

Where Colorado's last frontier becomes the most intimate address in the Rockies
Reserve this StayBoutique Hotel in Dolores, CO
Dunton Hot Springs
17 Total Rooms
17 Room Types
4.8 (7 Reviews)
The road narrows as it climbs into the San Juan Mountains, winding past meadows thick with wildflowers and stands of old-growth aspen until it dead-ends at something unexpected: a ghost town, brought carefully back to life. Dunton Hot Springs occupies a former mining settlement in a high alpine valley at nearly 9,000 feet, its hand-hewn log cabins restored with the kind of devotion that honors what the mountains left behind. There is no lobby. No check-in desk. What greets you instead is a village of weathered timber structures set along the banks of the West Fork of the Dolores River, each one holding its own quiet story.
The cabins serve as the property's accommodations, and no two are alike. Restored from their original 1800s structures, they blend pioneer-era architecture with considered modern comfort. Reclaimed wood, antique furnishings, Native American textiles, and heated floors sit alongside deep soaking tubs and fireplaces. Names like Dolores, Dunton Store, and the Library speak to the individual character of each space. Some sit creekside, others nestle against the tree line. The scale is deliberately intimate, with fewer than fifteen cabins accommodating a small number of guests at any given time, preserving the feeling that this valley belongs to you alone.
At the center of the property, the restored saloon functions as the social heart of Dunton Hot Springs. Meals are served here communally, with a seasonal menu that draws from locally sourced and foraged ingredients, shifting with the mountain calendar. The bar, set beneath original timbers, pours wine and whiskey into evenings that often end with nothing more than firelight and conversation. Just steps away, the natural hot springs themselves emerge from the earth at temperatures that have drawn visitors to this valley for centuries. Mineral-rich pools are set both indoors, within a restored bathhouse, and outdoors beneath open sky. A small spa offers bodywork and treatments that draw on the property's connection to the natural world. In winter, the springs steam against deep snow. In summer, they catch the long alpenglow of the San Juans.
Beyond the village, the surrounding landscape opens into one of the most dramatic stretches of Colorado's high country. The property offers guided horseback riding, fly fishing, mountain biking, ice climbing, cross-country skiing, and backcountry excursions depending on the season. Nearby peaks exceed 14,000 feet. The valley sits within a vast expanse of national forest, and the sense of isolation is genuine. Telluride is the nearest town of note, accessible by a mountain pass that reinforces just how far removed this place truly is.
Dunton Hot Springs does not approximate wilderness. It inhabits it. The property operates with an understanding that the landscape is the luxury, and everything built here exists in quiet dialogue with it. What stays with you is not any single detail but the cumulative weight of mornings spent watching mist rise off the river, of afternoons soaking in mineral water beneath a canopy of peaks, and of evenings where the only sound is the crackle of a fire in a cabin that has stood, in one form or another, for more than a century.
The road narrows as it climbs into the San Juan Mountains, winding past meadows thick with wildflowers and stands of old-growth aspen until it dead-ends at something unexpected: a ghost town, brought carefully back to life. Dunton Hot Springs occupies a former mining settlement in a high alpine valley at nearly 9,000 feet, its hand-hewn log cabins restored with the kind of devotion that honors what the mountains left behind. There is no lobby. No check-in desk. What greets you instead is a village of weathered timber structures set along the banks of the West Fork of the Dolores River, each one holding its own quiet story.
The cabins serve as the property's accommodations, and no two are alike. Restored from their original 1800s structures, they blend pioneer-era architecture with considered modern comfort. Reclaimed wood, antique furnishings, Native American textiles, and heated floors sit alongside deep soaking tubs and fireplaces. Names like Dolores, Dunton Store, and the Library speak to the individual character of each space. Some sit creekside, others nestle against the tree line. The scale is deliberately intimate, with fewer than fifteen cabins accommodating a small number of guests at any given time, preserving the feeling that this valley belongs to you alone.
At the center of the property, the restored saloon functions as the social heart of Dunton Hot Springs. Meals are served here communally, with a seasonal menu that draws from locally sourced and foraged ingredients, shifting with the mountain calendar. The bar, set beneath original timbers, pours wine and whiskey into evenings that often end with nothing more than firelight and conversation. Just steps away, the natural hot springs themselves emerge from the earth at temperatures that have drawn visitors to this valley for centuries. Mineral-rich pools are set both indoors, within a restored bathhouse, and outdoors beneath open sky. A small spa offers bodywork and treatments that draw on the property's connection to the natural world. In winter, the springs steam against deep snow. In summer, they catch the long alpenglow of the San Juans.

What we love about this stay
There's something disarming about a place that was once abandoned and now asks you to be completely present. Dunton sits in the San Juans as a restored ghost town — hand-hewn log cabins, each with its own personality, scattered across a landscape so vast it recalibrates your sense of scale. The absence of cell service isn't a gimmick here; it's the actual architecture of the experience. Meals happen communally, at tables where miners once sat, and that shared intimacy among strangers feels earned rather than engineered. You soak in hot springs with sulfur on the air and mountains in every direction, and the luxury isn't in thread counts — it's in the fireplace crackling while silence does the rest. This is a place for people who don't need to be entertained, just returned to themselves.
Explore our rooms & suites
Member rates save up to 15% on every room
Free cancellation on most room types
Member rates save up to 15% on every room
Free cancellation on most room types
Where you'll be staying
8532 Road 38, Dolores, CO 81323, Dolores, CO, 81323, US
Hear it from other travelers
Guest
NOV 2025
We had a lovely experience here. The food was amazing, the views, the scenery, the rustic remoteness of it all. The staff was exceptional. We loved our stay.
Guest
NOV 2025
Relaxing and rejuvenating at the same time. It is a place to find yourself and your life that you loose site of in our hectic world.
Guest
NOV 2025
This was one of the most amazing experiences I have ever had. Romantic, excellent food, amazing service - pretty much perfect all around. I highly recommend this property.
Guest
NOV 2025
We visit the property once a year for our wedding anniversary. It offers complete relaxation. After our last visit, we plan to come twice per year.
Guest
NOV 2025
Fantastic. A great stay. It seemed that several staff were new and so finding their feet a bit, but everyone was eager to please and did everything they could to make our stay enjoyable.
What you need to know
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