Feb 20, 2026
Luxury Stays on the Peaceful Side of the Smokies: Walland, Townsend and Maryville
Written by: Emily Huffstetler
Quiet is a luxury. The Peaceful Side of the Smokies has everything you need, minus the noise.
McGhee Tyson Airport (TYS) connects the region to more than 30 nonstop destinations. From the airport, it’s roughly a 13-minute drive to Maryville, 25 minutes to Walland and 34 minutes to Townsend, depending on traffic.
From full-service destination resorts to lodge-style retreats, these are the Peaceful Side’s top luxury stays.
Destination Resorts in Walland
Walland is home to two of the region’s most nationally recognized luxury properties. Both are set in the foothills on expansive private land, with on-site dining and guided experiences built into the stay.

Blackberry Farm operates like a self-contained estate, with 68 guest accommodations ranging from rooms and suites to cottages and multi-bedroom houses. It was named the No. 1 resort in the South in Travel + Leisure’s 2024 World’s Best Awards and was also recognized on Condé Nast Traveler’s 2025 Gold List.

The Farm’s culinary program centers on its Foothills Cuisine. The Barn serves multi-course dinners, and Food & Wine named Blackberry Farm the Best U.S. Hotel for Food and Drink in its 2025 Global Tastemakers Awards.
Guests can build their days around a schedule of guided experiences, from fly fishing and horseback rides to tastings and farm tours. On-property hiking spans a 12-mile trail network, with routes ranging from moderate to challenging.

Blackberry Mountain takes a more modern approach to the same foothill setting, spanning 5,200 acres and dedicating 2,800 acres to conservation. Accommodations include lodge stays as well as standalone options, ranging from cottages and treehouses to cabins and multi-bedroom homes. In 2024, Travel + Leisure readers ranked it the No. 2 resort in the South.

Three Sisters, the flagship restaurant in the Lodge, serves breakfast, lunch and dinner, with a dinner menu that changes daily and an international beverage list. Firetower, built around a restored 1950s lookout tower, offers a three-course dinner experience with sunset ridgeline views.
The property emphasizes movement and recovery, with more than 36 miles of private trails, plus an indoor climbing wall and a ropes course. Nest, the on-property spa, is the first Joanna Czech–certified spa in the United States.
Elevated Stays in Townsend
Townsend sits along the route into the Great Smoky Mountains National Park via US-321/TN-73, which runs through town and into the park. The town’s standout stays combine direct park access with on-site amenities, dining options and curated add-ons.

Dancing Bear Lodge & Appalachian Bistro covers 38 acres and offers 28 accommodations. Room categories range from studio-style cabins to two-bedroom cottages and villas with full kitchens, fireplaces and hot tubs.

Dancing Bear Appalachian Bistro has earned national recognition, including a spot on OpenTable’s 2026 list of Top 100 Romantic Restaurants. It also appeared on Tripadvisor’s Travelers’ Choice Best of the Best Fine Dining Restaurants in the U.S., placing at No. 21.
The property has about two miles of trails for walking, plus add-ons like in-cabin massage and reservations for off-site excursions like fly fishing, horseback riding and clay shooting.

Little Arrow takes a premium-outdoors approach in Townsend, with accommodations that span glamping tents, cabins, tiny homes, Airstreams, vacation homes and full-hookup RV sites. It earned a No. 3 ranking for Best Glamping Spot and a No. 6 ranking for Best RV Campground in the USA Today 10Best Readers’ Choice Awards.

Amenities include a 24/7 coffee lounge, a zero-entry pool with grottos, splash pad and hot tub, sport courts, a dog park, and river access points for swimming and fishing. Spa time is part of the mix, too.

Tremont Lodge & Resort is a newly renovated property with updated room and suite options. Many rooms include a Keurig coffee setup, mini-fridge, microwave, and a patio or balcony. Select suites add extras like a fireplace and a full kitchen.

On-site dining is limited but covered in the morning with a complimentary continental breakfast. A pool bar opens later in the day. Other amenities include a fitness center, game room, outdoor movie screen, outdoor and indoor pool, firepit area and pavilion.
Boutique Comfort in Maryville
Maryville is closest to the airport, but it still sits on the corridor that leads through Townsend and into the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. It has more city amenities, while still offering quieter places to stay.

RT Lodge sits on the campus of Maryville College, surrounded by more than 155 acres of private woods. Guest rooms are simple but elegant, with a king or two single beds finished with luxury linens.
The Restaurant at RT Lodge is listed in the MICHELIN Guide, one of only a handful of East Tennessee restaurants to earn the distinction. The kitchen shapes its menus around what’s in season, with ingredients sourced from local farms and regional providers. Dinner is offered both à la carte and as a tasting menu. The Morningside Room serves cocktails, rotating local beers and a curated wine selection, plus bar snacks and a casual dinner menu.

Recently, the property expanded with The Carriage House, a dedicated day spa with seven treatment rooms offering massages, facials and body treatments, along with private lounge areas and a sauna. The Meeting House is another new addition, a glass-walled event space designed for weddings, retreats and corporate gatherings.
Evenings at RT Lodge close softly with complimentary s’mores at the firepit.
Born and raised in Maryville, Tennessee, with roots tracing back to Cades Cove, Emily Huffstetler is a proud Maryville College graduate and storyteller of the Greater Smokies region.
