As someone who’s driven every stretch of the Silverado Trail and visited nearly every geothermal pool in Napa Valley, I built this guide to help you find the soak that fits your trip. Calistoga sits at Napa Valley’s northern tip, atop a geothermal aquifer bubbling since the Wappo people first settled here 8,000 years ago.
What sets it apart from other spa towns is the consistent heat from volcanic activity from Mt. Konocti, which warms the water to 230°F before cooling it into resort pools. For a weekend reset, romantic escape, or solo recharge, these Hot Springs in Calistoga offer a unique, rejuvenating experience.

Hot Springs in Calistoga: Prices, Temperatures & Insider Tips
Indian Springs Calistoga
California’s Oldest Continuously Operating Spa
Natural Geothermal Mineral SpringsSolage, Auberge Collection
The Luxury Benchmark of Calistoga
Luxury Geothermal ResortDr. Wilkinson’s Backyard Resort
The Legend Since 1952
Geothermal Mineral SpringsCalistoga Spa Hot Springs
Four Pools and Full Downtown Access
Geothermal Mineral ResortGolden Haven Hot Springs
The Couples’ Mud Bath Specialist
Geothermal Mineral SpringsRoman Spa Hot Springs Resort
Mediterranean Gardens and Quiet Soaking
Geothermal Mineral SpringsUpValley Inn & Hot Springs
Scandinavian Wellness Meets Wine Country Value
Geothermal Mineral Spring PoolCalistoga Motor Lodge & Spa
Retro-Cool Vibes With Three Mineral Pools
Geothermal Mineral ResortMeadowlark Country House & Resort
The Most Private Soak in Napa Valley
Adults-Only Mineral ResortMount View Hotel & Spa
Art Deco Elegance in the Heart of Downtown
Geothermal Mineral Jacuzzi + Day SpaHarbin Hot Springs
The Natural Escape Just Beyond Calistoga
Natural Hot Springs1. Indian Springs Calistoga — California’s Oldest Continuously Operating Spa
- 📍 Location: 1712 Lincoln Avenue, Calistoga, CA (right on the main street)
- 💧 Type: Natural Geothermal Mineral Springs — 4 thermal geysers on-site
- 🌡️ Temperature: Water surfaces at 230°F, cooled and delivered to the Olympic-sized pool
- 👥 Best For: Families, history enthusiasts, couples, solo retreaters
- 💰 Price: Resort rooms from ~$400/night; spa day passes require a treatment purchase
- ⏰ Hours/Availability: Year-round; spring and fall are peak season — book well in advance
- ✅ Pro Tip: The Buddha Pond is open to guests at no extra charge — grab a cucumber-citrus water from the staff and spend an hour there before your spa treatment. It’s one of the most serene spots in all of Napa Valley and most visitors walk right past it.
Sam Brannan first built a spa and pool on this site in 1861, and what’s remarkable is that the land itself hasn’t changed — the same four thermal geysers still push water up from a depth of 4,000 feet. The Olympic-sized mineral pool is the largest of its kind in California, and stepping into it feels less like a hotel amenity and more like a geological event.
The 17-acre property is lush with olive trees, lavender, and roses, and the resort’s restaurant, Sam’s Social Club, sources ingredients locally. If you’re the kind of traveler who wants the full story behind a place — not just the amenity list — Indian Springs delivers it.

2. Solage, Auberge Collection — The Luxury Benchmark of Calistoga
- 📍 Location: 755 Silverado Trail N, Calistoga, CA (just off the main wine corridor)
- 💧 Type: Luxury Geothermal Resort — geothermal pools plus an award-winning spa
- 🌡️ Temperature: Full spectrum pools, from cold plunge to warm soak; infrared sauna also available
- 👥 Best For: Couples, luxury travelers, foodies, anniversary trips
- 💰 Price: Studios and suites from ~$598/night; spa day passes available separately
- ⏰ Hours/Availability: Year-round; Spa Solage is 20,000 sq ft of indoor and outdoor space
- ✅ Pro Tip: Book the Solage Signature Mudslide treatment — it’s a three-part sequence involving mineral-enriched volcanic mud, a private geothermal soaking tub, and time in the resort’s signature sound chairs. It’s not cheap, but nothing else in Calistoga compares.
Solage occupies its own category among Calistoga hot springs resorts. The 89-room property sits within Auberge Resorts Collection’s portfolio, which means every detail — from the natural material finishes in the studios to the Michelin-recognized Solbar restaurant — has been considered against a very high standard.
The geothermal pools here span a range from Wim Hof-cold to bathwater warm, and the experience is designed around the idea of contrast therapy rather than simple soaking. After dinner at Solbar, where the seasonal Northern California cuisine changes with what’s growing in Napa, the pools take on a different character entirely — quieter, darker, and genuinely restorative.

