
Andaz Miami Beach
When you book Andaz Miami Beach in Miami, USA through our Hyatt Prive partnership, your stay includes daily breakfast, room upgrades and a hotel credit.
Exclusive Booking Perks
- Welcome amenity.
- Daily complimentary full breakfast at a hotel restaurant for up to two guests.
- Property credit.
- Priority for room upgrade (response within 24 hours of booking, subject to forecasted occupancy).
- Early check-in/late check-out/connecting rooms (response within 24 hours of request, subject to forecasted occupancy).
Location
Andaz takes "personal style" as both name and mission, and in Miami Beach that translates to an informal luxury steeped in the neighbourhood's particular rhythm: art deco heritage meets Latin pulse, oceanfront leisure tempered by a design-conscious edge. The brand's signature touches (no front desk formality, locally inspired art, complimentary minibar snacks) feel especially at home here, where the city has always preferred poolside ease to buttoned-up convention.
Miami Beach stretches along a barrier island where the Atlantic meets Biscayne Bay, its streets lined with pastel deco facades and Royal Poinciana trees heavy with scarlet blooms. The neighbourhood hums with bilingual conversations, the salt-thick air mixing with café cubano and sunscreen. Collins Avenue runs the spine of the island, connecting the Art Deco Historic District to the south with quieter, residential pockets to the north. You're walking distance from white sand beaches where the water glows turquoise even in winter, and the design galleries and murals of the Wynwood arts district lie just across the causeway.
Miami International Airport sits 17 kilometres west, a straightforward drive across the MacArthur or Venetian causeways that offer first glimpses of the bay's impossible blue and the downtown skyline rising behind it.
The property reflects the Andaz ethos with locally inspired dining and an art programme that pulls from Miami's thriving contemporary scene, but the real draw extends just beyond: L'Atelier de Joël Robuchon Miami, seven kilometres away, brings two Michelin stars and the late chef's signature counter-style theatre to a city now joining Paris and Tokyo in the Robuchon constellation. Closer in, Tambourine Room by Tristan Brandt (one star, 4.4 kilometres) offers Asian-inflected contemporary cuisine in the wood-panelled elegance of the historic Carillon Miami Wellness Center, while Stubborn Seed (one star, 4.9 kilometres) delivers Chef Jeremy Ford's brashly creative tasting menus in an industrial-chic glass-fronted kitchen on a busy corner. Book a table at one of these; Miami's Michelin recognition is recent enough that reservations still feel like insider knowledge.
Cultural texture comes from the Art Deco Historic District to the south, where over 800 pastel-striped buildings form the world's largest concentration of 1930s resort architecture, and the beach itself: 14th Street Beach lies three kilometres away, a stretch of white sand where the water stays warm enough for swimming nearly year-round. Miami Beach Golf Club (1.8 kilometres) and the marinas along Sunset Harbour (three kilometres) offer morning diversions before the afternoon heat sets in.
Winter (December through February) is Miami Beach's high season for good reason: temperatures hover in the low to mid-twenties Celsius, humidity drops, and the light turns crystalline, casting sharp shadows across deco cornices and poolside terrazzo. The ocean cools slightly but remains swimmable, and outdoor tables fill with visitors escaping northern cold.
Spring and autumn bring warmer air (mid-to-high twenties) and occasional afternoon showers that arrive suddenly, drench the Royal Poincianas, and vanish just as fast. April and May offer the best balance: warm enough for beach days without the summer's oppressive humidity, and the city feels less crowded as snowbirds depart.
Summer (June through September) means heat and daily thunderstorms, the air so thick you feel it on your skin. Temperatures push past 30°C, and the rhythm slows to match: late breakfasts, long siestas, evenings that start after sunset when the breeze finally picks up off the Atlantic. Locals know this season best; visitors willing to embrace the heat find quieter beaches and better restaurant availability.
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