There is a version of hotel pricing that exists outside the normal frame of reference. Not $800 a night, not $2,000 a night. Numbers that make you recalculate whether a room is a product or a statement. The suites on this list start at $70,000 a night and go past $100,000. Some require minimum stays. Most come with staff ratios that make them less a hotel room and more a staffed residence.
These are the most expensive hotel suites in the world right now — ranked by reported nightly rate, with the facts that explain why someone actually books them.
TL;DR: The Guinness World Record for the most expensive hotel suite belongs to The Mark Penthouse in New York — $114,767 per night (including taxes and breakfast), verified April 2025. The Royal Mansion Penthouse at Atlantis The Royal in Dubai and the Empathy Suite at Palms Casino in Las Vegas both hit $100,000. Claridge's Penthouse in London has no fixed published rate but has been reported at around £60,000 per night.
No. 1: The Mark Penthouse, New York — $114,767/night
The Guinness World Record for the most expensive hotel suite in the world — verified April 22, 2025 — belongs to The Mark Penthouse in New York at $114,767 per night, taxes and breakfast included. Five bedrooms, six bathrooms, four fireplaces, a living room that converts into a 26-foot-high ballroom, a private gym, library, and a 2,500-square-foot rooftop terrace overlooking Central Park and the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The largest hotel suite in the United States at over 10,000 square feet, designed by Jacques Grange, on the 16th and 17th floors of The Mark's Upper East Side landmark building. This is the certified record holder — not by reputation but by primary verification.

No. 2 & 3: The $100,000 Tier — Dubai and Las Vegas
Two suites sit at $100,000 per night, and they could not be more different in character.
Royal Mansion Penthouse — Atlantis The Royal, Dubai is the more architectural of the two. Occupying the highest residential floors of Atlantis The Royal, the four-bedroom suite spans 476 square metres of private terrace with a private infinity pool cantilevered above the Arabian Gulf. The interior — marble, gold chandeliers, a commissioned blue sphere by a contemporary artist — operates at a scale that makes most penthouses look provisional. A private foyer contains 100-year-old olive trees. There is an alfresco kitchen and a private library. Views take in Dubai's skyline and the Palm Jumeirah in both directions.


The Empathy Suite — Palms Casino Resort, Las Vegas at $100,000 per night (two-night minimum) is the world's only hotel suite designed by Damien Hirst. The British artist collaborated directly on every surface and installation — a two-storey sky villa with a private infinity pool overlooking the Strip, a 13-seat bar, two massage rooms, a salt sauna, and an art collection worth tens of millions embedded in the walls and ceilings. The suite is less a room than a commissioned installation you sleep inside.

No. 4–7: Geneva, Miami, New York, Paris
Royal Penthouse Suite — Hotel President Wilson, Geneva ($80,000–$100,000/night) occupies the entire 8th floor — 1,680 square metres, 12 bedrooms, panoramic Lake Geneva and Alps views, a Steinway grand piano, and bulletproof glass throughout. A longstanding choice of heads of state.

Faena Penthouse — Faena Miami Beach ($70,000–$88,000/night at current published rates) runs two floors, five bedrooms, a baby grand piano, and panoramic Atlantic Ocean views. A residential layout that makes it feel less like a hotel room and more like a borrowed house on the ocean. Rates vary significantly by date — peak periods like Art Basel and New Year's push toward the top of the range.

Ty Warner Penthouse — Four Seasons New York (~$78,000/night) occupies the 52nd floor of I.M. Pei's Midtown tower with four glass balconies at the highest residential elevation in the city. Designed by Peter Marino and Ty Warner — a green bowenite waterfall, a chromotherapy infinity tub overlooking Central Park, a Bösendorfer baby grand, and a private spa facing the East River.

Grand Appartement Concorde — Hôtel de Crillon, a Rosewood Hotel, Paris (~$73,000/night). Two connecting suites above Place de la Concorde, each with its own bathroom, dining room, and dressing rooms — bookable separately or together as a single sprawling apartment overlooking one of the most famous squares in the world.

