Travel & Lodging in Arizona
1,096 travel & lodging businesses across Arizona · Hotels, resorts, RV parks, tours and attractions.
Who are the best travel & lodging in Arizona?
Saguaro List currently lists 1,096 travel & lodging across Arizona, including 3 BR Home With A Sunset, 3 Palms Tucson North Foothills, 9 Arizona Motor Hotel. Compare the full list below — every listing shows real contact details, and you can request free quotes from up to 3 local businesses at once.
Arizona runs on visitors. More than 40 million people a year come for the Grand Canyon, Sedona's red rocks, Scottsdale's spa resorts, spring training, and the mild winters that draw snowbirds by the hundred-thousand. That makes lodging and travel one of the state's biggest industries — and one of the most seasonal. A room that's $99 in July can be $399 during the Waste Management Open or a Sedona fall weekend, and the best guest ranches and national-park gateway rooms book out months ahead.
Arizona lodging is also unusually varied. You've got five-star desert resorts and dude ranches in the Sonoran foothills, historic Route 66 motels through Kingman and Williams, RV parks and snowbird campgrounds around Yuma and Quartzsite, vacation rentals in Sedona and Flagstaff, and hostels near the Grand Canyon. Add the museums, zoos, and attractions that anchor a trip, plus the tour operators and travel agencies that put it all together.
This is your starting point for finding trusted places to stay and things to do across the state — whether you're a visitor planning a trip or an Arizona hospitality business trying to get found by the millions of people searching every year.
Page · Travel & Lodging
Tucson · Travel & Lodging
Williams · Travel & Lodging
Yuma · Travel & Lodging
Gilbert · Travel & Lodging
Phoenix · Travel & Lodging
Phoenix · Travel & Lodging
Tempe · Travel & Lodging
Tucson · Travel & Lodging
Scottsdale · Travel & Lodging
Sedona · Travel & Lodging
Scottsdale · Travel & Lodging
Scottsdale · Travel & Lodging
Glendale · Travel & Lodging
Phoenix · Travel & Lodging
Scottsdale · Travel & Lodging
Tempe · Travel & Lodging
Tucson · Travel & Lodging
Chandler · Travel & Lodging
Phoenix · Travel & Lodging
Sedona · Travel & Lodging
Flagstaff · Travel & Lodging
Tucson · Travel & Lodging
Mesa · Travel & Lodging
Williams · Travel & Lodging
Flagstaff · Travel & Lodging
Williams · Travel & Lodging
Page · Travel & Lodging
Williams · Travel & Lodging
Sedona · Travel & Lodging
Phoenix · Travel & Lodging
Sedona · Travel & Lodging
Apache Junction · Travel & Lodging
Bullhead City · Travel & Lodging
Yuma · Travel & Lodging
Phoenix · Travel & Lodging
Mesa · Travel & Lodging
Cottonwood · Travel & Lodging
Cottonwood · Travel & Lodging
Glendale · Travel & Lodging
Phoenix · Travel & Lodging
Tempe · Travel & Lodging
Tucson · Travel & Lodging
Tucson · Travel & Lodging
Kingman · Travel & Lodging
Tucson · Travel & Lodging
Phoenix · Travel & Lodging
Phoenix · Travel & Lodging
Mesa · Travel & Lodging
Chandler · Travel & Lodging
Kingman · Travel & Lodging
Phoenix · Travel & Lodging
Tucson · Travel & Lodging
Tempe · Travel & Lodging
Yuma · Travel & Lodging
Nogales · Travel & Lodging
Flagstaff · Travel & Lodging
Chandler · Travel & Lodging
Yuma · Travel & Lodging
Fountain Hills · Travel & Lodging
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What to look for in travel & lodging in Arizona
- Check the season: Arizona rates and availability swing hard between summer (low in the desert, high up north) and the winter/spring high season — book desert resorts and snowbird RV parks early.
- For the Grand Canyon, Sedona, and Monument Valley, confirm exactly how far the property is from the park entrance or trailhead; "near the Grand Canyon" can mean 90 minutes away.
- Desert heat matters: verify working, well-maintained A/C and covered or shaded parking for any summer stay below the Rim.
- For RVs, confirm full hookups, big-rig access, and whether the park is 55+, snowbird-seasonal, or year-round.
- Ask about resort or cleaning fees up front — Arizona resort fees can add $30–$50 a night that isn't in the headline rate.
- Look for local operators licensed and insured for the specific activity (Jeep tours, river trips, guided hikes) and read recent, Arizona-specific reviews.
Travel & Lodging in Arizona — FAQ
When is the cheapest time to visit Arizona?
In the desert (Phoenix, Tucson, Scottsdale, Yuma), summer — June through August — is by far the cheapest, with resort rates often cut in half despite the heat. Up north (Flagstaff, Sedona, the Grand Canyon), summer is peak season and winter is cheaper. Spring (spring training, wildflowers) and fall are the priciest statewide.
Do I need a car to visit Arizona?
Almost always yes. Outside downtown Phoenix and Tempe's light rail, Arizona is spread out and most attractions — the Grand Canyon, Sedona, Monument Valley — are a long drive with little transit. Many visitors rent a car or book guided tours and shuttles through a local operator.
What's the difference between a dude ranch and a resort in Arizona?
A dude (or guest) ranch is an all-inclusive Western experience — horseback riding, meals, and activities bundled into a nightly or weekly rate, often in the desert foothills around Tucson or Wickenburg. A resort is a hotel-style property with pools, spa, and dining, priced per room with activities à la carte.
Are RV parks in Arizona open year-round?
Many desert RV parks around Yuma, Quartzsite, and Casa Grande are snowbird-focused and busiest November through March, while some are 55+ or seasonal. Parks up north near Flagstaff and the Rim are typically summer-season. Always confirm the season, age policy, and hookup type before booking.