33 Haunted Hotels and Airbnbs to Book for a Spooky Halloween

These reportedly haunted hotels, inns, and B&Bs promise bona fide fright nights on Halloween—or any night of the year.

By Manasa Reddigari and Teresa Odle | Updated Sep 18, 2023 12:56 PM

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Old hotel and sign

Photo: istockphoto.com

Who said you need a Ouija board to drop a line to the dearly departed? Apparitions both sympathetic and sinister are believed to abound—no board required—in accommodations around the country. Families love to travel over Halloween; as many as 40 percent planned a trip in October 2022, according to ValuePenguin. Ghost tours and haunted attractions bring in about $300 million annually in the U.S. Commercial haunted houses are one thing, but staying in a hotel or inn with reports of hauntings and paranormal activity takes it to another level. Though most properties on this list have been updated or changed hands or purposes over the years, all have interesting histories.

Lizzie Borden Bed & Breakfast in Fall River, Massachusetts

Green building

Photo: Wikimedia Commons

True crime buffs can spend the final hours of October at this bed-and-breakfast where Lizzie Borden infamously inflicted “40 whacks” on her father and stepmother in 1892. Borden was acquitted of the grisly double murder and vacated the home shortly thereafter, but those who have explored the stately sitting room report sightings and hauntings like shadowy figures (even Lizzie herself?), tousled bed linens, and other surreal events. From $250 per night at Lizzie Borden House.

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Inn at 835 in Springfield, Illinois

Large inn with green accent

Photo: booking.com

High-society florist Bell Miller is thought to have become so enamored of her 1909 Classical Revival-style apartment building and its well-heeled residents that she never left. Some visitors staying in one of the inn’s 11 rooms have recognized Bell’s friendly ghost by the mellifluous voice that plays on the walls of what is now a historic bed-and-breakfast. Others know the specter by her sweet tooth, signaled by the clink of the lid of a crystal candy jar being removed although there’s no one around. From $122 per night at the inn’s Facebook page or Conn’s Hospitality Group.

Redstone Inn & Suites in Dubuque, Iowa

Redstone Inn and Suites, Debuque Iowa

Photo: Wikimedia Commons via Kepper66

It took Augustine A. Cooper only 17 years to ascend from steamship crewmate to proprietor of Cooper Wagon Works and owner of this imposing brick and sandstone Victorian (one of his three mansions). A series of fires, coupled with the decline in importance of the wagon, led to the downfall of his business. But Cooper still makes his presence felt at the 12-room Redstone Inn, in the form of a gentlemanly apparition whose soft footsteps can be heard throughout the property. The entire property is up for sale, but some rooms still are available for booking. From $145 at Redstone Inn.

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21c Kansas City, Missouri

Hotel with neon lights

Photo: expedia.com

The tragic past as much as its enigmatic Art Deco architecture made the Savoy the oldest continuously operating hotel west of the Mississippi, and the talk of the town in Kansas City. Transformed into 21c Kansas City, it now offers 120 modern guest rooms and suites, plus contemporary art. However, throughout its long history, guests have reported unexplained voices and a girl in Victorian clothing on the fourth floor. From $291 at 21c Museum Hotels.

Hawthorne Hotel in Salem, Massachusetts

Brick hotel

Photo: hawthornehotel.com

This Federal-style hotel in the city infamous for its 17th century witch trials is believed by some to occupy the site of an apple orchard owned by Bridget Bishop, the first person executed for witchcraft during the trials. Although paranormal activity hasn’t been confirmed, the hotel was the site for filming some scenes on the historic property. Guests at the hotel, which was constructed in 1925, have reported the aroma of apples wafting through the air, though nothing on the hotel’s menu could account for the sweet scent. From $184 at Hawthorne Hotel.

