Is Our Top Hotel Near Disneyland Still #1?
In the last decade-plus, we have stayed at over 65 hotels near Disneyland and Disney California. First as tourists on trips, then as SoCal locals wanting to field test accommodations, then childeless millennial tourists again, and finally as parents living in Orange County. We’ve stayed at everything from sketchy motels to family suites to luxury resorts.
Our experience led us to create the comprehensive Anaheim Hotel Reviews & Rankings back in 2015. It started as a ‘work-in-progress’ list based on the two dozen hotels we had stayed at then. It quickly grew over the years as we made a concerted effort to stay in and review hotels, especially as development was booming in Anaheim and new hotels were opening and others closing or being remodeled.
During the first few years, there were several different #1 picks. There was a time when Desert Inn, Hotel Indigo, Candy Cane Inn, Fairfield, Tropicana, and Park Vue Inn all jockeyed for top spots. And several of those remain sentimental favorites from a bygone era of Disneyland visits. However, our top selection has remained unchanged since Fall 2017: Best Western Plus Park Place Inn.
A lot has happened in the last ~7 years. (Understatement of the century.) That’s doubly true when it comes to hotels near Disneyland. Without actually counting, I’d hazard a guess that at least two-dozen brand new hotels have opened in Anaheim during that timeframe, including a couple of luxury heavy-hitters and at least a half-dozen family suites within walking distance. Countless other hotels have been remodeled in order to keep pace with the evolving hotel scene and guest expectations.
For better or worse, the Best Western Plus Park Place Inn has not changed in meaningful ways in the last ~7 years. The rooms were recently renovated when we last stayed there. They remain the same to this day, but are now not-so-recently renovated. The building is still old and the Best Western is still very much a roadside motel-style property. That’s the “for worse” part.
The “for better” thing is that the Best Western Plus Park Place Inn has not moved. I mean, I guess technically it has. Thanks to tectonic shift or whatever, Anaheim will eventually fall into the Pacific Ocean over a long enough timeline. But you know what I mean. This Best Western is the closest hotel to Disneyland, directly across the street from the parks. It’s closer to Walt Disney’s original Magic Kingdom than Grand Californian, Disneyland Hotel, or Pixar Place Hotel.
That location was the primary basis for our #1 ranking and it remains unchanged. Even if the hotel has shifted by a couple inches since we last reviewed it, the Best Western Plus Park Place Inn is still the closest hotel to Disneyland. Nevertheless, we’re in the process of revisiting and refreshing hotel reviews, and thought it wise to check-in at the Best Western again to see if our sentiment has changed after 7 years of additional hotel stays elsewhere in Anaheim. Hence this post.
The proximity selling point of the Best Western cannot be overstated. The hotel is literally at the Disneyland pedestrian intersection. You’re under 60 seconds (depending upon the traffic light) from hotel to the Disneyland Resort gateway and being enveloped in the cheery Esplanade background music loop.
From room door to park turnstile, the Best Western is, at the very most, a 10 minute walk. It’s the next-best thing to actually staying on-site, and you might even argue that it’s better than being on-site at the Disneyland Hotel or Pixar Place Hotel, as it’s closer to both parks than both of those. As with Park Vue Inn, it’s basically just crossing the intersection and you’re there.
In our Park Vue Inn Review, we noted that whether it or Best Western Plus Park Place Inn is a shorter walk to Disneyland really depends upon your room. The hotels themselves are nearly equidistant to the main entrance. Really, though, we’re talking about a difference of a dozen steps or so. Both hotels are directly across the street, and both are pretty evenly matched.
These aren’t the only two hotels in this cluster across the street–just the two closest to Disneyland. Others include all of the following:
- Best Western Anaheim Plus Inn (a different Best Western)
- Camelot Inn & Suites
- Del Sol Inn
- Anaheim Desert Inn
- Tropicana Inn
- Fairfield by Marriott
- Grand Legacy at the Park
Aside from their proximity to the parks, the most notable thing about every entry on this list is that they’re generally the same type of motel-style properties. Sure, some have been refreshed or renamed over the last decade, but they’re all fundamentally still the same.
They’re also distinct from the newer generation of Anaheim hotels, all of which would surpass anything on the above list when it comes to guest rooms and amenities. The difference is the location. These have it, those newer hotels don’t. That’s probably also why the hoteliers operating the above properties as disinclined to raze and replace. They don’t need to–the location sells itself.
Let’s turn to the rooms at the Best Western Plus Park Place Inn to see if they’re still up to snuff…
Knowing that nothing had actually changed about the hotel, we opted to switch things up with this stay by opting for the Mini-Suite with 2 Queens and Sofa Bed. This is the largest room type at the Best Western Plus Park Place Inn, and the only option capable of sleeping 6 people.