3. Dr. Wilkinson’s Backyard Resort & Mineral Springs — The Legend Since 1952
- 📍 Location: 1507 Lincoln Avenue, Calistoga, CA (walkable from downtown)
- 💧 Type: Geothermal Mineral Springs — 3 pools fed by springs at 140–150°F at source
- 🌡️ Temperature: Pools cooled and maintained at soaking temperature; volcanic ash mud baths available
- 👥 Best For: Solo wellness travelers, couples, anyone wanting an authentic Calistoga experience
- 💰 Price: Rooms from ~$200/night; spa treatments priced separately; mud baths included in packages
- ⏰ Hours/Availability: Year-round; spa by appointment recommended
- ✅ Pro Tip: The House of Better restaurant on-site is worth a meal even if you’re not staying. It focuses on nourishing, whole-food cooking — a rarity among resort restaurants in wine country, where everything tends toward the indulgent end of the spectrum.
“The Doc” — as founder Dr. John Wilkinson is still affectionately called by Calistoga locals — opened this resort in 1952, and the spirit of his approach still defines the place. It leans wellness rather than luxury: lush gardens, palm trees, vintage-inspired cottages, and mineral pools that feel genuinely therapeutic rather than decorative. The geothermal water here emerges from the source at temperatures between 140 and 150°F before being cooled and channeled into the pools.
The volcanic ash mud baths have a devoted following — the kind of guests who have been coming back for decades and have long stopped needing to check other options. For travelers who find the ultra-luxury resorts a bit remote in feel, Dr. Wilkinson’s hits a warmer, more personal note.

4. Calistoga Spa Hot Springs — Four Pools and Full Downtown Access
- 📍 Location: 1006 Washington Street, Calistoga, CA (one block from Lincoln Avenue)
- 💧 Type: Geothermal Mineral Resort — 4 heated outdoor pools
- 🌡️ Temperature: Pools range from 80°F to 104°F; guests can move between temperatures
- 👥 Best For: Families, budget-conscious travelers, first-time Calistoga visitors
- 💰 Price: Rooms from ~$250/night; pools included with stay; day passes no longer available
- ⏰ Hours/Availability: Year-round; pool access included for all guests
- ✅ Pro Tip: The 80°F pool is the one most visitors overlook — it feels too cool at first, but after time in the 104°F hot pool, it becomes the most refreshing part of the sequence. Bring that contrast rotation into your visit rather than camping at one temperature.
What Calistoga Spa Hot Springs does better than any other property on this list is give you four distinct pool temperatures and let you work through them at your own pace — no treatment booking required, no minimum spend. The recently renovated pool deck features travertine tiles, grape-covered arbors, and lounge furniture that makes it easy to spend an entire afternoon poolside.
The 56-room hotel is one block off Lincoln Avenue, so dinner, wine tasting, and boutique shopping are all a short walk away. It’s not the most luxurious option in Calistoga, but the pools are the real thing — fed by natural geothermal water — and the central location makes it one of the most practical bases for exploring the town. For your reference on what authentic Calistoga thermal experiences look like across the region, CATRAVELTIMES’ California travel guides cover hot springs from San Diego to the Sierras.

