I toured a 4,355-square-foot Four Seasons penthouse suite that costs $11,000 a night. The smallest room was my favorite.

The five-bedroom penthouse at the Four Seasons in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, is full of Western art, scenic terraces, and luxury comforts.

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  • The Four Seasons Jackson Hole offers exclusive penthouse suites for high-paying guests.
  • These luxury suites cater to bachelorette parties and multi-generational families.
  • The Granite Residence provides a home-like experience with ski-in and ski-out access.

In a hallway off the lobby at the five-star Four Seasons hotel in Jackson Hole, there's an exclusive elevator nook for the highest-paying guests.

The elevators lead to the ski-in, ski-out resort's 31 private residences. These penthouse suites with full kitchens and up to five bedrooms commonly host bachelorette parties and multi-generational families, Kim Cole, the director of public relations for the Four Seasons, told Business Insider.

On a recent trip to Jackson Hole, Wyoming, I got an exclusive tour of one of these suites — the Granite Residence — and it felt more like a luxury home than a hotel accommodation.

The penthouse suite is in the Four Seasons Jackson Hole, a luxury ski resort in Teton Village.

A cabin like hotel behind yellow and green trees with mountains in the background

The Four Seasons in Jackson Hole, Wyoming.

Just beneath the Jackson Hole Mountain Resort, the Four Seasons is well-located for Grand Teton and Yellowstone National Park visitors.

Cole told BI that while the Four Seasons maintains top-tier service across all 133 locations, each is designed uniquely to suit the destination.

"There's a sense of place at every Four Seasons," she said.

With a "mountain modern chic" brand, this location of the 63-year-old, high-end hotel chain was ranked the best stay in Jackson Hole by US News.

Rates vary by season. In the peak winter season, the Granite Residence starts at $11,000 a night.

The stay includes ski and snowboard rentals for kids under 12 from mid-December to early January.

I knew the penthouse would epitomize Jackson Hole from the moment I walked through the door.

A foyer with a wood door on the left, wooden hooks hanging on the wall on the left, and a painting of a buffalo above a wooden entryway table on the tight

The foyer of the penthouse.

On the ninth floor of the resort, I stepped into a foyer with leather coat hooks and a pair of matching ottomans beneath. A framed, purple buffalo stared me in the face.

I felt like I was in a Western film — and that was the intention, according to Sarah Kennedy, CLB Architects' principal and lead design director of the penthouse suite.

"The majority of people who come to Jackson are really coming here to immerse themselves in nature," Kennedy said.

Cherry-wood cathedral ceilings made the living and dining space feel large and luxurious.

Inside a hotel penthouse with wooden ceilings, white walls, a couch in front of a coffee table and behind a dining table, and a circular, modern chandelier above

The living and dining space inside the penthouse.

When CLB redesigned the penthouse, completed in the summer of 2024, Kennedy said the team maintained the hotel's style while elevating it.

"They had accented it previously with a bunch yellows and warm whites. So in terms of trying to modernize it, we kept the base palette of rich cherries and redwoods and offset it with whites," she said.

CLB selected a neutral color palette.

"The color palette is very simple, with natural textures," Kennedy said. "When we did try to bring color there, it was being inspired from the outside, like the soft blues and the greens of the natural landscape at the resort."

Windowed doors led to a balcony at the back of the living room.

Windowed, wooden doors show a balcony overlooking trees behind a couch.

The terrace at the back of the living room.

"The interesting thing about doing interiors here in Jackson is that the quality of light filtering into the space in peak winter and peak summer is completely different," Kennedy said.

So, CLB selects tones that complement light filtering into the interiors throughout the year.

"For example, I'm looking out the window now, and the amount of yellow and orange from all the leaves that are coming in is crazy," she said. "But you have to make sure that that same palette looks really good when there's a bunch of blue coming in from all the reflection of the snow."

"The subtle picking of these soft blues and neutrals is the way that we allow that palette to really feel immersive in nature but also stand the test of the seasons throughout the year here," she continued.

The dining table seated up to 10 people.

