The all-suite tower on A1A where every room has a kitchen and a terrace, and the sixth-floor Sky Deck has the best pool view on the beach.
The Conrad Fort Lauderdale Beach is the city's all-suite tower on A1A: 290 suites, each with a full kitchen and terrace, run by Hilton's Conrad brand in the building that was once a stalled Trump project. Book it for space, ocean-view suites and the 20,000-square-foot Sky Deck pool. Note it sits across the road from the sand, not on it.
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Book the Conrad when you want space and self-sufficiency on the beach corridor rather than a compact luxury room. Every one of its 290 units is a suite with a full kitchen, a separate living area and a private terrace or balcony, which makes it unusually practical for longer stays, families and business travelers who want to host in-suite or cook a meal in. The 24-story glass tower means the upper floors deliver wide Atlantic and Intracoastal views that a low-rise beach hotel cannot match.
The building has a story worth knowing: it began in 2005 as the Trump International Hotel and Tower Fort Lauderdale, stalled through the financial crisis, and finally opened as Conrad Fort Lauderdale Beach in October 2017 under Hilton's luxury Conrad brand. What you get today is a modern, well-located all-suite hotel that participates in Hilton Honors, which is a meaningful draw for loyalty members and a large part of why it ranks so highly for the city.
The suites are the whole point. Each has a stylish, contemporary finish with a full kitchen, a living space and a furnished terrace, and they face either the Atlantic or the Intracoastal Waterway. The layouts give you far more room than a standard resort room at a similar rate, so for a multi-night stay the value equation tilts in the Conrad's favor, especially if you would otherwise be eating every meal out.
There is one nuance to understand: the Conrad is a condo-hotel, with a mix of hotel-managed suites and privately owned residences among its 290 units. In practice that means the bones are consistent but finishes and upkeep can vary a little from suite to suite, so it is worth requesting a high floor on the ocean side and, for a special stay, asking about the larger corner layouts.
The signature amenity is the Sky Deck on the sixth floor, a roughly 20,000-square-foot ocean-facing deck with a heated pool, private cabanas, a Jacuzzi and a fire pit, plus the casual Spinnaker Pool Grill. Its elevated position gives it sweeping Atlantic views, and the cabana program makes it a genuinely comfortable place to spend a full day or entertain a client, even though it is a pool deck rather than a true rooftop.
On dining, the headline is Takato, a Japanese-Korean restaurant, paired with the Atlas Cocktail Lounge for drinks. For something quicker there is the Cornucopia Gourmet Market for grab-and-go, and the in-suite kitchens mean you can just as easily cook breakfast on your terrace. It is a compact but well-judged food and beverage lineup for an all-suite property rather than a sprawling resort with a dozen outlets.
The Conrad sits at 551 North Fort Lauderdale Beach Boulevard on the North Beach stretch of A1A, in the heart of the city's beach-hotel corridor. That is a strong, walkable position, close to the beach promenade and a short drive from the Las Olas Boulevard dining scene and the Galleria shopping mall, with Fort Lauderdale airport roughly 20 to 30 minutes away depending on traffic.
The honest detail is that the Conrad is across A1A from the sand rather than directly on it. The beach is only a few steps away over the road, but if being able to walk straight from your room onto the sand matters to you, the beachfront hotels have the edge. For many guests the suite space and the elevated pool are a fair trade for crossing one road to reach the water.
The Conrad is a strong, spacious all-suite option, but it is not right for every traveler.
The Conrad wins on suite space, in-room kitchens and its elevated pool, and gives ground to the beachfront hotels on direct sand access and formal service. Here is how it lines up with the hotels ranked around it.
| Hotel | Style | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Conrad Fort Lauderdale Beach | All-suite Hilton tower on A1A | Space, kitchens, longer stays |
| Auberge Beach Residences & Spa | Beachfront residences and spa | The most complete beach luxury |
| The Ritz-Carlton Fort Lauderdale | Beachfront five-star classic | Formal service on the sand |
| W Fort Lauderdale | Design hotel with WET Deck pool | A social, party-forward scene |
Choose the Conrad for suite space and a kitchen; move to Auberge Beach or the Ritz-Carlton for true beachfront, or the W for a livelier pool scene. All appear on our full Fort Lauderdale ranking.
From $350/night. Independent review; we may earn a commission at no cost to you.
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