Sequim lavender field at dusk
Lodging Guide · Lavender Season 2026

Where to Stay
in Sequim

From cabins set right in the lavender rows to seaside hotels twenty minutes away — here's how to sleep close to the bloom, and when to book before the valley fills up.

The best lavender trips start the night before, when you fall asleep with the windows open and the fields just outside. Sequim is a small town, so its lodging is limited and it books up fast — especially around peak bloom and festival weekend. This guide covers where to stay close to the lavender, what kind of stay fits your trip, and where to look nearby when Sequim itself is full.

Book early. Lodging within 30 minutes of Sequim for festival weekend (July 17–19, 2026) typically sells out by spring. Reserve as soon as your dates are set.

Stay in the lavender: farm-stays & glamping

The most memorable way to do a lavender trip is to sleep in the fields. A few Sequim farms offer cabins, restored vintage trailers, and canvas glamping tents set right among the rows — you step outside at dawn into the fragrance and the mountains. These are limited in number and book the earliest, so grab them as soon as your dates are set. Browse the farms on the farm map to see which ones offer overnight stays, and our family farm Lit Lavender offers cabins and yurts in the fields.

Hotels, B&Bs & vacation rentals

  • Hotels & inns in Sequim — a handful of well-kept options downtown and along Highway 101, walkable to restaurants and a short drive to every farm.
  • Bed & breakfasts — Sequim and the surrounding countryside have charming B&Bs, several with valley or water views.
  • Vacation rentals — whole-home and cottage rentals are plentiful on the usual platforms and ideal for families or groups who want a kitchen and space to spread out.

Compare availability on Booking.com, Airbnb, or Vrbo.

Nearby: Port Angeles & Port Townsend

If Sequim is full — common on festival weekend — two neighbors have more rooms and are still an easy drive:

  • Port Angeles (about 20 minutes west) — the gateway to Hurricane Ridge and Olympic National Park, with the most hotel rooms in the area and the ferry to Victoria, BC.
  • Port Townsend (about 45 minutes east) — a beautifully preserved Victorian seaport with boutique hotels and inns; a lovely add-on to a lavender trip.

Booking tips

  • Reserve early — peak bloom (mid-July) and festival weekend are the first to sell out.
  • Consider shoulder dates — early July or mid-August offers the same lavender with more availability and lower rates.
  • Book your ferry too — if you're driving from the Seattle side, reserve the crossing at wsdot.com/ferries.

Plan the trip around your stay

Pick your farms and days, get an efficient route, and email yourself the plan — free.

Open the trip planner →

More: Day trip from Seattle · 3-day Olympic Peninsula itinerary · When the lavender blooms