Crown Towers Perth is your big weekend sorted
When you want Perth to feel like a proper event, not just a trip.
“You've been saying 'we should do a fancy weekend in Perth' for six months — this is where you actually book.”
If you and your partner (or your best friend, or your mum — no judgment) have been circling the idea of a proper blow-out weekend in Perth, Crown Towers is the answer you keep landing on. Not because it's the only luxury option in town, but because it's the one that removes every logistical question from the conversation. Pool? Yes. Dinner? Multiple options without leaving the building. Spa? Right there. Drinks? Same. You don't need to plan a weekend here — you just need to show up and let the resort do the thinking. That's the entire pitch, and it works.
Crown Towers sits on Great Eastern Highway in Burswood, which means you're across the river from the CBD but close enough that a cab into Northbridge for a late-night bite is ten minutes and twenty bucks. The location is deliberate — you're meant to stay on-site, and the complex is built to make that feel like a choice rather than a limitation. The casino floor is downstairs if that's your thing, but the tower itself keeps a comfortable distance from the noise and the carpet patterns. You take a separate entrance, a separate lift, and suddenly you're in a different postcode emotionally.
At a Glance
- Price: $230-450
- Best for: You love a resort vibe where you never have to leave the property
- Book it if: You want the closest thing to a Las Vegas mega-resort in Western Australia, complete with a massive lagoon pool and high-roller energy.
- Skip it if: You prefer boutique, intimate hotels with personalized service
- Good to know: Valet parking is expensive ($75/day); self-parking is cheaper but a trek
- Roomer Tip: Join the 'Crown Rewards' program for free before you go—it can sometimes get you discounted or free parking.
The room situation
The rooms are big in the way that Australian luxury hotels do big — not quirky-boutique big, but proper square-meterage big. You can open a suitcase on the floor and still walk around the bed without performing a gymnastics routine. The king beds are genuinely comfortable, the kind where you wake up and briefly consider cancelling everything you had planned. Blackout curtains work properly, which sounds basic but matters enormously when Perth's summer sun starts its assault at 5am.
Bathrooms are where the money shows. Deep soaking tub, separate rain shower, and enough counter space for two people's toiletries without a territorial dispute. The amenities are high-end and smell expensive in a way that makes you quietly pocket the leftovers. There's a TV in the bathroom mirror, which you'll use exactly once to prove it exists and then never touch again. The robes are thick. Wear them to breakfast if room service is your plan — and it should be at least one morning.
The pool deck is the centrepiece of the whole operation. It's resort-style, heated, and lined with cabanas that make you forget you're in Burswood and not somewhere tropical. On a Saturday afternoon it fills up, but weekday mornings are yours. Grab a lounger early, order something cold from the poolside service, and settle in. If you're here for a girls' weekend or an anniversary, this is where the Instagram content writes itself — but more importantly, it's where you'll actually relax.
“The pool deck on a weekday morning is the closest thing Perth has to a resort holiday without the airport drama.”
Dining on-site ranges from genuinely excellent to perfectly fine. Nobu is the headline act and earns it — if you're celebrating something, book a table there and don't look at the bill until Monday. For something more casual, Bistro Guillaume does a solid job for lunch without the formality. The lobby bar pours a good cocktail and has that specific energy of people who are one drink into a very good night. Skip the buffet breakfast at least once and order room service instead — the eggs Benedict arrives on actual crockery, and eating it in a robe overlooking the river is the whole point of being here.
One honest note: the resort fee structure means extras add up faster than you'd expect. Spa treatments, poolside drinks, room service — none of it is cheap, and the minibar is priced like it's guarding state secrets. Budget for the experience, not just the room rate, or you'll get a checkout bill that ruins the afterglow. Also, if you're a light sleeper and your room faces the highway side, request a river-facing room when you book. The soundproofing is good but not miraculous.
The small thing nobody mentions: the turndown service leaves a little card with the next day's weather forecast and a chocolate. It's a tiny gesture, but it's the kind of detail that makes you feel like the hotel is actually paying attention rather than running a checklist. The hallway lighting is also dimmed after 9pm, which gives the whole floor this calm, cinematic quality on your walk back from dinner. Someone in the design team understood the assignment.
Your actual plan
Book at least two weeks ahead for a weekend stay — Friday night availability disappears fast, especially in summer. Request a river-view room on a higher floor; the difference in outlook is worth the ask. Do one dinner at Nobu and one night out in Northbridge (Tiny's is a ten-minute cab). Use the pool on your checkout morning — late checkout is usually available if you ask nicely at reception the night before. Skip the casino unless losing money is part of your love language. And don't try to cram Perth sightseeing into this trip — the whole point is staying put.
Rooms start around $320 a night for a deluxe king, but the suites push well past $569 on weekends. Factor in at least $142 per day for food and drinks on-site if you're leaning into the full resort experience. It's not a budget play — it's a "we deserve this" play, and the price reflects that.
The bottom line: Book a river-view room, eat at Nobu on night one, spend Saturday at the pool, order room service Sunday morning in your robe, and text your friend "why don't we do this more often" — because you will.