5. Golden Haven Hot Springs — The Couples’ Mud Bath Specialist
- 📍 Location: 1713 Lake Street, Calistoga, CA (~10-minute walk from downtown)
- 💧 Type: Geothermal Mineral Springs — indoor pool, hot tub, and private spa rooms
- 🌡️ Temperature: Indoor mineral pool and outdoor hot tub; water sourced from the same geothermal aquifer
- 👥 Best For: Couples, friend groups (treatment rooms fit up to 4 people), small groups
- 💰 Price: Rooms from ~$218/night; spa packages combine mud bath and massage
- ⏰ Hours/Availability: Year-round; open to day guests for spa treatments
- ✅ Pro Tip: Golden Haven’s treatment rooms are among the only ones in Calistoga that can accommodate two, three, or even four people simultaneously for a mud bath. If you’re visiting with a group of friends, this is the one resort where everyone can share the experience in the same room rather than rotating through solo.
Golden Haven has a clear identity and it sticks to it: couples and small groups who want to share the Calistoga mud bath ritual together rather than endure it one person at a time. The 28-room property is smaller and more intimate than the larger resorts, with rooms that include complimentary bikes for exploring the vineyards and a mineral water bathtub option in select rooms for late-night soaking.
The spa specializes in packages that combine volcanic ash mud baths, mineral baths, cool-down flannel wraps, and massage — the classic Calistoga sequence, done with care. The natural mineral water comes directly from the geothermal aquifer beneath the property. It’s a well-priced, well-maintained retreat that delivers exactly what it promises.

6. Roman Spa Hot Springs Resort — Mediterranean Gardens and Quiet Soaking
- 📍 Location: 1300 Cedar Street, Calistoga, CA (steps from downtown Lincoln Avenue)
- 💧 Type: Geothermal Mineral Springs — 3 pools (1 outdoor, 1 indoor, 1 outdoor jetted)
- 🌡️ Temperature: Outdoor pool 92–96°F seasonal; outdoor hot tub 103°F; indoor jetted pool 100°F
- 👥 Best For: Quiet retreat seekers, groups of women travelers, couples wanting mid-range value
- 💰 Price: Rooms from ~$150–$250/night; pools open 8am–10pm daily
- ⏰ Hours/Availability: Year-round; pools accessible to guests 8am–10pm (midnight on New Year’s Eve)
- ✅ Pro Tip: Roman Spa is celebrating its 50th anniversary through April 2026 with a special package that includes Prosecco on arrival, plush robes, and discounted multi-night rates. If your dates align, it’s a genuinely good-value moment to visit a resort that rarely discounts.
Three pools fed by 100% natural geothermal water, Mediterranean gardens in full bloom, private patios, splashing fountains, and a staff with a notably low turnover rate — Roman Spa has a returning-guest problem in the best possible sense. The 60-room property sits at the foot of Mt. St. Helena and is quiet in a way that the larger resorts aren’t, with a villa-style layout that makes the grounds feel more like a private estate than a hotel.
The Baths at Roman Spa offer mud baths, massages, and body treatments without the price tags attached to the bigger-name spas. It’s a property that rewards guests who slow down and stay a night or two longer than they planned. For a broader look at the state’s geothermal options, the complete hot springs guide for California on CATRAVELTIMES is a useful companion to this article.

7. UpValley Inn & Hot Springs — Scandinavian Wellness Meets Wine Country Value
- 📍 Location: 1865 Lincoln Avenue, Calistoga, CA (on the main street, northern end)
- 💧 Type: Geothermal Mineral Spring Pool — plus Scandinavian-inspired sauna and steam room
- 🌡️ Temperature: Natural geothermal mineral water swimming pool; European dry sauna and steam room
- 👥 Best For: Value-conscious travelers, active visitors, solo travelers, wine-focused weekenders
- 💰 Price: Rooms from ~$146/night; pools and sauna included with stay
- ⏰ Hours/Availability: Year-round; complimentary shuttle passes for downtown Calistoga
- ✅ Pro Tip: Ask for complimentary shuttle access passes at check-in — UpValley Inn provides them to all guests, making it easy to move between downtown wineries and the hotel without worrying about parking or driving after tastings.
UpValley Inn & Hot Springs sits in a category of its own: it’s the only property on this list to pair geothermal mineral pools with a Scandinavian-inspired sauna and steam room complex, which means you’re getting a genuine contrast therapy circuit at a price point that’s well below the resort competition.
The 55-room property was recently remodeled with a “rustic meets modern” aesthetic — think warm wood tones, clean lines, and enough character to feel like somewhere rather than anywhere. The mineral pool is the real draw, fed by the same geothermal aquifer that runs beneath all of Calistoga, and the steam room and dry sauna round out a wellness circuit that holds its own against properties charging twice the nightly rate.

