There’s shoestring travel, then there’s budget travel, then there’s travel, then business travel, and then elite travel. Way, way, way up — way higher than any of those — is megarich travel. It’s the type of travel that only happens on a private jet, with chauffeurs to the most expensive hotel in the world. It’s “I have a pet tiger and I could easily get away with feeding someone to it” travel.

Naturally, this level of travel requires a certain type of accommodation. There are no hostels, no shared bathrooms, no trips to the ice machine at this level of accommodation. This is Wolf of Wall Street lodging. This is “I need a place to spend the night while my manservant replenishes my yacht’s cocaine vaults” lodging.

You get the idea. These are the most expensive hotels in the world. Here’s what spending more than the majority of the world’s annual income is on a single night in a hotel room looks like.

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The Apartment at The Connaught, London

 

the connaught

Photo: Maybourne

At $23,500 a night, the Apartment offers a private butler and menus designed by Michelin-starred chef Helene Darroze. It has a wrap-around balcony overlooking London’s incredibly posh Mayfair area.

To get a good idea of just how over-the-top British blueblood opulent this place is, check out their interactive site regarding the Apartment — it includes stories of the butler flying to Paris after guests left to return the shoes they’d forgotten and a guy who wanted to cook his wife a meal and had a Michelin chef passing him tips behind a secret door. I mean, Christ.

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The Presidential Suite at the Hotel Cala di Volpe, Costa Smeralda, Italy

Cala di Volpe

Photo: Expedia

 

At $26,000 a night, the Presidential Suite at the Hotel Cala di Volpe in Sardinia offers three bedrooms, a solarium, a private pool, and a fitness area. Each of the three bathrooms has a jacuzzi, an “oversized shower,” and “dual vanities of Sardinian marble.”

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The Shangri-La Suite at the Shangri-La Bosphorus, Istanbul

Shangri-La Bosphorus, Istanbul

Photo: Expedia

At a mere $26,385 a night, the Shangri-La Suite takes up the entire top floor of the Shangri-La hotel, overlooking the Bosphorus Strait in Istanbul. There’s a TV embedded in that bathroom mirror, by the way. The room has three private terraces that give you views of pretty much the entire Istanbul skyline.

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The Presidential Suite at the Mandarin Oriental Pudong, Shanghai

Mandarin Oriental Pudong, Shanghai

Photo: Expedia

Located in spectacular, skyscraper-heavy Pudong, the best suite at the Mandarin Oriental is about $26,450 a night. It’s a two-bedroom apartment with its own wine cellar and staggering 25th-floor views of the Shanghai skyline. It, of course, has butler service, and they promise flexible check-in and check-out, saying you can enjoy your full 24 hours in the hotel. I should hope so!

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The Royal Suite at the Hôtel Plaza Athénée, Paris

 

Hôtel Plaza Athénée - Dorchester Collection

Photo: Expedia

The Royal Suite at this hotel is the largest hotel room in Paris, with 450 square meters. It’s also $27,000 a night…$27,000 which totally could have gone towards paying off my student loans instead. The suite includes televisions concealed behind the mirrors, and “all the embroidery is done with gold thread.” In large part, what you’re paying for in this suite is proximity to gold.

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The Royal Suite at St. Regis Saadiyat Island, the United Arab Emirates

The St. Regis Saadiyat Island Resort, Abu Dhabi

Photo: Expedia

At $35,000 a night, the Royal Suite at St. Regis is the largest hotel room in the UAE. It has two floors, butler service, and a private theater. It also has a swimming pool and a games room. The master bedroom takes up pretty much all of the bottom floor and looks out over the ocean.

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8. The Royal Villa at the Grand Resort Lagonissi in Athens

 

Photo: Grand Resort Lagonissi/Facebook

The Royal Villa, at $35,000 a night, once played host to Mel Gibson and Leonardo DiCaprio. It has two master bedrooms, each with marble bathrooms with their own steam baths, as well as the butler’s quarters. There’s also a private massage area, a heated pool, and a private deck overlooking the beach.

