I stayed in $300-a-night hotels in Salt Lake City and Park City. One was more luxurious. The other was more convenient.

I stayed in $300-a-night hotels in Salt Lake City and Park City. One felt luxe, the other didn't. Here's why the 2-star difference mattered.

  • I recently visited Salt Lake City and Park City, Utah, for the first time.
  • I stayed at a five-star hotel in Salt Lake City and a three-star hotel in Park City.
  • My rooms were similarly priced, but they offered completely different experiences.

Park City may be Utah's central ski hub, but Salt Lake City offers luxury stays at a lower price.

I visited the area along Utah's Wasatch Front for the first time in January 2025 and booked hotels in both towns that cost about $300 per night.

I spent two nights in Salt Lake City's five-star Grand America Hotel and one night in the Sheraton Park City, a three-star Marriott hotel.

My experiences at each hotel were so different that I couldn't believe they were roughly the same price.

Park City has more luxury hotels and resorts than Salt Lake City — and they typically cost more than double the price.

A composite image of a festive, snow-covered block in Park City, Utah with pine trees in the background and a bust street in Downtown Salt Lake City

Park City and Salt Lake City.

Home to two world-class ski resorts, Park City is a place where you can wake up and hit the slopes right away. Salt Lake City, however, is about a 40-minute drive from Park City and has fewer five-star hotels that typically come at a lower price point.

Park City has eight five-star hotels listed onBooking.com, with an average nightly rate of $760. Four-star hotels cost roughly $660 per night, and three-star hotels cost $340 on average.

Salt Lake City has only two five-star hotels listed on the same site — the Grand America Hotel, where I stayed, and the Hyatt Regency. The accommodations here cost less than half the average per night, at about $150 for three-star hotels, $220 for four-star hotels, and $310 for five-star hotels.

I spent my first two nights in Utah at the Grand America Hotel in Salt Lake City.

A tall, wide white building, the Grand America Hotel, with flags and trees in the foreground and cloudy skies in the background

The Grand America Hotel in Downtown Salt Lake City.

The Grand America Hotel was the first five-star hotel to open in Salt Lake City. It was built in 2001 for a specific reason — to host the 2002 Olympic Committee.

"One of the stipulations to bring the Olympics here was to build a five-star hotel," a hotel representative told Business Insider.

The hotel, known for hosting celebrities and professional athletes, was ranked among the 50 best hotels in the world by CN Traveler's 2024 Reader's Choice Awards.

The Grand America Hotel stretches 24 floors on 10 acres in Downtown Salt Lake City. It has 775 rooms and four tiers of accommodation, with a starting rate of $300 per night during peak season (depending on hotel occupancy), the representative told BI. That rate gets you a 700-square-foot premier room that includes a lounging area, a marble bathroom, and a wall of windows.

I stayed in the second-tier room, an 880-square-foot executive suite that cost $340 a night, though BI received a media rate for the two-night stay.

Aside from the size, the rooms are quite similar.

Then, I spent one night at the Sheraton Park City.

A Sheraton hotel in Park City, Utah with cars parked in the front lot

The exterior of the Sheraton Park City.

Sheraton Park City is a premium Marriott hotel built in 1983. Before an upgrade in 2019, it was known as the Park City Marriott.

The three-star hotel is about 10-minute drive from world-class ski resorts, Deer Valley and Park City Mountain, and the hotel has a shuttle service, making it a convenient stay for skiers.

A hotel representative told BI that the hotel has 199 rooms and four tiers of accommodation, with a starting rate of $300 during peak season.

I booked the lowest tier — a guest room— for about $300 for one night.

The Grand America Hotel had a posh European feel.

Inside a lobby with wood walls, a marble entryway, and a large chandelier

Inside the Grand America Hotel lobby.

The Grand America Hotel is drenched in old-world glitz and glam. With Italian marble floors, glass chandeliers, and antique decor in every direction, I felt like royalty as I stepped into the lobby.

The Sheraton Park City had more of a southwestern mountain vibe.

A couch in front of a desk in a hotel lobby with a bookcase in the background on the right.

Inside the Sheraton Park City lobby.

The Sheraton Park City had a more modest feel. The lobby had an elevated cowboy-era look, with wood and leather furniture, a stone fireplace, and stacks of logs on the shelves surrounding it.

My executive suite at the Grand America Hotel was 880 square feet and included a living room.

A light blue room with a victorian couch sandwiched between two wooden side tables with lamps on them, a glass table in front of the couch, and framed building sketches above the couch

The living room in the author's suite.

My executive suite at the Grand America Hotel had accents and decor that matched the upscale, European look of the rest of the hotel.

The suite had a large living room with a lounge and desk.

If I had booked the lower room tier for $300 a night, I would have had a smaller, sectioned-off seating area in addition to the bedroom.

Sliding doors in the living room led to the bedroom.