Our thinking was that maybe this would bridge the gap between a standard hotel room at the Best Western and the spacious family suites that are available farther down the road from Disneyland.
It really does not. At least, not in our opinion.
These larger mini-suites at the Best Western do provide a bit of breathing room as compared to standard rooms, and obviously there’s the difference of being able to sleep 6 as opposed to 2-4 guests. So strictly from a capacity perspective, they’re an upgrade.
That’s undeniably true if you have a larger family that can’t do a standard room and will only use this as a ‘crash pad’ and are not concerned about spaciousness. That will be the perspective of many families visiting Disneyland, and for that demo, these rooms are a win!
We hear from many families of 5, disappointed by the lack of options across the street from Disneyland. The mini-suites at the Best Western are great for them. They’re also good for parents plus a grandparent, and a child or two. (Our exact scenario–except baby didn’t need her own bed!) I’m sure there are other parties of 3-4 who would prefer the 3-bed setup. So we’re not dismissive of this configuration–it’s a good one that makes the Best Western Plus Park Place Inn viable for many parties!
What we’re simply saying is that it doesn’t bridge the gap between the old motel style and the new family suite style that’s proliferated in Anaheim.
Those new rooms usually have separate sleeping and living spaces (and sometimes kitchens). There is often, but not always, a wall and door between the living and bedroom. This makes it easier for putting kids to bed while parents stay up and decompress, do adult activities, and whatnot.
I probably don’t need to explain this–the photos should speak for themselves–but that’s not possible at the Best Western Plus Park Place Inn. The little quarter wall thing (with the cut-through) just doesn’t cut it for subdividing the space. Everyone is going to bed at the same time, and engaging in the same family-friendly activities. Here’s a video room tour to better show you around the space:
Beyond that, the rooms at Best Western Plus Park Place Inn are fine. No longer “newly” renovated, they are definitely showing their age as compared to the brand-new hotels that have been built in the years since we last stayed here. It very much has the look of an older motel trying to stay “contemporary.”
This isn’t to say there’s anything bad about the rooms. To the contrary, there are little touches throughout the room, from the carpet to the paintings to the headboards. Equally as important, we found the hotel room to be clean and well-maintained. It also doesn’t smell like it was freshly carpet-bombed with Febreeze or used copious amounts of cleaner to mask years of decay.
You might laugh, but in staying at 65+ Anaheim hotels, we’ve seen things you people wouldn’t believe. The Best Western aspires to be something more and makes an effort. It doesn’t just phone it in and rest on its laurels of being the closest hotel to Disneyland.
Circling back to the basics, these mini-suite rooms at the Best Western feature two queen beds and queen sofa sleeper offers a flat screen TV, alarm clock/radio, microwave, mini refrigerator, coffee maker, iron/board and hairdryer.
The queen beds are plush and comfortable. The sheets and pillows likewise felt high quality. The sofa sleeper is a different story, but I think that’s to be expected. Best Western Plus Park Place Inn gets high marks in terms of the room comfort.
Having a Keurig, even of the knockoff variety, is also nice. Many of the motels in the area have really bad and cheap coffee makers, and the most repulsive coffee imaginable. Not that “Donut Shop” is the pinnacle of small-batch, sustainably grown, artisan coffee roasters…but at least it’s not awful.
A mini-fridge is also nice. It’s easy to get groceries near Disneyland or you can–and I’m not condoning this–grab an extra yogurt or other item from the free breakfast and stash that in the fridge for a midday or late night snack. Going back to the room throughout the day is easy since you’re so close to Disneyland.
Then there are the bathrooms, which are a weakness and very similar among all Anaheim motels. As I’ve written before, I could use a single stock photo for 75% of the hotels in Anaheim, and no one would ever know the difference.
There’s nothing necessarily wrong with any of these bathrooms…there’s just nothing right about them, either. They are all consistently undersized and underwhelming.
Although it’s hardly a purposeful design feature (since they’re all this way, regardless of size), the one good thing I’ll say about these bathrooms is that the shower/bathtub and toilet are separate from the sink and mirror.
If you’re in a room that sleeps 6 and are coming close to maxing out that capacity, having separate spaces for multiple people to get ready simultaneously is probably a good thing. Which is also why it’d be nice if that wall separating the beds from the couch were a bit more wall-ish.
Perhaps the biggest change since our last stay at the Best Western isn’t the hotel itself, but that Captain Kidd’s has been replaced by Calaca Mamas Cantina, Anaheim’s Day of the Dead inspired Mexican eatery that’s family-owned and serves homemade cuisine. It’s a night and day improvement over Captain Kidd’s, but then again, so would’ve been an airport Sbarro. (But really, this is much better.)
