellness experience; the spa is a supporting act. For a dedicated wellness retreat, Canyon Ranch Tucson offers a far deeper program, but it comes at a significantly different price point and without the wild Montana setting.
Dining
The on-site dining room has a reputation that outpaces expectations for a property this remote. The kitchen leans into regional ingredients and has maintained a loyal following among both guests and locals from the surrounding Park County area. It is not a destination dining experience by urban standards, but for a resort in rural Montana it is a genuine reason to stay on property rather than driving out. Pair dinner with a post-meal soak and you have the core Chico loop. Browse our full Park County restaurants guide if you want alternatives in the region.
Location and Access
Chico sits in Paradise Valley, roughly 30 miles south of Livingston and about 30 miles north of Yellowstone's north entrance at Gardiner. That positions it as a logical base for Yellowstone day trips, fly-fishing on the Yellowstone River, and horseback riding. The nearest airport is Bozeman Yellowstone International (BZN), approximately 60 miles away. The trade-off for the setting is real remoteness , there is no nearby town for casual errands or alternative dining. Explore our Park County experiences guide to plan activities around your stay.
Who Should Book
Chico works leading for couples looking for a low-key Montana escape, families comfortable with a rustic-leaning resort, and travelers using it as a Yellowstone basecamp. It is not suited to business travel or anyone expecting a high-service luxury property. For Montana-adjacent alternatives, Sage Lodge, also in Pray, offers a more modern, higher-finish option at a higher price. Alpine Falls Ranch is worth considering if a working ranch experience appeals. See our full Park County hotels guide for the complete picture.
Know Before You Go
- Location
- Pray, MT 59065 , Paradise Valley, Park County, Montana
- Nearest Airport
- Bozeman Yellowstone International (BZN), approx. 60 miles
- Booking Difficulty
- Easy , no waitlist, reservations available directly
- Leading Time to Visit
- Winter for the hot spring experience; summer for Yellowstone access and fly-fishing
- Pool Access
- Natural geothermal outdoor pool, open year-round to guests and day visitors
- Dining
- On-site dining room open to guests and public; reservations recommended for dinner
- Nearby
- Yellowstone National Park north entrance (~30 miles), Livingston MT (~30 miles), Yellowstone River fly-fishing
- Explore More
- Park County bars | Park County wineries | Park County experiences
Compare Chico Hot Springs
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chico Hot Springs | Easy | — | ||
| Aman New York | Michelin 3 Key, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — | |
| Amangiri | Michelin 3 Key, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — | |
| Hotel Bel-Air | Michelin 3 Key, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — | |
| The Beverly Hills Hotel | Michelin 3 Key, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — | |
| The Carlyle, A Rosewood Hotel | Michelin 2 Key, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which room category is best at Chico Hot Springs?
The cabins and outbuildings offer more privacy than the main lodge rooms, which suits couples and small groups wanting separation from the resort's busier common areas. Main lodge rooms are closer to the pool and dining room, making them the practical pick for families or anyone who wants less walking in cold weather. Room inventory is limited enough that booking early matters more than optimizing category — take what's available and plan your trip around pool and dining access.
Is Chico Hot Springs good for business travel?
No. Chico Hot Springs sits in a remote stretch of Paradise Valley, roughly 30 miles from Livingston, MT, with no conference infrastructure to speak of. If you need reliable connectivity, meeting rooms, or proximity to an airport, this is the wrong property. It works for small off-site retreats where the point is deliberate disconnection, but for standard business travel, look elsewhere.
How is the pool and spa at Chico Hot Springs?
The outdoor geothermal pool is the reason to book. It's fed by natural hot spring water, operates year-round, and is at its best in winter when the contrast between soaking in warm water and sub-freezing Montana air is the core experience. The pool is large enough to handle resort guests without feeling overcrowded on most nights, though weekends in peak season can get busy. Spa services are available on-site but the pool is the primary draw, not the treatment menu.
How is the dining at Chico Hot Springs?
The dining room consistently outperforms expectations for a property this remote. The kitchen leans into regional ingredients and has built a local reputation that draws diners from outside the resort, which is a reliable signal of quality in a market this thin. It's not a destination restaurant in the Michelin sense, but for Park County, Montana, it's the best on-site dining option in the area by a clear margin. Book a table in advance if you're arriving on a weekend.
How is the location of Chico Hot Springs?
Paradise Valley is the selling point and the constraint. Chico sits about 30 miles south of Livingston and 30 miles north of Yellowstone's north entrance at Gardiner, making it a practical base for Yellowstone day trips without requiring you to stay inside the park. The trade-off is that you need a car for everything and the nearest airport is Bozeman, roughly an hour away. If you're flying in, factor in the drive time when planning arrival.
How does Chico Hot Springs compare to nearby hotels?
Within a 30-mile radius, Chico has no direct competitor that combines geothermal pools, on-site dining, and Yellowstone proximity at the same price point. Livingston has standard motel and inn options that cost less but offer none of the resort infrastructure. Properties inside Yellowstone itself are more convenient for park access but lack the hot springs experience. If the pool is your reason for visiting, Chico is the clear choice in this geography.
Is Chico Hot Springs family-friendly?
Yes, with some caveats. Families comfortable with a rustic-leaning resort will find the outdoor pool, open space, and Yellowstone proximity genuinely useful. It's not a resort engineered for children — there are no waterslides or dedicated kids' programming — but the setting and activities suit families who are self-directed. Couples looking for a quiet escape may find peak-season weekends busier than expected if families are a consideration.
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