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9. The Penthouse Suite at the Grand Hyatt Cannes Hôtel Martinez

 

At a quaint $37,500 a night, the Penthouse Suite at the Hotel Martinez in Cannes offers views of the Bay of Cannes (from a terrace Jacuzzi, of course), and two king-size bedrooms. Strangely, compared to the other suites on this list, the Grand Hyatt’s amenities list, rather than using the words “opulence,” “luxury,” and, “gold-leaf covered heated toilet seat,” lists things like “wireless internet,” “a bathrobe,” and “Windows that open.” Don’t let that understated description fool you, though — according to Billionaire.com it is the fourth most expensive hotel room in the world.

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11. The Ty Warner Penthouse at the Four Seasons in New York

 

Most expensive hotels in the world

Photo: Used with permission of Four Seasons

The Ty Warner Suite at the Four Seasons in New York will set you back a cool $45,000 a night. It’s the highest hotel room in New York, with a 360 view of the city, and it took seven years and $50 million dollars to build. The room has its own art concierge and also a huge library. It only houses three — with accommodations for a child (and let’s be honest, the only child that will ever stay here is Prince George).

Here’s their website’s pathologically detailed description of the bathroom: “The master bathroom is entirely clad in custom slabs of rare Chinese onyx and includes sinks carved from solid blocks of rock crystal, underlit with LED lighting. Unwind in a chromatherapy infinity soak tub or an oversized Dornbracht steam rain shower with six body jets. Other features include a Toto Neorest toilet with wireless remote, sensors and heated seat, and floors with radiant heat. The walls, ceiling and sink in the jewel-like guest powder room are fashioned from semi-precious tiger’s eye stone.”

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12. Empathy Suite at the Palms Resort in Las Vegas

 

Most expensive hotels in the world

Photo: Palms Casino Resort/Facebook

At $40,000 a night, the Sky Villa offers a private glass elevator, a glass spa jutting out over the balcony with views of the strip, a dry sauna, and 24-hour butler service. There are actually a few Sky Villas, but the most luxurious one is called the Hugh Hefner Sky Villa. Because it’s Vegas, so of course.

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13. Burj Al Arab in Dubai

 

Most expensive hotels in the world

Photo: Creative Family/Shutterstock

No catalog of the gaudily expensive would be complete without a mention of Dubai. While many of our other hotels on this list get a spot by merely having an absurdly expensive and luxurious suite, the Burj Al Arab gets on for having nothing but absurdly expensive luxury suites.

All of their suites are duplexes, and the cheapest of them is $2,000 a night. Not including taxes and fees. The most expensive is around $12,000. This may well be — overall — the most expensive hotel in the world.

The amenities? You can get around in their Rolls-Royce, Mercedes, and helicopter transfer services. Or take advantage of their personalized butlers. Also, you can go to their four swimming pools and private beach, or get free access to a nearby waterpark. It’s a great place to go to show your complete contempt for the concept of moderation.

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15. The Royal Penthouse Suite at the Hotel President Wilson in Geneva, Switzerland

 

Most expensive hotels in the world

Photo: Hotel President Wilson/Facebook

At 60,000 Swiss Francs a night — or about $68,000 — this is the most expensive hotel room in the world. The suite has hosted the likes of Bill Gates and Michael Douglas and includes its own private elevator, gym, and pool table; it has maximum security, a Steinway Grand Piano, and a panoramic view of Lake Geneva.

The good news is that it sleeps up to six people (it has 12 bedrooms and bathrooms, but the site says it only sleeps six). So you can split the price with your other comically rich friends.

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Amangiri, Utah

Nihi Sumba, Indonesia

 Sumba, Indonesia

Photo: NIHI Sumba

The Brando, French Polynesia

All inclusive island resorts

Photo: The Brando/Johan Drone Adventure


Hôtel de Crillon, Paris

Empathy Suite