Hotel in Baltimore, United States
The Ivy Hotel
1,375ptsMount Vernon Mansion Intimacy

About The Ivy Hotel
A restored 19th-century Mount Vernon mansion with 18 rooms, Michelin 2 Keys recognition, and a La Liste Top Hotels score of 90.5 points, The Ivy Hotel is among the few Black-owned boutique hotels in the United States operating at this tier. Rates start from $846 per night. Magdalena, its in-house restaurant helmed by chef Ülfet Ralph, draws guests and locals alike.
Mount Vernon's Mansion Standard
Baltimore's boutique hotel tier has never been as thin as the city's reputation suggests, but it remains small enough that a property earning Michelin 2 Keys recognition in 2024 and a La Liste Leading Hotels score of 90.5 points in 2026 sits in a category largely by itself. The Ivy Hotel occupies a restored 19th-century red-brick mansion on East Biddle Street, in the Mount Vernon neighbourhood just north of the Inner Harbor. Mount Vernon carries Baltimore's most concentrated run of 19th-century architecture, Beaux-Arts civic monuments, and independent cultural institutions. Placing a luxury property here, rather than on the waterfront, signals a particular kind of guest calculation: history and neighbourhood texture over marina views and convention-adjacent convenience.
Across American cities, the small-mansion-hotel format has produced some of the country's most considered overnight experiences. Properties like Troutbeck in Amenia and SingleThread Farm Inn in Healdsburg have shown that historic residential scale, when handled carefully, produces a quality of quiet and spatial generosity that larger hotels structurally cannot replicate. The Ivy operates in that same logic: 18 rooms across a mansion footprint, which means no convention corridors, no banquet-hall breakfast rooms, and a staff-to-guest ratio that registers immediately on arrival.
What the Room Delivers
The editorial angle that matters most here is what the overnight experience actually feels like at the room level, because that is where The Ivy's investment is most visible. The accommodations use a design vocabulary drawn from the mansion's 19th-century origins: four-poster beds, lush fabrics, and gas fireplaces that are functional rather than decorative. In an era when many boutique hotels treat the room as a backdrop for lifestyle photography, the fireplace-and-four-poster combination signals a deliberate orientation toward the experience of being in the room rather than photographing it.
Bathrooms are fitted with heated limestone floors, and select rooms include soaking tubs. The heated-floor detail is worth noting because it is the kind of specification that operates below the threshold of marketing language but registers every morning: the difference between a limestone floor in October and a warm limestone floor is not subtle. These are room-level decisions that distinguish properties spending their budget on guest experience from those spending it on lobby statements.
Across the 18 rooms, the combination of architectural envelope, fireplace, and bathroom specification places The Ivy in a peer set closer to Hotel Bel-Air in Los Angeles or Post Ranch Inn in Big Sur in terms of room-experience philosophy than to Baltimore's larger competitors. Where properties like the Four Seasons Hotel Baltimore or the Sagamore Pendry Baltimore operate at scale with amenity lists built for a range of guest types, The Ivy is calibrated for guests whose priority is the room itself.
The Social Rhythms of a Small Property
One structural advantage of the 18-room format is that the property's shared spaces carry genuine social weight rather than serving purely as throughways. The verdant courtyard functions as the setting for breakfast, afternoon tea, and drinks, which means it sees three distinct uses across a single day. In larger hotels, these functions are separated across different rooms or floors. Here, the same courtyard carries the morning into the evening, which produces the kind of layered familiarity with a single space that travellers at properties like Chicago Athletic Association in Chicago or Raffles Boston in Boston describe as the thing they remember most clearly.
The spa is described as intimate rather than comprehensive, which is accurate positioning for a mansion-scale property. A small spa used thoughtfully fits the format; a large spa in 18 rooms would either crowd out other functions or produce a facility too large relative to the guest population to feel genuinely private.
Magdalena and the Restaurant Question
In-house dining at boutique hotels frequently falls into one of two failure modes: a restaurant so subordinated to the hotel's brand that it functions as an expensive room-service annex, or a restaurant so independent that hotel guests feel like an afterthought. Magdalena, helmed by chef Ülfet Ralph, appears to have avoided both. Its local reputation is sufficiently strong that it draws Baltimore diners independently of the hotel, which is the clearest signal that it operates as a genuine restaurant rather than a hospitality amenity. For hotel guests, this matters because a locally regarded restaurant on site means the first dinner of a stay does not require research or a taxi. For a Baltimore visit, it also provides immediate access to a chef's reading of the local food culture without leaving the building.
