5 Best Hotels in Sacramento and the Gold Country, California

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Sacramento has plenty of full-service hotels, budget motels, and small inns. Larger towns along Highway 49—among them Auburn, Grass Valley, and Jackson—have chain motels and inns. Many Gold Country bed-and-breakfasts occupy former mansions, miners' cabins, and other historic buildings.

Hyatt House Sacramento/Midtown

$$ | 2719 K St., Sacramento, CA, 95816, USA Fodor's Choice

The architects of this courtly hotel, which opened with a splash in 2023, incorporated the redbrick Romanesque Revival–style facade of the 1928 structure that preceded it. Done in contemporary style with soft brown and powder blue accents that defer to exposed brick evoking the past, the guest rooms and suites have dedicated sitting areas and bathrooms with ultramodern fixtures. All the studio and one-bedroom suites have full kitchens and sofa beds, making them a viable option for larger groups. Standard rooms have microwaves and small refrigerators. The accommodations range in size from 306 to 607 square feet, but even the smaller ones make efficient use of their space. The room rate includes a well-stocked breakfast buffet, and the Historic Star Lounge serves lunch, dinner, and cocktails (happy hour 3–6).

Pros

  • Historic Star Lounge for lunch, dinner, and cocktails (happy hour 3–6)
  • Full kitchens and sofa beds in suites
  • 3 pm check-in, noon checkout

Cons

  • Bit of a hike to Downtown
  • Pricey on event weekends
  • Valet parking (fee) only
2719 K St., Sacramento, CA, 95816, USA
916-894–6500
Hotel Details
128 rooms
Free Breakfast

Quick Facts

  • $$

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Kimpton Sawyer Hotel

$$ | 500 J St., Sacramento, CA, 95814, USA Fodor's Choice

Soft shades of brown and gray and furniture milled from California oak lend this full-service hotel's spacious rooms and suites a haute-rustic feel. Convenient to the Downtown Commons (DOCO) shopping and entertainment complex, Golden 1 Center arena, the Capitol, and Old Sacramento attractions, the hotel pleases business and leisure travelers with up-to-date electronics, deluxe bath products, and in-room yoga mats and spa treatments. On-site facilities include the third-floor pool and Revival bar, a steak house, and the independently run 25,000-square-foot Punch Bowl Social, with a bar and restaurant, bowling, billiards, darts, and other diversions.

Pros

  • Pool deck and Revival bar
  • "living room" lobby
  • Convenient to Downtown and Old Sacramento

Cons

  • Pricey in-season
  • No tubs in many rooms
  • May be too high-style for some guests
500 J St., Sacramento, CA, 95814, USA
916-545–7100-front desk
Hotel Details
285 rooms
No Meals

Quick Facts

  • $$

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Rest Hotel Plymouth

$ | 9372 Main St., Plymouth, CA, 95669, USA Fodor's Choice

The team behind Plymouth's Taste restaurant converted two adjacent run-down buildings into this boutique hotel whose individually decorated rooms rank among the area's finest. Done in soft beige and brown tones, the rooms neatly split the difference between fancy and functional, affording you a dash of style along with good value. Amenities include flat-screen smart TVs, free Wi-Fi, and coffeemakers.

Pros

  • Attention to detail
  • Breakfast buffet
  • Evening wine hour, s'mores by the firepit

Cons

  • Minimum stay requirement some weekends
  • Lacks big-city hotel amenities
  • Some noise in street-side rooms
9372 Main St., Plymouth, CA, 95669, USA
209-245–6315
Hotel Details
16 rooms
Free Breakfast

Quick Facts

  • $

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Holbrooke Hotel

$ | 212 W. Main St., Grass Valley, CA, 95945, USA

A Main Street icon since the mid-1800s—when the A-list guest list included entertainer Lola Montez, writer Mark Twain, and Ulysses S. Grant—this two-story, historic-district hotel received a down-to-the-studs (in some cases bricks) makeover and reopened in 2020 as a boutique property. The 17 high-ceilinged guest rooms in the main hotel and 11 more across the back parking lot in the restored Purcell House contain a mix of antique, reproduction, and contemporary furnishings. Wide white subway-style tiles gleam in the bathrooms, whose 1-inch hex porcelain floor tiles and brass fixtures evoke days gone by. The ground-floor Golden Gate Saloon dates from 1852.

Pros

  • Convenient to shops and restaurants
  • Mix of antique, reproduction, and contemporary furnishings
  • Ground-floor saloon is reportedly the West's oldest continuously operating bar

Cons

  • A few rooms very small
  • Some noise from traffic in street-side rooms, restaurant patio in back rooms
  • Books up well ahead on many weekends
212 W. Main St., Grass Valley, CA, 95945, USA
530-460–4078
Hotel Details
28 rooms
No Meals

Quick Facts

  • $

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Wine & Roses Hotel

$$ | 2505 W. Turner Rd., Lodi, CA, 95242, USA

Set on 7 acres amid a tapestry of informal gardens and with most guest rooms decorated in rich earth tones or soothing blues and purples, this hotel has cultivated a sense of refinement typically associated with Napa or Carmel. The palette in the spa rooms, which have nearly the same amenities, is softer and more soothing; some rooms have fireplaces, and all have Wi-Fi access that, along with access to the pool and fitness center. Discounts on tastings at the adjacent Lodi Wine & Visitors Center is included in the daily $20 resort fee, and the on-site Towne House restaurant is deservedly popular. After a dip in the pool or a meal at the restaurant, you can head to the spa for a facial or herbal body scrub.

Pros

  • Luxurious setting
  • Popular restaurant
  • Spa treatments

Cons

  • Expensive for the area
  • Some guests mention that walls are thin
  • Many events
2505 W. Turner Rd., Lodi, CA, 95242, USA
209-334–6988
Hotel Details
66 rooms
No Meals

Quick Facts

  • $$

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