8. Calistoga Motor Lodge & Spa — Retro-Cool Vibes With Three Mineral Pools
- 📍 Location: 1880 Lincoln Avenue, Calistoga, CA (northern end of the main strip)
- 💧 Type: Geothermal Mineral Resort — 3 outdoor mineral pools + MoonAcre Spa & Bathhouse
- 🌡️ Temperature: 80–84°F lap pool / 90–96°F wading pool / 100–104°F mineral whirlpool
- 👥 Best For: Adventure-oriented couples, social travelers, wine-country road trippers
- 💰 Price: Rooms from ~$249 midweek / ~$329 weekends (plus $35 resort fee)
- ⏰ Hours/Availability: Year-round; day passes available through ResortPass; spa books up fast on weekends
- ✅ Pro Tip: Book the Mud Painting Ritual at MoonAcre Spa before you arrive — it’s a 30-minute DIY volcanic clay experience with essential-oil pigments and a steam rinse, priced at $45 and unavailable to walk-ins once the day fills up.
The Motor Lodge trades on mid-century motel lines, turquoise cruiser bikes, and three geothermal pools fed from the same Calistoga aquifer as the fancier resorts — just packaged with considerably more personality. The Agodacourtyard runs communal fire pits, bocce courts, and an Airstream retail truck, which makes the property feel less like a spa retreat and more like a social destination with hot springs attached.
Fleetwood, the on-site restaurant, serves wood-fired California-meets-Mediterranean plates and draws locals on Sunday “Pizza & Prosecco” nights. If you find the slower, meditative pace of the wellness resorts a little quiet for your taste, the Motor Lodge gives you all the geothermal benefits without asking you to whisper the whole time.

9. Meadowlark Country House & Resort — The Most Private Soak in Napa Valley
- 📍 Location: 601 Petrified Forest Road, Calistoga, CA (~1.5 miles from downtown)
- 💧 Type: Adults-Only Mineral Resort — clothing-optional mineral pool, hot tub, Finnish sauna
- 🌡️ Temperature: Pool at 80°F / hot tub at 100–106°F; water sourced from the property’s own mineral well
- 👥 Best For: Adults-only couples, solo travelers seeking total privacy, European-style wellness seekers
- 💰 Price: Suites from ~$300/night; day passes $50 per person (by appointment only)
- ⏰ Hours/Availability: Pool area open 24 hours for overnight guests; day passes require advance booking
- ✅ Pro Tip: Overnight guests have pool access around the clock — arriving late means you’ll likely have the entire mineral pool and hot tub to yourself under the Napa Valley stars. It’s one of the few experiences in Calistoga that genuinely requires no schedule.
Set on a 20-acre park-like estate, Meadowlark is the only adults-only resort in Calistoga, and the only property in Napa Valley with a clothing-optional mineral pool area.Visit Calistoga Napa Valley The eight suites and two guesthouses lean toward European country-house elegance — many with fireplaces, marble-tiled bathrooms, and private terraces with vineyard views.
A full gourmet breakfast is included each morning, served on the veranda overlooking the Mayacama foothills. The pace here is deliberately different from every other property on this list: no spa menu to navigate, no pool bar, no ambient music. Just mineral water, open sky, and a property quiet enough to hear the wind move through the surrounding oaks.