A dining room with a long, black table, a four-light chandelier, artwork on white walls, and wooden cathedral ceilings

The penthouse dining room.

When sourcing furniture, Kennedy worked with an approved list of vendors, including Restoration Hardware and more local vendors. Select pieces also came from showrooms around the US.

The kitchen was a small, pentagonal room off the dining room.

Inside a pentagonal kitchen with wood cabinets, marble counter tops, stainless steel appliances, and an island in the middle

Inside the kitchen.

The full kitchen had a gas stove. Guests can book a private chef to cook meals for them.

Next to it, there was a spacious pantry with an additional fridge, freezer, and other appliances.

Inside a large storage room with a stainless steel fridge on the left and built-in wooden shelves stocked with appliances on the right

Inside the penthouse pantry.

This huge pantry had all the kitchen appliances anyone could need, from blenders to crock pots.

Next to the closet, I came across the smallest — and coolest — room in the entire penthouse.

A composite image of a wooden door leading to the bathroom and Inside a bathroom with white wallpaper sketched with mountains and a sink and toilet on the left

The guest powder room.

Nestled in a corner of the penthouse, I opened the door leading to the guest powder room. It was the smallest room, with just a sink, toilet, and counter.

In such a luxurious space, I wasn't expecting to be wowed by the guest bathroom.

But I was wrong.

It was a guest bathroom with a bold wall covering.

Inside a bathroom with white wallpaper sketched with mountains, a painting of a fox on the right, and a sink and toilet on the left

Inside the guest bathroom.

"The bread and butter of what we do here is connect people with nature," Kennedy said. "As it relates to pieces within the space, there are some wall coverings, particularly the one in the powder room that's got a mountainous scene."

The bathroom was covered in white wallpaper with simple black sketches of mountains on them. A gold and gray painting of a fox on the right matched the finish of the faucet.

It was a simple room, but every aspect felt thoughtfully considered, which is why it stood out to me.

On the other side of the penthouse was an additional living space with cozy seating.

A living room with white walls, wood trimmings, and a chandelier above a round caffee table surrounded by couches, chairs, and ottomans

The other living room in the penthouse.

Kennedy told BI that the penthouse design is as much about comfort as it is about nature.

"We're giving people the ability to feel like they're living a luxurious experience," she said.

That's why the penthouse boasts two living spaces with cozy seating.

"After you've been skiing all day, you don't really want a super flimsy thin profile chair. You want something that feels like it's hugging you," Kennedy told BI. "There's an element of, 'I'm just going to sit here and sip my hot chocolate and not move for four hours.'"

The second living space led to a hallway decorated with custom Western art.

A long hallway with white walls and nature paintings on either side

A hallway in the penthouse.

Cole told BI that much of the art in the penthouse was custom-made for the space, and guests can purchase the pieces.

The hallway led to the five guest rooms, each with its own bathroom and balcony.

Inside a bedroom with a white bed with a maroon headboard on the right, windowed doors on the left, and wood-panneled ceilings

Inside the master bedroom.

The master bedroom also had a fireplace.

In all five bedrooms, CLB selected soft colors for the fabrics.

All five had an en-suite bathroom complete with marble.

Inside a white, marble hotel bathroom with wooden cabinets and moldings, a double sink and vanity on the right, a separate door to a toilet on the left, and a tub in the back center

Inside one of the five en-suite bathrooms.

These bathrooms screamed luxury, with oversize tubs, multiple shower heads, and separate toilet rooms.

There was also a laundry room in the penthouse.

Inside a laundry room with a washer and dryer on the left in front of an l-shaped counter with storage cabinets above and below

Inside the laundry room.

I thought it would be convenient for long-term guests and large families.

Throughout the penthouse, there was a crow's nest view of the mountains surrounding the resort.

A mountain scene on a cloudy day with a ski transportation center at the bottom.

A view of the resort's surrounding mountains from a penthouse balcony.

After I toured the Granite Residence, I thought it screamed Jackson Hole and the Wild West inside and out.

From the walls to windows and terraces, it was impossible to forget where I was while exploring the vast penthouse.