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Erie Mansion Bed and Breakfast in Clyde, New York

Brick mansion

Photo: Wikimedia Commons

This 2.5-story brick beauty has played host to two distinguished families: the original owners, Dr. Smith and his family, and later, their daughter Eugenia and her husband, glassmaker Charles Ely. These residents and their staff are rumored to haunt the stairway, halls, and kitchen of the Classical Revival abode. But the most sought-after specter is undoubtedly that of a reportedly headless kitchen staff member who is said to have been murdered at the mansion. From $150 for a B&B suite at Erie Mansion.

Grand Union Hotel in Fort Benton, Montana

Red brick building

Photo: grandunionhotel.com

This hotel on the National Register of Historic Places is rumored to have a number of resident ghosts, including a cowhand who rode his horse up the main staircase and was then shot and killed by the hotel’s bar manager. Keep your eyes and ears open, and you might detect the shadow of a man donning a long coat and hear the faint hoofbeats of a phantom horse stampeding through the halls. The hotel has survived several transitions, and now blends its 1882 charm with modern luxury. From $199 a night at Grand Union Hotel.

The Wayside Inn in Middletown, Virginia

Historic buildings

Photo: thewaysideinn1797.com

You’d expect nothing short of a cavalry of ghosts haunting a centuries-old hotel that once hosted both Union and Confederate soldiers—and you’d be right. Wander this eerie, wood-framed accommodation and you may pass through inexplicable cold spots, hear the disembodied laughter of children, and, if you’re lucky, men in blue or gray uniforms. Restored after a fire in the 1980s, the Wayside Inn has retained much of its 18th century charm, with 22 rooms plus the booming Larrick’s tavern with live music and events. From $85 through Wayside Inn.

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The Peabody Hotel in Memphis, Tennessee

Exterior view of large hotel building at night

Photo: peabodymemphis.com

In a routine that dates back to the 1930s, the “Peabody Ducks” leave their rooftop “duck palace” and waddle over a red carpet to the hotel lobby fountain every day at 11 a.m. to the strains of John Phillip Sousa’s “King Cotton March.” At 5 p.m., they march back to their quarters. Yet the ducks aren’t the only unusual fixtures of this historic hotel with 400-plus rooms. The 11th floor is said to be a hotbed of paranormal activity, including a whispering ghost, unexplained noises, and cold spots that would give even lionhearted lodgers the goosebumps. From $239 a night at Peabody Hotels and Resorts.

Union Station in Nashville, Tennessee

Large historic building during sunset

Photo: unionstationhotelnashville.com

Rarely, if ever, do ordinary hotels furnish their rooms with the design tastes of a particular guest in mind. But then again, Union Station is anything but ordinary. The hotel furnished Room 711 in honor of Abigail, a young woman who bid farewell to her soldier beau at Union Station (then a train station) during World War II. Years later, she threw herself in front of a speeding train when she learned that he was never coming home.

Although the ghost continues to make her presence known in the room through flickering lights and loud noises, the now-luxury 125-room hotel insists she’s a harmless soul searching for her lost love. From $381 at The Union Station.

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The Heathman Hotel in Portland, Oregon

Heathman hotel

Photo: Wikimedia Commons via Steve Morgan

The bronze bulldog statue that stands watch at the entry of this 10-story Jacobean Revival hotel hasn’t managed to protect the building from spirits. Legend has it that a guest once leaped off the building to his death and now haunts the rooms he passed on the way down. As a result, guests staying in rooms ending in 03—most notably 1003, 803, and 703—often report poltergeists and temperature drops. The historic hotel has modern rooms, and is part of historic downtown Portland. From $155 at the Heathman Hotel.

The Biltmore Hotel in Coral Gables, Florida

Ariel view of large hotel in Florida

Photo: biltmorehotel.com

If you have a penchant for the paranormal, 13 is your lucky number when you stay at this Mediterranean Revival-style hotel that has hosted the likes of Franklin Roosevelt, Greta Garbo, and a number of less savory characters. The 13th floor, where mobster Thomas Walsh was shot dead by a rival, is the source of much of the otherworldly activity that reportedly has been witnessed at the hotel. Renovated in the 1980s, the Biltmore offers opulent rooms and fine dining, including afternoon tea. From $255 a night at the Biltmore Miami Coral Gables.