Speaking of which, the Best Western’s free continental breakfast is served upstairs at Calaca Mamas Cantina. It’s fine. Not as good as the ambitious breakfasts at the newer family suites, but above-average by Harbor Boulevard motel continental breakfast standards.
The pool at Best Western Plus Park Place Inn is also nothing special. Pools at these hotels don’t really matter to me since I never use them, but if you have kids and want to take a midday break for pool time, this will leave something to be desired.
What I will say here is that at least the pool is flanked by the hotel buildings, which isolate it from the outside world to some degree. (Well, until some weirdo in one of the rooms above creeps on sunbathers…) A lot of Anaheim motels have pools in the parking lots and this is better than that. Still not as good as the best option, which is rooftop pool decks.
Without a doubt, pricing is the biggest change for the Best Western Plus Park Place Inn over the last 7 years. You used to be able to get rooms here in the $150 to $200 per night range. That was on the higher end of the Anaheim average, but not too bad.
Now, you’ll be hard-pressed to book the Best Western for under $300 per night. Prices have exploded throughout Anaheim, but even so, this is above trend. More than anything else, this is what gives us pause in keeping the Best Western in the #1 spot, especially as its competition has not increased this much in price. (Click here to check Get Away Today for current deals at the Best Western Plus Park Place Inn and compare its pricing to other hotels near Disneyland.)
As with most other hotels in Anaheim, you’ll also now pay for parking. That’s a double-whammy that makes the Best Western much more of a tough sell.
Ultimately, the question is whether the ‘closest hotel to Disneyland’ can overcome the higher price point and the construction of over a dozen new hotels that do everything better than the old roadside motels on Harbor Boulevard. That’s almost impossible to answer. Ask me first thing in the morning when we’re full of energy and have issues walking a few blocks, and I’m probably saying no. When we’re overdue for nap time or at the end of a very long day when every step counts, I’m saying yes–without a doubt.
One thing we’ve learned over the years of doing this and receiving reader feedback is that proximity to the parks is paramount. More of you care about location than any other single quality–probably than everything else combined. Obviously, no advice is one-size-fits-all, and your party may prioritize differently and not care as much about location. In which case, the Best Western is not going to be the #1 hotel near Disneyland for you. Heck, it probably wouldn’t be top 20!
For many (most!) other Disneyland visitors, being directly across the street is a huge advantage for Best Western Plus Park Place Inn. This makes it easy for a midday nap, pool break, going back for snacks, or even grabbing my tripod and other lenses. The time spent leaving and returning to Disneyland or DCA is minimal from the Best Western, whereas the hotels past the Harbor/Katella intersection are much more of a hassle.
While we still have to revisit a few of the other hotels on Harbor, the Best Western Plus Park Place Inn remains our #1 pick and recommendation for now. That’s the case for those who heavily weigh proximity to the parks. It still strikes the best balance of location, room quality, and amenities. Whether that remains the case depends upon prices and updated rooms (or not) elsewhere.
Any of the above motels on that bullet-point list near the top could claim the #1 spot if they’ve redone the rooms and charge more reasonable rates. (Tropicana Inn immediately comes to mind as a strong contender for the throne.) In the meantime, the Best Western Plus Park Place Inn is still the perfect place to stay for a park-centric vacation, especially one that is likely to include midday breaks, or for those who want to save their feet. You just might be overpaying for saving a few steps and staying at the closest hotel to Disneyland.
Planning a Southern California vacation? For park admission deals, read Tips for Saving Money on Disneyland Tickets. Learn about on-site and off-site hotels in our Anaheim Hotel Reviews & Rankings. For where to eat, check out our Disneyland Restaurant Reviews. For unique ideas of things that’ll improve your trip, check out What to Pack for Disney. For comprehensive advice, consult our Disneyland Vacation Planning Guide. Finally, for guides beyond Disney, check out our Southern California Itineraries for day trips to Los Angeles, Laguna Beach, and many other SoCal cities!
Your Thoughts
Have you stayed at the Best Western Park Place Inn? What did you think of the location, rooms, and amenities? Think it’s the #1 hotel near Disneyland when heavily weighting the rankings for location? Does proximity to the parks overcome the astronomical price for what’s basically a glorified roadside motel? Do you agree or disagree with our assessment of this hotel? Any questions? Hearing feedback about your experiences is both interesting to us and helpful to other readers, so please share your thoughts or questions below in the comments!
















