Hotels With a Private Tub in New Orleans — Best Options in 2026
New Orleans has some of the most atmospheric hotels in the US — old buildings, interesting history, and a city that takes pleasure seriously. Here are the best options for a suite with a private tub in the city.
1. Windsor Court Hotel
From ~$300/night
Windsor Court is consistently one of the top-rated hotels in the US, and it earns it. The suites have soaking tubs and the hotel has an impressive art collection throughout. The Grill Room restaurant is one of the better hotel restaurants you’ll find anywhere. In the CBD, about a 10-minute walk from the French Quarter.
👉 Check availability at Windsor Court →
2. Hotel Monteleone
From ~$200/night
Hotel Monteleone has been in the French Quarter since 1886, and it shows in the best way — thick walls, tall ceilings, a sense of place you don’t get in newer hotels. The suites have soaking tubs, and the famous Carousel Bar (it actually revolves slowly) is downstairs. Truman Capote claimed to have been born here. The literary history alone is worth it.
👉 Check availability at Hotel Monteleone →
3. The Eliza Jane
From ~$250/night
The Eliza Jane is built inside five connected 19th-century buildings in the Warehouse District — each with a different architectural character. The suites have soaking tubs and the Commons Club restaurant and Press Club cocktail bar are genuinely good. The design celebrates New Orleans newspaper history, which sounds odd but works.
👉 Check availability at The Eliza Jane →
4. The Roosevelt New Orleans
From ~$250/night
The Roosevelt has operated since 1893 under various names and is now a Waldorf Astoria property. Suites have soaking tubs, the Sazerac Bar is one of New Orleans’ institutions (and supposedly the birthplace of the Sazerac cocktail), and the lobby is the kind of grand space they stopped building a century ago.
👉 Check availability at The Roosevelt →
Practical notes for New Orleans
- Mardi Gras. If you’re visiting in February or early March, check whether Mardi Gras falls during your trip. Hotels book up 6–12 months ahead and prices are at their highest.
- Jazz Fest (late April/early May). One of the world’s great music festivals. Worth building a trip around, but book 3–4 months ahead.
- Summer heat. July and August in New Orleans are genuinely brutal — hot, humid, and occasional heavy rain. Hotel prices drop accordingly.
- French Quarter vs Warehouse District. The Quarter has the atmosphere and history. The Warehouse District is quieter, more gallery-focused, and slightly better for restaurants.