Occidental Hotel in Buffalo, Wyoming

Occidental Hotel lobby

Photo: occidentalwyoming.com

Serving at various points as a saloon and a bordello, as well as a hotel, the Occidental once witnessed the tragic death of a young woman on one of the upper floors. If you feel a tap on your shoulder, hear the creaking of furniture, or see the full-bodied specter of a woman with long dark hair and a white dress during your stay, you can be sure it’s not the hotel’s receptionist! Play cowboy or pioneer this Halloween with a stay in one of the restored rooms, which retain some feel of the Old West. From $125 per night at the Occidental Hotel.

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Crescent Hotel in Eureka Springs, Arkansas

Aerial view of Crescent Hotel surrounded by forest

Photo: crescent-hotel.com

The Crystal Ballroom of this historic haunt hosts annual seances, ghost talking sessions, and live hypnosis events in memory of Anna Eva Fay, a famous vaudeville spiritualist, and “Dr.” Norman Baker, one of her great admirers. Baker, himself once a vaudeville performer, was also a quack who opened a cancer hospital on the hotel’s premises in the 1930s. Visitors report Victorian ghosts, as well as spirits believed to haunt the edifice from Baker’s era. You can search them out by taking a ghost tour of the hotel. From $245 a night at 1886 Crescent Hotel & Spa.

Seelbach Hilton in Louisville, Kentucky

The Seelbach Hotel at night

Photo: seelbachhilton.com

Ghost hunters from around the country check into The Seelbach to delve into the real-life whodunit involving Patricia Wilson, an enchanting, raven-haired guest. She was found at the bottom of the hotel’s elevator shaft one day in 1936 after learning that her husband, from whom she had recently separated, had died in a car accident. Was it suicide or an accident? While no one has yet unraveled the mystery, many guests have encountered Wilson wearing a blue dress and wandering the eighth floor or the mezzanine of the French Renaissance-inspired hotel. From $154 at Seelbach Hilton Louisville.

Stanley Hotel in Estes Park, Colorado

The Stanley Hotel from The Shining

Photo: istockphoto.com

The site where “The Shining” was filmed, this Colonial Revival-style hotel promises a spine-tingling experience no matter which room you enter. Among many sightings by hotel guests are reports of seeing a face looking out from the window of Room 407. Ghost hunters prefer rooms 401, 407, and 428. Or you can choose the Stephen King Suite, room 217. From $309 at The Stanley Hotel.

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Amargosa Opera House and Hotel in Death Valley, California

Amargosa Opera House and Hotel in Death Valley, CA

Photo: Wikimedia Commons

After a fortuitous flat tire led New York City dancer Marta Becket to this down-on-its-luck hotel and opera house, she abandoned the Big Apple to restore the building and turn it into a vibrant performance venue for herself and other local artists. But evidently, it’s not only the living denizens of Death Valley who have descended on the Amargosa, which now is a ghost town. A menacing miner skulks in Room 32, a crying child reportedly haunts Room 24, and a ghost cat has been known to prowl around the opera house. Today, 16 rooms are available for lodging. From $113 at Guest Reservations or contact the hotel (frontdesk@amargosoperahouse.org).

Queen Mary Hotel in Long Beach, California

Queen Mary Hotel in Long Beach, CA

Photo: istockphoto.com

You won’t find the occupants of Stateroom B340 on the manifesto of this 1,019-foot-long retired passenger liner, but you’ll certainly feel their presence. Guests who have spent the night in the recently reopened room have reported lights turning on and off, bed linens being pulled off, and even a specter looming above them as they awoke. Other activity includes staff reports of cold air and apparitions such as fading guests. The historic liner has more than 300 staterooms available. From $144 at The Queen Mary.

Parks-Bowman Mansion: The Haunted Bedroom in New Orleans, Louisiana

Parks-Bowman Mansion surrounded by foliage

Photo: airbnb.com

While the skeleton and mounted cow skull that adorn this one-bedroom rental are purely ornamental, make no bones about it: The Parks-Bowman Mansion is haunted. You’ll be sharing the cozy room in the palm-tree-shrouded pad with the friendly ghost of a young girl who lived at the turn of the 19th century. Although the wee wraith is said to be shy, you can’t miss her trademark yellow frock! From $98 a night at Airbnb.

