Four Seasons Hotel San Francisco — 9.4/10, the Luxury Property Guests Keep Coming Back to Recommend
Picture opening the door on the tenth floor to Yerba Buena Gardens spread out below you, the San Francisco skyline filling the window with nothing obstructing the view — The Four Seasons SF holds the highest Booking.com score in this lineup: 9.4/10 from over 420 verified reviews. Occupying floors 5–15 of 345 Market St, directly adjacent to Yerba Buena Gardens, the rooms run noticeably larger than competitors in the same area. The One65 Fine Dining Complex — six floors of distinct dining concepts in the same building — has guests saying they would come back just for the restaurant alone. Full-service spa, a concierge team that books Opera tickets at midnight, and a location two blocks from BART. If you are going to spend heavily once in San Francisco, this is where it goes.
Among the luxury hotels in San Francisco, there is one that guests keep singling out with unusual specificity. Not 'it was very nice' but 'that was the best hotel service I have ever experienced in my life.' The Four Seasons SF earns its 9.4/10 from 420+ Booking.com reviews through a combination of things that are harder to fake: rooms that are genuinely larger than the city standard, a concierge team that guests name individually in their reviews, and a physical setup — floors 5 through 15 of a glass tower sitting above Yerba Buena Gardens — that gives even a standard room a view worth waking up for.
"Opened the curtains to Yerba Buena Gardens in the morning light, ordered breakfast, had the concierge arrange San Francisco Symphony tickets within two hours of asking. I have stayed in a lot of five-star hotels and the service here is genuinely in a different category."
The rooms are the foundation of that score. A Superior Room starts around $550–750 USD per night — for a Four Seasons in a major American city that sits at the lower end of what the brand charges, and the value is felt. Wide rooms, high ceilings, 400-thread-count linens, furniture in warm blond wood and sand tones. Deluxe Rooms run $700–950; the jump in size is real and worth it if you are spending more than a night or two. Premier Suites start at $1,800 and climb to $4,500+ for peak dates and butler-service configurations. One practical note: floors 12 and above on the Gardens-facing side capture both the Yerba Buena park below and the Bay Bridge in the distance — that is the view to request. Market Street-facing rooms are fine but carry more street noise after dark.
The talking point guests keep returning to is One65 — the hotel's six-floor Fine Dining Complex housed in the same building but running as its own destination. Each floor takes a distinct concept: a ground-floor patisserie and café for morning, bar and dining floors mid-building, a rooftop bar with open-air city views at the top. Guests who are not staying at the hotel make reservations here. Guests who are staying recommend booking a table before arrival — it fills up. Alongside One65, the hotel carries a full-service Four Seasons Spa, an indoor pool, and a fitness center. The concierge team handles everything from Napa winery appointments to theatre bookings to late-night car services — this is where the reviews start sounding almost competitive about who got the most done.
On location — the hotel sits at 757 Market St in SoMa, floors 5–15 of the 345 California/Market building, directly adjacent to Yerba Buena Gardens. It is a five-minute walk to BART Powell St, which matters considerably for World Cup visitors: take BART from Powell St to Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara in roughly 45–50 minutes, no car needed, no match-day parking headaches. Union Square is under ten minutes on foot. Moscone Convention Center is directly adjacent. The Embarcadero and Ferry Building are fifteen minutes by foot or one BART stop. For visitors arriving by air, SFO is about 30 minutes on BART.
A few things to say plainly: $550 per night is genuinely high, and unless you are using the spa, One65, and the concierge service regularly, you are paying for capacity you are not drawing down. For a two-night trip where you sleep and leave early, there are well-positioned hotels in SF for half that price. The SoMa location is convenient and modern, but it is not the atmospheric Victorian-era neighborhood that some visitors picture when they think of San Francisco — if the Classic Nob Hill experience is the priority, that requires a different hotel. And while parking exists in the area, self-parking in this part of SoMa carries a daily cost that should be factored into the budget if you are driving.
The honest bottom line: Four Seasons SF is the right choice if the best service in the city and a restaurant worth traveling for matter as much as the bed itself. The 9.4/10 from 420+ guests is not an outlier — it is consistent across dates, room types and trip purposes. Couples, business travelers, special occasion trips, and World Cup visitors who want the best available base in San Francisco all fit here. If your budget caps below $400, or the Victorian-neighborhood experience is the priority, the rest of this list has good alternatives.
Summary from Booking & Agoda
- ✓ 9.4/10 highest score in the SF Luxury group — Booking.com Exceptional
- ✓ One65 Fine Dining Complex — guests say the restaurant alone justifies the hotel choice
- ✓ Concierge team: arranges Opera, theatre, late-night car services, Napa tours
- ✓ Spacious rooms with Yerba Buena Gardens views, floors 5–15
- ! Starting rate $550 is higher than other properties in the luxury group
- ! SoMa location — modern and convenient but not the Victorian-neighborhood Classic SF feel
- ✓ Adjacent to Yerba Buena Gardens · Union Square under 10-min walk
- ✓ Full-service spa, indoor pool, and fitness center in-building
- ✓ Early check-in often available — rooms frequently ready before 3pm
- ! Self-parking in SoMa is expensive — factor it in if driving
- ! One65 reservations required well in advance, especially on weekends and World Cup dates
- 💡If your budget is below $400/night · Rates here start at $550+ · 1 Hotel SF or Hotel Nikko offer good value at lower price points without sacrificing location
- 💡If you want the Classic Nob Hill / Victorian SF atmosphere · This hotel is in modern SoMa · Look at Ritz-Carlton Nob Hill for that specific neighborhood experience
- 💡If you are driving and need affordable parking · Self-parking around SoMa is expensive · BART from Powell St is significantly easier and cheaper for getting around the city
Heading to San Francisco for the World Cup?
San Francisco is a 2026 host city — see our full World Cup guide (matches, where to stay, tickets, visa) plus how to reach Levi's Stadium on match day.