10. Mount View Hotel & Spa — Art Deco Elegance in the Heart of Downtown
- 📍 Location: 1457 Lincoln Avenue, Calistoga, CA (right on the main downtown strip)
- 💧 Type: Geothermal Mineral Jacuzzi + Full-Service Day Spa
- 🌡️ Temperature: Outdoor mineral whirlpool; heated pool with mountain views; spa treatments indoor
- 👥 Best For: History lovers, couples, solo travelers who want downtown walkability with spa access
- 💰 Price: Rooms from ~$200/night; spa treatments available to hotel guests and day visitors
- ⏰ Hours/Availability: Year-round; spa open to non-guests by appointment
- ✅ Pro Tip: The poolside cabanas at Mount View are some of the most underbooked in Calistoga — request one when you reserve your room and you’ll have shaded poolside seating secured before you even arrive. On summer weekends, the open pool deck fills fast.
Mount View Hotel channels old Hollywood glamour — it’s an art deco property set right in downtown Calistoga, with a mineral jacuzzi, poolside cabanas, and a full-service spa within steps of Lincoln Avenue’s restaurants and tasting rooms. Hot Springs Locator The architecture alone sets it apart: original 1930s details, warm tile work, and a lobby that feels more like a Napa Valley time capsule than a hotel check-in.
The spa offers a focused treatment menu that covers massages, facials, and body wraps without requiring an overnight stay, making it one of the more accessible day-spa options for visitors based elsewhere in the valley. For travelers who want to be in the middle of everything — walking to dinner, walking to wine tasting, walking back to a mineral soak — Mount View is the most central base on this entire list.

11. Harbin Hot Springs — The Natural Escape Just Beyond Calistoga
- 📍 Location: 18424 Harbin Springs Road, Middletown, CA (~20 minutes north of Calistoga)
- 💧 Type: Natural Hot Springs — outdoor geothermal pools in a clothing-optional, clothing-friendly setting
- 🌡️ Temperature: Hot pool 110–113°F / warm pool 95–100°F / cold plunge pool available
- 👥 Best For: Free-spirited solo travelers, wellness purists, anyone seeking a natural (non-resort) soaking experience
- 💰 Price: Day passes ~$30–$50 depending on season; camping and lodging available on-site
- ⏰ Hours/Availability: Year-round; open to day visitors and overnight guests; reservations strongly recommended
- ✅ Pro Tip: Harbin operates on a “quiet zone” policy around the pools — it’s genuinely enforced, which means you’ll hear nothing but water and wildlife during your soak. If the louder, social energy of Calistoga’s resort pools isn’t your speed, this is the antidote.
Twenty minutes north of Calistoga, Harbin Hot Springs sits in a canyon on 1,160 acres of Mayacama mountain land and operates on a different frequency than any resort in this guide. The pools here are fed by natural geothermal springs that surface without pipes or plumbing infrastructure — the water comes out of the earth and flows directly into stone pools, making it the rawest soaking experience within reach of Napa Valley.
The property operates as a nonprofit retreat center, which means the revenue stays in the land rather than going to a hospitality group. Clothing is optional around the pool area; the atmosphere is calm and intentional. It’s not for everyone — but for the traveler who finds the spa-resort format a little too curated, Harbin is the real thing.

Ready to Book Your Calistoga Soak?
Every resort on this list is drawing from the same ancient geological gift, but each packages it differently. Indian Springs gives you history and scale. Solage gives you luxury without apology. Dr. Wilkinson’s gives you warmth and authenticity. Golden Haven gives you the couples ritual done right. Roman Spa gives you quiet and value. UpValley gives you wellness on a practical budget.
And Calistoga Spa Hot Springs gives you flexibility and a central base for exploring the whole town. The honest answer is that there’s no wrong choice — the water is real everywhere you go in Calistoga. Pick the one that matches your travel style, book before the weekend fills up, and let the geothermal aquifer do the rest. Bookmark this guide and start planning your Calistoga hot springs adventure today.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q. Are there any free hot springs near Calistoga?
There are no free public hot springs in Calistoga itself. The closest free alternative is Harbin Hot Springs in Middletown, about 20 minutes north.
Q. What is the closest hot springs to downtown Calistoga?
Roman Spa and Calistoga Spa Hot Springs are within a block or two of Lincoln Avenue, making them very walkable. Indian Springs is also on Lincoln Avenue at 1712, essentially downtown.
Q. Can you visit Calistoga hot springs without staying overnight?
Yes, day access is available but usually requires spa treatments. Golden Haven, Indian Springs, and Solage all offer day-use tied to services.
Q. What is the best hot springs option for couples in Calistoga?
For luxury romance, Solage is ideal with its contrast pools and fine dining. Golden Haven offers intimate volcanic ash mud baths, while Roman Spa is quieter and more affordable.






