Four Seasons One Dalton Boston — Skyline Views from Boston's Tallest Tower, 9.2/10 Highest-Rated
If you are looking for a Boston hotel where every room looks down at the skyline without anything in the way — Four Seasons One Dalton is the specific answer. Opened in 2019 inside Boston's tallest residential tower, it holds a 9.2/10 score on Booking.com from over 200 verified reviews, making it the highest-rated luxury hotel in the city right now. Every room starts at floor 20 or above. Zuma Restaurant draws its own crowds from the city. The Equinox Spa on the seventh floor is the full picture. Guests who have stayed here talk about it the same way: if you are going to spend big on one hotel in Boston, this is where that money actually shows.
Boston has several five-star properties, but the one that comes up most often in recent guest conversation is Four Seasons One Dalton. A 9.2/10 on Booking.com does not happen by accident — and the reviews here are unusually specific. Not a vague "great hotel" but guests writing about the concierge who sourced Red Sox tickets same-day, the check-in that was done in under three minutes, the view from floor 32 at sunset that they still think about. The building itself — the tallest tower in Boston — provides a physical context no other hotel in the city can match. When hotel rooms begin at floor 20, the word "city view" becomes something different.
"Check-in took three minutes. The concierge found Red Sox tickets by the afternoon. Then the view from floor 32 at sunset — Boston is much more beautiful than I expected. Nothing from this trip is going to be easy to forget."
The property opened in 2019 as the newest true five-star addition to Boston's luxury market, and it shows in the finish. Deluxe City View Rooms run $700–950 USD per night, which is the top of the scale for Boston — One Dalton Suites go $1,100–1,800, and the Sky Villa Penthouse reaches $3,500–8,000+. Every category places you above the neighboring rooftops with unobstructed sightlines across Back Bay, the Charles River, and the broader city grid. One practical note most guests pass along: request a room above floor 30 on the Back Bay side. That angle gets both the Charles River and the Back Bay skyline in a single frame, which is the view most often mentioned in reviews.
Two features drive the conversation about this hotel more than anything else: Zuma Restaurant and the Equinox Spa. Zuma is a Japanese robata restaurant with a limited number of global locations — the Boston branch draws enough local diners that hotel guests who do not book in advance sometimes cannot get a table. The concierge can arrange this at check-in, which is the recommended approach. The Equinox Spa on the seventh floor is a full-facility operation — treatments, pool, fitness — at a level Boston did not have at a hotel before this property opened. The pool view from that floor is worth noting on its own: city skyline visible from the water, which changes the usual experience of a hotel pool considerably.
Location sits at 1 Dalton St in Back Bay/South End, at the boundary between two of Boston's most walkable neighborhoods. Green Line E to Prudential Station is roughly a five-minute walk from the door, which opens up the full MBTA network — Fenway Park, the waterfront, Cambridge, all reachable without an Uber. Copley Square is about ten minutes on foot. The Newbury Street shopping corridor is slightly further but still walkable. One honest note: this is not a property where you open the hotel door and step into boutique retail immediately. There is a short walk or one metro stop to get to the densest commercial stretches. For most guests at this price level it is a non-issue, but it is worth knowing.
A few honest points before booking: the rate — starting at $700 per night — is the highest of any hotel reviewed in our Boston list. If the budget does not reach that level comfortably, there are very good alternatives in the same city at lower price points. The Mandarin Oriental starts around $625, the Fairmont Copley Plaza around $445. Both are excellent. The second thing worth saying: Zuma requires a reservation and will not always have walk-in space. This is a fixable problem via the concierge, but it is not the kind of hotel restaurant where you can simply arrive at dinner time. Plan around it and the experience is much smoother.
Put plainly: Four Seasons One Dalton is the hotel that earns a 9.2/10 in Boston because it consistently delivers what it promises at the level it charges. The views are real, the service standard is real, and the guests who report back are unusually enthusiastic. It fits best for a special-occasion couple trip, a significant celebration, or a business traveler with a proper hotel budget. If you want to stay somewhere in Boston that you will actually talk about afterward — this is the most consistent answer the review record points to.
Summary from Booking & Agoda
- ✓ 9.2/10 on Booking.com — highest-rated luxury hotel in Boston
- ✓ Boston's tallest tower — rooms from floor 20+ with unobstructed Skyline views
- ✓ Zuma Restaurant + Equinox Spa + Pool — all under one roof
- ✓ Four Seasons service standard consistently confirmed across all reviews
- ! Starting rate ~$700/night — highest in the Boston luxury bracket
- ! Not directly adjacent to Newbury Street shopping — short walk or one metro stop required
- ✓ Concierge at Four Seasons level — Red Sox tickets and Zuma reservations sourced same-day
- ✓ Green Line E · Prudential Station ~5-min walk — full MBTA access without Uber dependency
- ! Highest room rate in this Boston roundup — not suited for budget-conscious travelers
- ! Zuma requires advance reservation — walk-in dinner is not reliable
- 💡If your budget is below $700/night · This is the priciest hotel in the Boston luxury lineup · See Mandarin Oriental Boston (~$625) or Fairmont Copley Plaza (~$445) as strong alternatives
- 💡If you want to walk straight out into shopping and cafes · One Dalton is not immediately adjacent to the densest retail streets — a short walk or one metro stop is needed · See Fairmont Copley Plaza or Kimpton Marlowe for more walk-out-the-door convenience
- 💡If you plan to eat at Zuma · Book the table through the concierge at check-in — do not rely on walk-in availability
Heading to Boston for the World Cup?
Boston is a 2026 host city — see our full World Cup guide (matches, where to stay, tickets, visa) plus how to reach Gillette Stadium on match day.