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Civil War Farmhouse in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania

Civil War Farmhouse interior with wood paneling

Photo: airbnb.com

The past will both charm and haunt you at this farmhouse that once served as a Civil War field hospital. In addition to architectural holdovers from the antebellum era, from the stone exterior to the paneled walls, the house retains a gang of friendly ghosts that the owner claims have peacefully shared the property for decades. From $117 a night at Airbnb.

The Manor in Saint Paul, Minnesota

The Manor in St Paul, MN

Photo: airbnb.com

The owner of this Airbnb once told Reader’s Digest that an old barrette he found at the property years ago could be traced back to young Rosalia Fihn, a girl who died of typhoid fever in the home in the early 1900s. Residents and visitors have reported a supernatural force at The Manor ever since. Although the barrette is now nowhere to be seen, you’ll find an abundance of other thoughtfully curated objects in the master bedroom that hint at Rosalia’s eternal presence at the estate, including a teddy bear and a wall-mounted portrait of a cherubic child. From $93 a night at Airbnb.

Shamrock House in Sunset, South Carolina

Shamrock House, a cabin in SC

Photo: homeaway.com

Whether the weeping heard within this chilling cabin emanates from the emotional resident ghost, Nancy, or merely the creaking floorboards boils down to whether you’re a believer in or a skeptic about spirits. Either way, you’re in for a memorable Halloween when you stay at the lodge’s main cabin or one of two other cabins. They are situated, in the owner’s own words, “in the sticks,” far away from the throngs of noisy trick-or-treaters. From $370 a night at Vrbo.

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Laura’s Cottage in Savannah, Georgia

Laura's Cottage, Savannah, GA

Photo: airbnb.com

This quaint 1,000-square-foot cottage that dates to 1799 served as a filming location for Robert Redford’s 2010 crime drama, “The Conspirator.” But the phantom presence on the property is anything but a conspiracy. The ghost of Laura, a woman who reportedly lived at the cottage for 50 years, is often blamed for unexplained phenomena such as the opening and shutting of windows, flickering lights, and the scent of burning wood that hangs in the air long after the last fireplace embers have been stamped out. From $224 a night at Airbnb.

Concord’s Colonial Inn in Concord, Massachusetts

Concord's Colonial Inn -- sign in front of building

Photo: Wikimedia Commons

Given its close proximity to Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, visits from beyond the grave are to be expected when you stay at Concord’s Colonial Inn. But to up the fear factor, spend the night in Room 24, the former site for housing wounded soldiers in the 1700s. Previous guests have frozen in fear at the sight of the shadowy figure that is said to float across the room and vanish before people can make sense of what they have seen. From $209 at Concord’s Colonial Inn.

Red Lion Inn in Stockbridge, Massachusetts

Red Lion Inn -- a white house with red porch stairs

Photo: redlioninn.com

Mrs. Plumb, the wife of Mr. Charles H. Plumb and the original co-owner of this former saloon, helped assemble the vast collection of antiques that adorn the hotel to this day. But little did the Plumbs know that nearly 250 years after the hotel’s opening, its most impressive collection would be that of its ghosts. The 4th floor is credited with most of the paranormal action, which includes unexplained knocking, cold spots, and full-bodied apparitions of a girl with flowers and a man donning a stovepipe hat. From $349 a night for a room in the Main Inn at Red Lion Inn.

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Hotel Monteleone in New Orleans, Louisiana

Hotel Monteleone front facade

Photo: Wikimedia Commons via Bart Everson

Maurice Begere, a toddler on a mission to reconnect with his mother, and William “Red” Wildemere, a man who died of natural causes, are but a few of the ghosts who are said to call Hotel Monteleone home. In fact, the International Society of Paranormal Research identified at least 12 resident ghosts during a paranormal investigation of the property. Even if you don’t come face-to-face with a phantom during your stay in the French Quarter, you may notice haunted happenings, such as a restaurant door that occasionally opens after it’s been locked and an elevator that drops guests off on abandoned floors. From $349 at Hotel Monteleone.