No. 8 & 9: Monaco
Monaco holds both remaining positions, both at the Hôtel de Paris Monte-Carlo — a property whose relationship with the principality's founding family runs through its DNA.
Prince Rainier III Diamond Suite — Hôtel de Paris, Monaco (~$70,000/night, with rates considerably higher during the Formula 1 Grand Prix) is the larger of the two Monaco suites at 830 square metres across an entire floor. A grand living area, private bar, library, dining room, study, and heated infinity pool. Private airport and heliport meet-and-greet are standard; a dedicated housekeeper assists with packing and unpacking. As we covered in our Monaco Grand Prix guide, this suite books years ahead for race weekend.

Princess Grace Diamond Suite — Hôtel de Paris, Monaco (from €30,000/night) is the more intimate of the two Monaco suites — two storeys, two bedrooms, a private terrace with Mediterranean views, and a private infinity pool. Designed in honour of Grace Kelly, who became Princess of Monaco in 1956: her portrait hangs in the bedroom. The view of Monaco from the upper terrace at sunset is among the most recognised in European hotel accommodation.


Two suites sit just outside this ranked list but deserve mention. The Hôtel Martinez Cannes Penthouse Apartments (reported at $56,500/night, 1,250 sqm, 180-degree Bay of Cannes views) are the most sought-after rooms on the Riviera during the Cannes Film Festival — covered in depth in our Cannes Film Festival guide. And The Penthouse at Claridge's in London — which opened in November 2023 atop the Art Deco landmark in Mayfair — has no fixed published rate, sold case-by-case at approximately £60,000 per night by the hotel's own account. Because it has no verified standard rate, it doesn't sit in the ranked list. But it belongs in the conversation.
What You Actually Want to Know
What is the most expensive hotel suite in the world?
The Guinness World Record for the most expensive hotel suite belongs to The Mark Penthouse in New York at $114,767 per night (taxes and breakfast included), verified April 22, 2025. Two suites at $100,000 per night follow: the Royal Mansion Penthouse at Atlantis The Royal in Dubai and the Empathy Suite at Palms Casino in Las Vegas (two-night minimum). The Penthouse at Claridge's in London has no fixed published rate — sold case-by-case at around £60,000 per night — so it sits outside the ranked list.
Are the most expensive hotel suites actually worth the price?
Worth is the wrong frame. At $75,000–$100,000 a night, you're not paying for incremental hotel comfort — you're paying for scale, exclusivity, and the specific experience of occupying a space almost no one occupies. The Royal Mansion in Dubai is a private residence you rent for a night. The Empathy Suite at Palms is a Damien Hirst installation you sleep inside. These suites exist in a category where the value is the experience, not the thread count.
Which city has the most expensive hotel suites?
New York places two properties in the top ten (The Mark and Four Seasons Ty Warner). Monaco contributes two (both at the Hôtel de Paris). Dubai, Las Vegas, Geneva, Paris, and Miami each place one property. The certified record holder is in New York.
How far in advance do you need to book these suites?
For peak periods — Formula 1 Monaco, Cannes Film Festival, Met Gala week in New York — suites at the top end book 12 to 18 months ahead. For standard dates, most are accessible with 3–6 months lead time. The Empathy Suite at Palms requires a two-night minimum regardless of timing.
What is included at this price point?
At $75,000+ per night, inclusions vary but typically cover dedicated butler service, airport or heliport transfers, personal shopping assistance, and priority access to the hotel's restaurants and spa. The Prince Rainier III Suite at Hôtel de Paris includes airport meet-and-greet and a dedicated housekeeper for packing and unpacking as standard.
Noon's advisors have access to every property on this list — and know which ones deliver on the rate. Tell us where you want to go.
By Noon Travel Editors | May 5, 2026
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