A hotel room at night with a bed and a seat on the left, a dresser and a TV on the right, and floor to ceiling windows in the back

The bedroom in the executive suite.

The bedroom felt elegant with antique furniture, one of the coziest king-sized beds I've ever had the pleasure of sleeping on, thanks to a customized mattress, and a small balcony overlooking Salt Lake City.

When I stay at hotels, I love waking up to a wide view of the destination I'm visiting because it gets me excited to start my day of exploring.

My room at the Sheraton Park City was 350 square feet.

Inside a hotel room with two beds on the right and a desser with a TV on top on the left

My room at the Sheraton Park City had two queen-sized beds across from a dresser and a small work desk. It looked more like a typical hotel room than my suite at the Grand America Hotel. The beds were comfortable, and I appreciated the local artwork on the walls.

I didn't have a balcony, and my room's window faced another side of the building, but I imagine that rooms on higher floors offered better views.

Although it was a bit plain compared to the Grand America Hotel room, my Sheraton Park City accommodation was clean, modern, and functional. It was certainly on par with other three-star hotels I've booked.

A large walk-in closet led to the bathroom at the Grand America Hotel.

Two mirrored doors open to reveal a white marble bathroom in a hotel room

The executive suite closet and bathroom.

The closet felt huge. Inside, I found terry cloth robes with matching slippers and amenities like an iron, steamer, safe, and extra linens.

There was also a vanity on one side of the closet and two mirrored doors that led to the bathroom.

If I had booked the lower-tier room, I would have had a smaller closet and bathroom, yet with all the same amenities as the executive suite.

My room at the Sheraton Park City had a smaller closet in front of the bathroom.

Inside a Sheraton Park City hotel room with a closet on the left, a sink on the right, and a door to a bathroom in the center

Inside the Sheraton Park City room.

On the way to the bathroom, there was a small closet. It had an iron and ironing board inside. Across from it, I appreciated the brightly lit sink and vanity.

My bathroom at the Grand America Hotel was spacious and coated in marble.

A white marble bathroom with a tub on the left and a shower on the right

The bathtub and shower in the executive suite.

Handpicked Italian marble coated the floors, counters, and some of the walls in the executive suite bathroom.

The bathroom had a soaking tub, a glass-walled shower on one side, and a toilet stall on the other. It was stocked with travel-sized toiletries.

The lower-tier rooms' bathrooms are smaller, but they have the same decor and include a tub and separate shower.

My bathroom was smaller at the Sheraton Park City, but the shower felt larger.

Inside a Sheraton Park City hotel room shower with towels on a rack on the right

The shower in the Sheraton Park City bathroom.

This bathroom was decent for a 3-star hotel. There was no tub, but the shower felt larger than the one in my Grand America suite.

Inside, there were two shower heads and full-sized toiletries.

The Grand America Hotel had indoor and outdoor pools.

Inside a spa-like pool room

The indoor pool at the Grand America Hotel.

The indoor pool was in the 20,000-square-foot Grand Spa, which also has saunas and 18 service rooms. The outdoor pool was surrounded by trimmed trees in a courtyard.

The Sheraton Park City had an indoor atrium pool.

The pool at the Sheraton park city surrounded by stone hotel building walls

The pool in the Sheraton Park City courtyard atrium.

The pool area sat in a courtyard atrium in the middle of the hotel and had an indoor-outdoor feel. Although there was no spa at the Sheraton Park City, the pool area had a hot tub and a sauna.

The Grand America Hotel was packed with amenities.

A spa entrance with lululemon products on the right and seating on the left

Inside the spa lobby at the Grand America Hotel.

In addition to the spa, the Grand America Hotel had a fitness center, a European-style coffee shop and bistro, a strip of high-end boutique shops, multiple bars, 24 business venues, and a 35,000-square-foot courtyard with intricate landscaping.

The Sheraton Park City had convenient amenities, too.

A carpeted room at the Sheraton Park City with a tv on the right and a table and chairs behind it as well as two computers on the left

Amenities at the Sheraton Park City.

With two restaurants, a coffee shop, a convenience store, a fitness center, a game room, a business center, and 11 event venues, the Sheraton Park City had plenty of amenities for a three-star establishment.

After staying at both hotels, I realized I'd rather sacrifice convenience than luxury.

The author takes a mirror selfie with a camera in a robe inside a hotel room's walk-in closet

The author enjoys her executive suite at the Grand America Hotel.

I thought the Sheraton Park City was worth the $300 price point. The three-star hotel would be perfect for a budget traveler who wants to wake up and hit the slopes right away.

But the Grand America Hotel was just as luxurious as hotels that have cost me $1,000 a night or more in other cities.

After a tiring day of winter sports, I imagine retiring to a lavish room for a warm bath before stretching out on a custom mattress would be worth the drive.

The post I stayed in $300-a-night hotels in Salt Lake City and Park City. One was more luxurious. The other was more convenient. appeared first on Business Insider