Is our top hotel near Disneyland still holding the #1 spot? It’s worth checking if this favorite spot continues to deliver the best experience for your next visit.
The other key factor that has changed in the last 7 years is the ubiquity of ride share services. For guests with no kids or kids beyond booster seat age and no mobility devices, the widespread availability and low cost of Lyft/Uber rides definitely expands the universe of viable hotel options. The alternative to a long walk in the sun for a midday break or at the end of the night can be a ride share instead of settling for an over-priced motel simply because it’s right across the street. That’s certainly been our calculation in a number of recent visits. I would much rather stay in a nice family suite at the Element with its robust breakfast for $100 less per night than the Best Western and use part of that difference for a couple of Lyft rides. That’s also why we will probably never stay at the Candy Cane Inn again despite the new renovation — ultimately it’s still a motel with small rooms and they’re asking over $300 per night.
We love staying at Candy Cane Inn. The beds are so comfortable, the parking free, the WiFi included, the expanded continental breakfast always fresh, tasty, and replenished.
Their dedicated shuttle is such a great perk.
When we made the walk it was alway less than 10 minutes to Disneyland gate and the entire walk was on Disney property, so no street hawkers bothering us. We could hear Disney music the entire way to the parks.
The front desk clerks and the entire staff have been universally friendly and competent. Our room is always clean and communicating with the hotel is perennially easy. The grounds feature many flowering plants and it always bears the unmistakable touch of attentiveness.
From the cobblestone parking area to the breakfast room, it is always clean and welcoming.
The only downsides are the petite size of the breakfast room and the lack of suites. However, for a family of five or less, it is our favorite option every time.
On our last visit we splurged and stayed at the Grand Californian, and we all were disappointed with the change.
We always enjoyed staying at the Jolly Roger located at Harbor and Katella. Had a great restaurant and an adequate pool.
The Residence Inn Anaheim Resort Convention Center that replaced it has a great pool; I like the Pizza Hut Express, but that happens to be my preference for national chain pizza.
Given how much cheaper it is than the Best Western Plus Park Place, I think it’s got a good chance at the #1 slot once Tom checks prices. (Unless the amenities & rooms have changed, I do like the Trop for “best motel across Harbor.” Those Stovall’s Best Westerns just cost so much more than the other motels now.)
Recently stayed at the new home2suites which is basically behind the fairfield. 7 min walk. EXTREMELY impressed! Huge breakfast buffet free. Nice lounge, coffee and snack bar, huge 1100sq ft family suites. Highly recommended checking it out!!
We’ve stayed at most of the hotels within walking distance, and have even brought bikes. I know it sounds nuts when you’re already walking so far all day–and if you have kids the addition of bikes might be actually be nuts–but it was a great help when we were on a super-tight budget and could ride a mile and save a hundred dollars a night. There’s a bike rack near the bag check 🙂 Of course, it doesn’t work when flying.
We like Park Vue just fine for all the reasons explained above. This post is more of a warning about another across-the-street motel, Desert Inn. When we stayed there nine years ago, someone “broke” into our car. They left trash, stole a bluetooth speaker and the small change in the console. It smelled of marijuana. Because there was no damage, we figured out it was the valet parking using our key. Here’s the thing–when we told the counter clerk, we weren’t believed. So we showed them, were required to repeat it to three other employees, then had to wait over an hour for a manager to tell it again. Then the manager did nothing; they told us the valet parking was contracted out and we had to contact them instead. No offer of a refund on parking. When we later contacted the valet company, they only offered to pay us for the small change and the bluetooth speaker, acting like I was petty to bother them. Of course, that wasn’t what we wanted. I had to get nasty to inspire them to actually refund the valet fees. Ridiculous. Anyway, it could be a fluke, but Desert Inn had other problems: the room wasn’t ready at check-in and we had to wait over an hour; when they did send us up, it still wasn’t ready because it hadn’t been cleaned; then they moved us to another room that supposedly had been cleaned, but there was a super-stinky trash can with numerous dirty diapers in it; when they didn’t come get the trash can after a half hour, I had to leave it in the hall. I didn’t want to do that because it isn’t nice for the other hotel guests, but I got the distinct impression that we cared more about the other guests than the mangement did.
This was all pre-pandemic, when there were enough hotel workers available, but it seemed like there weren’t enough employees for the size of the place. The whole thing was the worst near Disney hotel experience we’ve had in twenty years of visiting about three times a year. I don’t know what it’s like now, but if they didn’t have enough employees then, I can’t imagine it has improved.
So yeah, Park Vue wins!
