A Grand Canal address with a butler in every room, the polished modern-classic choice for a Venice anniversary that wants the view and the service without the fuss.
"The polished modern-classic on the Grand Canal, for the couple who wants the view and the butler more than the ghosts of a centuries-old palazzo."
| Criterion | Score |
|---|---|
| Romance | 9.9 |
| Service | 9.9 |
| Design | 9.8 |
| Location | 9.9 |
| Food | 9.5 |
| Value | 9.2 |
| Aggregate | 9.9 |
Scored on our six-criterion framework, weighted for an anniversary stay. See how we score.
Book it for the combination that is hard to find elsewhere in Venice: a genuine Grand Canal address and a butler assigned to every room. The hotel opened as a St. Regis in 2019 after a full restoration of a group of connected historic palazzi that had housed a hotel on this stretch of water for more than a century and a half. It sits at the point where the Grand Canal widens into St Mark's Basin, directly opposite the domes of Santa Maria della Salute, which is the single most photographed view in the city and the one you get to wake up to from a canal-facing room.
For an anniversary, that view plus the service is the whole argument. There are 169 rooms and suites across the five buildings, and the St. Regis signature butler service runs 24 hours in every category, not only in the top suites. That matters on a milestone trip because the butler quietly removes the friction that Venice otherwise adds: the airport water taxi, the restaurant bookings, the sunset gondola, the anniversary cake, the pressing of an outfit before dinner. You arrive by boat at the hotel's own canal pier, and from that moment the logistics stop being your problem.
Request a Grand Canal facing category, and if the budget stretches, a suite with a private terrace over the water. The view is the reason to be here, and the hotel prices it accordingly: interior and courtyard-facing rooms are calmer and less expensive, but they miss the canal entirely, which for an anniversary is the wrong economy. The Grand Canal Suites are the sweet spot, with tall windows or a terrace framing the Salute; the Presidential and Penthouse Suites go further, with wraparound terraces, but at a serious premium.
The interiors are modern-classic rather than antique: Venetian glass, Rubelli-style fabrics, and contemporary Italian furniture rather than the gilded, time-worn rooms of the city's oldest palazzo hotels. If you want a room that feels freshly and comfortably done rather than heavy with history, that trade lands in the St. Regis's favour, which is part of why it scores so well on room and design. When you book, confirm the orientation in writing, because "canal view" and "canal side" are not always the same category and the difference is exactly what you are paying for.
Use the butler from the moment you book, not on arrival. Pre-arrange the airport water taxi, a private sunset gondola from the hotel pier, your dinner reservations, and any anniversary surprise (cake, flowers, a canal-view table) in advance. Peak-season evenings and the best gondola slots fill early, and the butler service is the reason to be paying this rate.
Dining centres on Gio's Restaurant and its canal-side terrace, which is the room to book for the anniversary dinner: tables sit right above the Grand Canal, and the sunset hour over the Salute is the one to request. The cooking is contemporary Italian, and the terrace setting does much of the work on a special night. There is also a bar for aperitivo, and in-room dining that the butler can stage on a suite terrace if you would rather keep the evening private.
The butler service is the hotel's defining feature and the reason its service score is near the top of the list. Because it is offered in every room rather than reserved for suites, the attention feels consistent rather than tiered: unpacking help, garment pressing, a standing breakfast order, and a single point of contact for the whole stay. On a trip where you do not want to be managing bookings and boats yourself, that continuity is worth more than any single amenity. It is a large hotel, so the service is professional and well-drilled rather than family-familiar, but it is reliably excellent.
The honest cons are worth weighing before you commit at this price. First, location cuts both ways: being steps from Piazza San Marco puts you in the busiest, most heavily visited quarter of Venice, so if your idea of a romantic anniversary is a quiet, hidden corner away from the crowds, a hotel in Dorsoduro or Cannaregio will feel more secluded. Second, only the canal-facing rooms deliver the signature view, and they carry a real premium; the cheaper rooms are comfortable but miss the point of staying here.
Third, this is a full-scale 169-room hotel, not an intimate palazzo of a dozen rooms, so it trades the hushed, personal feel of the smallest Venice hotels for scale and consistency. Fourth, arrival almost always means a paid private water taxi from the airport, which adds noticeably to the cost and is easy to forget when comparing rates. None of these are dealbreakers for the right couple, but they are the reasons the St. Regis is a considered choice rather than an automatic one.
Against the city's other landmark hotels, the St. Regis trades centuries-old atmosphere for a fresher room product and its every-room butler. Use the table to place it against two other strong anniversary options on our Venice list.
| Hotel | Best for | Trade-off |
|---|---|---|
| The St. Regis Venice | Grand Canal view plus butler service in every room; modern-classic rooms | Busy San Marco setting; large-hotel scale; view costs a premium |
| Hotel Danieli, a Four Seasons Hotel | Iconic Gothic palazzo with centuries of history near St Mark's | Historic building means more variable rooms; famously busy public spaces |
| JW Marriott Venice Resort & Spa | Quiet private-island resort with a pool and spa, away from the crowds | Off the main island, so the city is a boat ride away |
If your anniversary is about the Grand Canal view, dependable service, and a room that feels freshly done, the St. Regis is the pick. If you want the weight of history in the walls, look at the Danieli; if you want calm, a pool, and distance from the crowds, the island resort at the JW Marriott is the better fit.
Yes. It sits directly on the Grand Canal opposite Santa Maria della Salute, offers 24-hour butler service in every room, and can arrange private gondola outings and canal-side dinners, which makes it one of the strongest anniversary choices in the city.
A Grand Canal facing category, ideally a suite with a terrace over the water. Interior and courtyard rooms are cheaper and quieter but miss the canal view that is the reason to stay, so confirm the orientation in writing.
At San Marco 2159, where the Grand Canal opens into St Mark's Basin, a short walk from Piazza San Marco. Arrival is usually by private water taxi, roughly 25 minutes from Venice Marco Polo airport, docking at the hotel's own canal pier.
Rates typically start around 1,000 euros per night and rise well beyond that for Grand Canal suites in high season. It sits in Venice's top price tier alongside the Danieli and the Gritti Palace. Check live rates for your dates.
A busy San Marco setting rather than a quiet corner, the signature view limited to canal-facing rooms, very high peak-season rates, a paid water-taxi arrival, and full-scale hotel size rather than an intimate palazzo feel.
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