The Baccarat Hotel arrived in 2015 as a statement that Midtown luxury could aspire to something beyond the familiar five-star formula. The crystal house founded in 1764 by Louis XV backed a hotel that is less a lodging than a sustained piece of editorial design, 114 rooms in which Baccarat crystal appears not as decoration but as architecture. Chandeliers, sconces, table accessories: the light in every room is a function of the glass it passes through.
The interiors were conceived by Patrick Jouin and Sanjit Manku as a Parisian pied-à-terre at Manhattan scale. The rooms are contemporary rather than historicist, grey tones, clean lines, and the precise opposite of the fussy European gilt that dominates the competition across the road. The bathrooms are in Calacatta marble with deep soaking tubs; the beds are dressed in Sferra linens. The effect is severe, purposeful luxury.
The indoor pool, rare in this price category in New York, is a genuine amenity rather than a marketing checkbox. At 25 metres, it is long enough to swim properly. The Spa de la Mer, treating with the marine-based skincare line, attracts guests from across the city and ranks among the more rigorous spa programmes in Midtown. The fitness centre is correspondingly serious.
The Bar Baccarat and Grand Salon operate as New York rooms, attracting Midtown's cultural and financial class independently of the hotel's guest population. The French restaurant holds its own against significant neighbourhood competition. Location on West 53rd, opposite MoMA, three blocks from Central Park, within walking distance of the major Midtown addresses, is close to ideal for the business traveller who also intends to visit a gallery between meetings.
The Baccarat's Midtown West address sits at the intersection of the financial district's working radius and the creative institutions that business conversation increasingly requires. Meetings in the Grand Salon feel deliberate. The rooms are quiet, the WiFi dependable, and the morning spa programme grounds the kind of schedule that loses its edges in a conventional hotel. The pool at 6am is a private resource that the hotel's size ratio makes genuinely private.
Average $937/night. Indoor pool included.
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Editorial · #7 on the Top 20 New York Hotels 2026 list
Baccarat Hotel New York ranks here because the property is unique in the global hotel landscape: the only hotel operated by the Baccarat crystal house, and the only luxury hotel in New York whose principal design statement is a single-material installation (the 17,000-piece chandelier in the lobby). The hotel opened in 2015 and was acquired by SH Hotels & Resorts in 2018; the design language and operational integration with the Baccarat brand remained unchanged through the ownership transition.
For New York visitors, the Baccarat is the address calibrated for proposals, anniversaries, and the staged Manhattan moment. The Royal Suite, 1,850 square feet with private dining room, handles in-suite proposal logistics. The Bar's nightly Champagne sabering ceremony is the property's signature public ritual. MoMA is directly across the street, which makes the Baccarat the most-requested hotel for guests structuring a Manhattan trip around the museum or for couples who want a culture-anchored stay on West 53rd.