Four Seasons' first Nashville property — 235 rooms on the Cumberland River with rooftop pool and Mimo Italian-Southern restaurant.
Four Seasons Hotel Nashville opened in 2023 as the brand's first Tennessee property, occupying a new-build tower on the Cumberland River in downtown Nashville. The 235 rooms and suites follow Four Seasons' urban-hotel template — neutral palette, high ceilings, floor-to-ceiling windows — adapted to N
The rooftop pool at sunset — Nashville's skyline and the Cumberland River visible from the deck, which gives the property a resort-like moment in an urban context.
Spacious living area, dining room, floor-to-ceiling windows, panoramic city views, marble bathroom
Condé Nast Traveler Hot List 2024
Vibe: Cumberland-River, Rooftop-Pool, Italian-Southern, Four-Seasons-DNA
Four Seasons Hotel Nashville is featured in 4 of our curated collections:
Best time: April through June and September through November offer Nashville's finest luxury conditions, with comfortable temperatures, the city's outdoor music venues in full operation, and the famous CMA Fest and other events driving the cultural calendar.
Demand: Nashville has experienced extraordinary luxury demand growth, with its music heritage, culinary scene, and corporate expansion driving consistent year-round hotel occupancy. Major events including CMA Fest in June and NASCAR weekend create significant demand spikes.
Pricing: Ultra-luxury Nashville properties command consistent premium pricing with event-driven spikes during major music and sports weekends. The city's rapid luxury hotel development has created competitive pricing across the finest addresses, with midweek stays offering excellent value.
Insider tip: Arrange a private after-hours session at RCA Studio B with a Nashville session guitarist who has recorded with country music legends - an exclusive musical encounter available through the finest hotel concierge relationships that delivers the authentic sound of Nashville's extraordinary musical cult
Avoid: Avoid July and August when Nashville's summer heat and humidity can be oppressive and the city's outdoor honky-tonk culture, central to its luxury appeal, becomes less comfortable for extended exploration.