A-Z Grand Canyon Hotels

Revered for hundreds of years for its picturesque beauty and grandeur, The Grand Canyon is today one of the most visited spots in the world, as over 5 million people come to see its wonders. Grand Canyon National Park encompasses just over 270 miles of the Colorado River and its surrounding canyons and mountainous terrain. Home to Native Americans for centuries, the park today is guardians to the history and lore from times long past, for those generations that have yet to come and experience its sublime beauty.
We offer a safe and secure environment to efficiently reserve hotel rooms for the Grand Canyon area, among many other local and reagional areas.
Luxury Hotels
Quality Inn & Suites Grand Canyon - Property is conveniently nestled in the pines 1 mile from the Grand Canyon Nat'l Park entrance. This full service resort offers full bath and second vanity area with a southwest flair…(more)…
Holiday Inn Express Grand Canyon AZ - 165 rooms + 32 suite annex. Located 1 mile from the Grand Canyon National Park south rim entrance. Dining and entertainment within walking distance…(more)…
Mid-Priced Hotels
Rodeway Inn Red Feather - Convenient location to shops and restaurants. Property has 2 sections: one with interior corridor rooms and one with exterior corridor rooms…(more)…
North Rim/South Rim
For most people, a visit to the Grand Canyon is to the south rim, approaching either along US 180 from Flagstaff or AZ 64 from the west. Both routes cross the largely flat Coconino Plateau which has typical mountain scenery of broad meadows and pine forests, with no hint of the great abyss over the horizon. The busy village of Tusayan is located two miles south of the park boundary; it has an airport, shops, hotels, IMAX cinema and a large, cheapish RV site. More basic camping is allowed free in the neighbouring Kaibab National Forest.
The journey from the south rim to the north rim of the Grand Canyon takes about 5 hours but it is very scenic, along a 215 mile route that descends from the pine-covered plateau near the canyon into the flat, empty but very colourful Painted Desert in the Navajo Indian Reservation then up US 89 to Lees Ferry and past the Vermilion Cliffs, before climbing steeply into the Kaibab National Forest and to the small town of Jacob Lake. From here, AZ 67 provides the only paved route to the north rim. As with US 180 approaching the south rim, the road passes through lush Alpine meadows and forests of fir and pine for 60 miles, with only occasional signs of habitation.
