Bellevue Visitor Guide.
Where to stay, what to eat, and how to spend your time in downtown Bellevue — the walkable, lakefront half of the Seattle metro. Written by locals, updated for 2026.
Bellevue is the other half of the Seattle metro — the one across Lake Washington, with the gleaming downtown, the walkable core, and a lakefront most visitors never realize is there. For years it was a day trip at most. As of spring 2026, with light rail running straight across the water from Seattle, it’s a destination you can reach without a car and stay in without compromise.
This guide is the short version of everything we cover in depth elsewhere on Downtown Bellevue Network: where to sleep, where to eat, what to do, and how to string it together. Every hotel and recommendation here was checked by our editors in 2026.
Getting to Downtown Bellevue
From the airport, from Seattle, and once you arrive — the short version.
From SEA Airport
~20–25 min
Seattle-Tacoma International (SEA) is about 17 miles south — a 20–25 minute drive in light traffic by rideshare or rental. Transit works too, but expect a transfer and about an hour.
From Seattle
~25 min
As of March 2026, the 2 Line runs across the I-90 floating bridge — the first light rail over open water anywhere. Downtown Seattle (Symphony Station) to Bellevue Downtown Station takes about 25 minutes, no car needed.
Getting Around
On foot
Downtown Bellevue is genuinely walkable — the hotels, the Bellevue Collection, the restaurant core, and the parks sit within a dozen blocks. Bellevue Downtown Station is steps from most of it.
Downtown Bellevue Hotels
From the three luxury hotels built into the Bellevue Collection to dependable value stays — all walkable to the core.
Upscale & Connected to the Collection
Skybridge access to shopping & diningW Bellevue
The scene hotel of the three, built into the Bellevue Collection with skybridge access to Bellevue Square. The Living Room Bar and a tucked-away speakeasy keep the lobby busy after dark.
The Westin Bellevue
Part of the Lincoln Square complex, with a spa, large event space, and the same skybridge access to shopping and restaurants. The reliable upper-upscale pick.
Hyatt Regency Bellevue
Inside Bellevue Place and skybridge-connected straight into Bellevue Square. The longest-tenured of the Collection hotels and a dependable business-and-leisure base.
InterContinental Seattle Bellevue
The newest luxury arrival (opened 2024), anchoring the Avenue Bellevue development with destination dining and one of the region’s few Les Clefs d’Or concierge teams.
Bellevue Club Hotel
A boutique luxury hotel attached to the private Bellevue Club, just southeast of the core — guests get the spa, pools, and athletic facilities along with some of the largest, quietest rooms in the city.
Reliable Upper-Midscale
Walkable, brand-name, well-locatedSeattle Marriott Bellevue
A full-service Marriott a short walk from Bellevue Downtown Station — the easiest base if you’re arriving by light rail.
AC Hotel Bellevue by Marriott
European-styled select-service in the heart of downtown, walkable to City Hall, the Collection, and Old Bellevue.
Hilton Bellevue
A large full-service hotel on the south edge of downtown near I-405 — a strong pick for conferences and groups.
Courtyard Bellevue Downtown
Dependable Marriott Courtyard directly across from The Shops at The Bravern, on downtown’s luxury-retail edge.
Hilton Garden Inn Seattle Downtown Bellevue
A central downtown Hilton Garden Inn within easy walking distance of the Bellevue Collection — a dependable, well-located mid-range base.
Midscale & Extended-Stay
Still walkable to the coreHotel 116, a Coast Hotel
A boutique-leaning value stay on the east side of downtown — comfortable and a notch above its price.
Red Lion Hotel
A long-running, no-surprises value hotel on Main Street, close to Old Bellevue’s restaurants and the waterfront walk.
Where to Eat in Bellevue
We cover Bellevue dining in obsessive depth — start here.
What to Do While You’re Here
Parks, a lakefront beach, museums, and the Bellevue Collection — the full rundown.
The Bellevue Collection & Beyond
The retail core that put Bellevue on the map — and the reason several hotels never make you step outside.
The Bellevue Collection — Bellevue Square, Lincoln Square, and Bellevue Place — is the largest shopping destination in the Pacific Northwest outside downtown Seattle, with 200-plus stores anchored by Nordstrom and Macy’s and connected by climate-controlled skybridges. The three luxury hotels above open directly into it. For luxury flagships, The Shops at The Bravern (Hermès, Gucci, Prada) sit a few blocks east. It’s a rare downtown where a rainy afternoon is a feature, not a problem — see our full shopping rundown in the Things to Do guide.