Baltimore's restaurant scene, covered more fully in our full Baltimore restaurants guide, has developed a sharper national profile over the past several years, and having a restaurant of Magdalena's standing within the property is a material advantage over Baltimore competitors like Hotel Revival Baltimore, Hotel Ulysses, or guesthouse by good neighbor, which operate at different price and format tiers.
A Property Worth Contextualising
The Ivy is also one of very few Black-owned boutique hotels in the United States operating at this recognition tier. This is worth stating plainly because it describes something structurally notable about American hospitality: the luxury boutique hotel segment has historically concentrated ownership in a narrow demographic, and properties that change that composition at the leading of the market deserve to be named as such. The fact that La Liste's 2026 ranking placed The Ivy at 90.5 points confirms that the recognition is grounded in hospitality quality rather than categorisation alone.
For travellers comparing US boutique properties at the mansion-scale tier, the peer set is genuinely selective. Properties like The Fifth Avenue Hotel in New York City, Aman New York in New York City, or internationally, Aman Venice in Venice and Badrutt's Palace Hotel in St. Moritz, all approach the historic-property format from different scales and ownership structures. The Ivy's 18-room count places it at the more intimate end of that spectrum globally, which sharpens rather than limits the experience.
Planning Your Stay
Rates start from $846 per night. Baltimore Penn Station is approximately one kilometre away, making Amtrak access from New York or Washington a reasonable arrival option without a car. Baltimore-Washington International Airport sits 18 kilometres out. Given the 18-room count, availability moves quickly around Baltimore's event calendar and peak autumn and spring weekends, when the city's convention and cultural programming tends to compress hotel inventory across the market. The Michelin 2 Keys designation and La Liste placement have increased the property's profile nationally, which has had a predictable effect on lead times. Booking several weeks ahead for a mid-week stay, and further for weekend dates, is advisable. The Pendry Baltimore and the Four Seasons Hotel Baltimore carry more inventory and may be available on shorter notice, but they operate at a different format and scale.
For travellers who have used properties like Amangiri in Canyon Point, Little Palm Island Resort & Spa in Little Torch Key, Canyon Ranch Tucson in Tucson, Kona Village, A Rosewood Resort in Kailua Kona, Sage Lodge in Pray, or Four Seasons at The Surf Club in Surfside and are accustomed to small-property calibration, The Ivy will read as a familiar format applied to an undervisited American city. For those newer to boutique hotels at this tier, the 18-room scale and fireplace-and-limestone-floor room specification make this a strong introduction to what the format can deliver. The address is 205 E Biddle St, Baltimore, MD 21202.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which room category should I book at The Ivy Hotel?
The Ivy's 18 rooms span a restored 19th-century mansion, and the most compelling options are those that combine the property's signature specifications: four-poster beds, gas fireplaces, and soaking tubs. Select rooms include soaking tubs in addition to the heated limestone floors present throughout, making them the clear choice for guests whose priority is the bathroom experience. The La Liste Leading Hotels score of 90.5 points and Michelin 2 Keys recognition suggest the property executes consistently across categories, but the rooms with the fullest specification set represent the strongest case for the rate, which starts at $846 per night.
What's the main draw of The Ivy Hotel?
The combination of historic mansion scale, room-level quality (gas fireplaces, heated limestone floors, four-poster beds), and the in-house restaurant Magdalena gives the property a case that Baltimore's larger hotels cannot match on format alone. The La Liste score of 90.5 points in 2026 and Michelin 2 Keys in 2024 confirm external validation at a level that positions The Ivy at the leading of Baltimore's boutique tier. At 18 rooms, the guest experience is necessarily intimate, which is itself the draw for travellers who find large hotels structurally incompatible with what they want from a stay.
How hard is it to get in to The Ivy Hotel?
With only 18 rooms, The Ivy operates with some of the tightest inventory in Baltimore. The property's Michelin 2 Keys designation and La Liste ranking have raised its national profile, compressing availability particularly around weekends and Baltimore's event-heavy calendar in autumn and spring. Mid-week stays carry more flexibility, but even those should be booked several weeks in advance. Rates begin at $846 per night. Travellers with fixed travel dates should treat availability as the primary constraint rather than rate.
Is The Ivy Hotel one of the few Black-owned luxury boutique hotels in the United States?
Yes. The Ivy Hotel is among a small number of Black-owned boutique hotels in America operating at this recognition tier, which La Liste's 2026 Leading Hotels ranking (90.5 points) and Michelin's 2024 2 Keys designation confirm is the leading of Baltimore's luxury accommodation market. The combination of ownership distinction and hospitality credential places it in a genuinely selective category nationally. For travellers for whom ownership context is part of the travel decision, The Ivy is one of the clearest examples of that combination at the luxury boutique level in any American city.
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