Amangani, Jackson Hole

Amangani in Jackson, Wyoming, isn't just a resort, it's a state of being, a place where the vastness of the American West meets the quiet precision of Aman's design philosophy.

Perched high on the East Gros Ventre Butte overlooking the Teton Range, Amangani feels like it was carved directly from the mountain, a sanctuary of sandstone, glass, and timber suspended above the valley floor. The name itself means β€œpeaceful home,” and it delivers exactly that: a haven of serenity where elk roam below, the Snake River meanders through the valley, and the Tetons rise like an ancient cathedral at the edge of the horizon. The first Aman resort to open in North America, Amangani redefined the meaning of mountain luxury, replacing flash with stillness, excess with elemental beauty. Its architecture mirrors the landscape: horizontal lines echoing the butte's contours, vast windows framing the drama of Wyoming's wilderness. Inside, you're met with the scent of cedar and the quiet crackle of the hearth, a space so balanced, it feels like meditation rendered in wood and stone.

Amangani's story is one of contrast and reverence, born from the tension between the untamed wilds of Jackson Hole and Aman's meticulous artistry.

Opened in 1998, the resort was designed by architect Ed Tuttle, whose minimalist approach captures the landscape's grandeur without competing with it. Every detail has intent: from the fossilized limestone walls quarried from the region to the redwood beams that glow in the evening light. The property's design philosophy is rooted in Aman's signature sense of place, to exist in harmony with its environment while quietly elevating it. That ethos extends into every experience. The Granite CafΓ© serves refined Rocky Mountain cuisine, think bison tenderloin, local trout, and organic produce sourced from Idaho farms, but the real luxury lies in its pacing, its restraint. The spa, renowned among Aman devotees, draws on Native American healing traditions, offering treatments with sage, juniper, and salt harvested from the Rockies. Even the infinity-edge pool feels transcendent, overlooking the valley like a mirror to the sky. Yet what truly defines Amangani isn't its amenities; it's its silence, that rare kind of quiet where you can hear wind moving across the sagebrush and snow melting on the peaks. This isn't a resort for spectacle. It's a place to unlearn noise, to remember how to breathe in rhythm with the earth again.

Amangani is best experienced as both an arrival and an awakening, the first stop or the final exhale in a journey through Jackson Hole's rugged heart.

In winter, it's a dream base for skiing Jackson Hole Mountain Resort, heli-skiing the backcountry, or snowshoeing across the valley's quiet expanses. The resort's Ski Lounge at Teton Village makes transitions seamless, one minute you're carving through powder, the next you're sipping espresso before returning to the stillness above the valley. In summer, Amangani transforms into a gateway to adventure: horseback riding along the Gros Ventre River, wildlife safaris in Grand Teton National Park, or sunrise hot-air balloon flights that drift above mist-shrouded plains. Yet the real rhythm of Amangani unfolds at dusk. As the sun sinks behind the Tetons, the light turns copper and the valley exhales, a moment best savored from the terrace, drink in hand, wrapped in one of Aman's signature wool throws. Later, retreat to your suite, where floor-to-ceiling windows blur the line between wilderness and comfort, and the stars feel impossibly close. For travelers who crave something deeper than luxury, something elemental, meditative, and eternal, Amangani is not just a stay, but a threshold. It's where the West breathes, and you learn to listen.

MAKE IT REAL

Start your planning journey with Foresyte Travel.

Experience immersive stories crafted for luxury travelers.

SEARCH

GET THE APP

Read the Latest:

Daytime aerial view of the Las Vegas Strip with Bellagio Fountains and major resorts.

πŸ“ Itinerary Inspiration

Perfect weekend in Las Vegas

Read now
Illuminated water fountains in front of the Bellagio Hotel in Las Vegas

πŸ’« Vibe Check

Fun facts about Las Vegas

Read now
<< Back to news page
Right Menu Icon