We stayed at Tropicana last year after having done BW the year prior and much prefer Tropicana. They were refurbished and significantly cheaper on our 6 night stay. If I recall correctly, anything over 5 nights gets a discount at Tropicana which adds to the savings. It’s an extra 100′ or whatever it is than the BW entrance but it’s nothing. Tropicana doesn’t have breakfast, but if we’re properly rope dropping it’s worth just having someone grab a mobile order from Panera or McDonald’s instead of spending the time with hotel breakfast (we’re a breakfast family, but rope drop takes priority on DL vacations).
stayed therein February, it was ok. the elevators were mostly broken, the rooms definitely show their age. and we felt the free breakfast was overpriced, but in all honesty have not found any decent early breakfast near Disneyland since Steakhouse 55 closed. the proximity is nice, but overall we would prefer to save for a trip every few years and stay onsite than staying at a less magical hotel outside the bubble at a slightly lower rate.
I would be curious about noise. I don’t think it has indoor hallways. So, you open the door directly outside. That would make me a bit nervous too. I’ve had a couple of occasions with someone trying to get in and banging on my door trying to get in at another hotel near Disneyland. It was a scary. I would be curious if any hotels that are across the street have indoor hallways. It’s just more secure and quieter.
I can’t speak to safety issues, but as for noise at night, the only trouble I’ve had with motels across from DL are rooms on the west side of the hotels most nearest Harbor Blvd. I’d avoid two or three rooms away from the end on all of these motels if you’re a light sleeper.
For inner hallways and bang for the buck I’d recommend going for one of the better hotels near the convention center. The only hotel with inner hallways that might be a shorter walk is the Courtyard Anaheim Theme Park Entrance, but that’s about as expensive as this hotel; I think you’ve got to appreciate *and* use the superior amenities there to justify the elevated cost.
We stayed at Wyndham Anaheim (Courtyard) hotel very near the corner of Harbor and Katella. Not a motel. Indoor corridors. Only 15 minute walk to park entrance. Much cheaper than motels across from entrance. Worth the short walk. Quiet!! Very clean, modern, nice rooms, comfy beds, modern bathrooms. Rooms have free wifi, microwaves, mini fridges, and coffee maker with coffee and creamer/sugar & cups provided. Rooms for 1 to 6 people. Room service available. Felt very safe. 24 hour front desk service. Great staff. Great lounge bar and restaurant on site. Nice pool and hot tub outdoor deck area, free self parking on site, guest self serve laundry rooms in hotel. Close walk to a variety of many restaurants.
I booked a room for there. I think it would be thrilling to be across the street from Disneyland Park / DCA. I’m from Detroit. I’ve been going to Disneyland since Christmas 1956 when I was in a toddler stroller. lol Now I am older and need the minimal steps.
Thank you for the updated review. As I’ve mentioned a few times, we stayed at Stovall’s Inn over on Katella and West/Disneyland Dr. on our trip in December. So the breakfast and coffee look very familiar. (The Donut Shop coffee was shockingly good, but the lobby/breakfast area coffee was atrocious, as was the other brand of coffee they sometimes left instead) The biggest difference was of course the distance to the parks (20 mins at the end of the night was ROUGH) and a MUCH better pool area at Stovall’s, plus the cute topiary garden over there. (Stovall’s Inn isn’t fancy, but it likely still ranks as a Top 10 pool area in Anaheim with two pools and spas and a separate wading pool) Oh and Stovall’s Inn is considerably cheaper, although not exactly cheap.
Next trip we’re hoping to be able to stay over on Harbor, but with prices skyrocketing I’m not sure. Sadly, price makes Park Place Inn largely a stopper for our family.
I have stayed there before and the location was great, so I was fully planning to book this for our January 2025 stay but when I saw the price hike I paused. After taxes and parking, it wasn’t much more (about 50/nt) to rent dvc points for a studio at the Grand Californian, so I did that instead. For the first time ever, staying onsite seemed more reasonable, so I am kinda glad for the excuse to try it out but also a little bummed that cheap hotel stays there are not so much a thing anymore.
Thanks for mentioning you can rent DVC points at Disneyland. Have done this in Orlando, but didn’t realize the option was available in Anaheim.
“ As with most other hotels in Anaheim, you’ll also now pay for parking. That’s a double-whammy that makes the Best Western much more of a tough sell.”
To me the most guest unfriendly piece was the parking rate if your car stays past checkout on the day you leave. I should have done my research (so shame on me), but I would venture many guests are staying in the park late on the day they checkout. You either need to budget in time and hassle to move your car, or pay what I’d argue is an exorbitant parking rate for the second day.
Even with all that, location could not be beat, and appreciated your recommendation!