Jekyll Island Club in Jekyll Island, Georgia

Jeckyll Island Club during sunset

Photo: jekyllclub.com

While this private club off the coast of Georgia once catered exclusively to high-fliers like the Rockefellers and Vanderbilts, it’s an equal-opportunity haunt for its live-in spirits. Guests of the Sans Souci cottage can reportedly catch a whiff of cigar smoke from J.P. Morgan himself, while grooms-to-be who book the venue for a wedding have been known to be visited by the well-wishing ghost of a bellhop on their big day. From $299 at Jekyll Island Club Resort.

Pfister Hotel in Milwaukee, Wisconsin

Large historic building in the city

Photo: Wikimedia Commons

Known for his service-oriented mindset, businessman Guido Pfister never stopped overseeing the Romanesque Revival-style hotel that he opened with the help of his son, Charles, way back in 1893. Keep your eyes peeled on the ninth floor, in the Minstrel’s Gallery, and at the top of the grand staircase for a glimpse of the friendly ghost of Guido keeping an ever-watchful eye on the crowds of hotel guests. In addition, watch for strange knocking and other paranormal phenomena. From $200 at The Pfister.

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Omni Mount Washington Resort in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire

Large red roof hotel

Photo: istockphoto.com

More than a century after the death of her first and second husbands, a ghost named Caroline continues to haunt this Renaissance Revival hotel where she lived with her first husband, businessman Joseph Stickney, until the early 1900s. Still determined to be the belle of the ball, the elegant apparition has been known to survey the guests from the balcony or gracefully descend the stairs at dinnertime. From $338 at the Omni Mount Washington Resort.

Boone Tavern in Berea, Kentucky

White tavern building

Photo: Wikimedia Commons via Parkerdr

Guests of this more than 100-year-old hotel have a ball at the murder mystery dinners regularly held around Halloween. But for real-life chills, head down to the basement of Boone Tavern to witness a flurry of paranormal activity. The hotel maintains that most of the ghosts down there are shy when it comes to meeting strangers, but you should prepare for at least a few jump scares if you stay long enough. From $204 at Historic Boone Tavern.

La Fonda in Santa Fe, New Mexico

Santa Fe hotel

Photo: Wikimedia Commons via Atakra

Local lore has it that this hotel is located on the former site of a courtroom and that hangings were conducted in the spot that is now the lobby. Possibly as a result, it’s believed that La Fonda continues to be haunted by a parade of poltergeists, from the Honorable Judge Slough to a cowboy haunting the hotel’s bar. From $624 a night at La Fonda on the Plaza.

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The Hollywood Roosevelt in Hollywood, California

Roosevelt hotel

Photo: istockphoto.com

Frequented by the likes of Shirley Temple and Brad Pitt, the guest list—and the ghost list—of this hotel named after Teddy Roosevelt reads like a who’s who of Hollywood elites. The specter of Marilyn Monroe is believed to linger in Suite 1200, and Montgomery Clift can be seen in the hallway outside Room 928. Others, like the spirits of two Oscar hopefuls that haunt the Blossom Ballroom, were never on the silver screen, but seem content to be in the midst of red-carpet royalty. From $280 a night at the Hollywood Roosevelt.

Otesaga Resort in Cooperstown, New York

Brick hotel with patio bonfire

Photo: otesaga.com

The living and dead mingle at this upstate resort aptly named after the Iroquois term for “a place of meetings.” If you’re after a close encounter with the supernatural, head on up to the fifth floor of the hotel, which has been owned by the Clark family since its construction in 1909. There, you may hear the ghastly giggling of running children, spy a specter looming across the hallway, and perhaps most mysterious of all, detect strange noises emanating from above the fifth floor—the topmost floor of the hotel. From $454 at the Otesaga Resort.