Three Perfect Itineraries
Whether you have an afternoon, a weekend, or a rainy day to fill.
Bellevue in Five Hours
- Ride the 2 Line in from Seattle to Bellevue Downtown Station.
- Walk Downtown Park’s canal promenade and waterfall.
- Lunch and browsing at the Bellevue Collection.
- Late afternoon at Meydenbauer Bay — beach or a kayak rental.
- Dinner on Old Bellevue’s Main Street.
Two Nights Downtown
- Check in at a Collection hotel; dinner and drinks without leaving the block.
- Morning at the Bellevue Botanical Garden, afternoon paddling Meydenbauer Bay.
- Saturday-night dinner reservation in Old Bellevue.
- Sunday: KidsQuest or the Arts Fair (summer), then the market if it’s Thursday-adjacent.
Never Step Outside
- Start inside the Collection — Bellevue Square to Lincoln Square by skybridge.
- KidsQuest Children’s Museum if you have kids.
- Lunch, a movie, and bowling at Lucky Strike in Lincoln Square.
- Wrap with happy hour — all of it under cover.
Bellevue by Season
There’s no bad time — but each season has its move.
Lakefront Weather
The Pacific Northwest’s payoff season: dry, long evenings, swimming and kayaking at Meydenbauer Bay, patios in Old Bellevue, and the Thursday Farmers Market and July’s Arts Fair.
Shoulder-Season Value
Crowds thin, hotel rates ease, and the Botanical Garden’s foliage peaks. The most underrated time to visit — and the easiest to book.
Holiday Lights
Bellevue does the holidays better than anywhere on the Eastside: Snowflake Lane’s nightly show on Bellevue Way and Garden d’Lights at the Botanical Garden, with the Collection’s shopping a warm walk away.
Gardens & Market Season
The Botanical Garden wakes up, the Farmers Market returns in late May, and the city greens out before the summer crowds arrive.
Visiting Bellevue: Common Questions
How do I get from Seattle to Bellevue?
Since March 2026, the 2 Line light rail runs across the I-90 floating bridge, connecting downtown Seattle to Bellevue in about 25 minutes — no car needed. Symphony Station in Seattle to Bellevue Downtown Station is a one-seat ride, with trains every 8 to 10 minutes during the day. Driving takes 20 to 30 minutes depending on bridge traffic.
Where should I stay in downtown Bellevue?
For the full experience, the three luxury hotels built into the Bellevue Collection — W Bellevue, The Westin, and the Hyatt Regency — put shopping and dining a skybridge away. The InterContinental is the newest luxury option. For business or value, the Marriott (walk to light rail), AC Hotel, Hilton, and Courtyard cover the mid-range, with Hotel 116 and the Red Lion at the value end. All are walkable to the core.
How far is Bellevue from SeaTac Airport?
Seattle-Tacoma International (SEA) is about 17 miles south of downtown Bellevue — a 20 to 25 minute drive in light traffic by rideshare or rental car. Transit is possible via the 1 Line and 2 Line with a transfer, but it takes roughly an hour.
Is Bellevue walkable?
Downtown Bellevue is one of the most walkable downtowns in the region. The hotels, the Bellevue Collection, the restaurant core, Downtown Park, and the light-rail station all sit within about a dozen blocks, and the Collection’s hotels and shops are connected by climate-controlled skybridges. You can spend a full visit without getting in a car.
What is there to do in Bellevue for a day?
A strong day: arrive by light rail, walk Downtown Park’s promenade, shop and lunch at the Bellevue Collection, spend the late afternoon at Meydenbauer Bay’s beach or on a kayak, and finish with dinner in Old Bellevue. Our Things to Do guide has the full list.
When is the best time to visit Bellevue?
Summer (July to September) brings the Pacific Northwest’s best weather, lakefront activities, and outdoor festivals. Fall is the value sweet spot — thinner crowds and lower hotel rates. Winter is the holiday-lights season, with Snowflake Lane and Garden d’Lights. Spring brings the gardens and the return of the Farmers Market.




