🎬 Screen Stays

Stay Where They Filmed

Movie and TV locations sorted by what you can actually do there — book the hotel, tour the estate, or see the house from the street without getting yelled at.

Most filming-location lists skip the only question that matters: can you actually go? This guide starts there. Every property below links to a full guide that tracks present-day access — tickets, tours, booking reality, and the etiquette of standing outside someone's very famous front door. For how screen tourism access is scored, see the Screen-Tourism Friction Index.

The Data Behind This

How We Score Access

Every location guide on this island tracks what a visitor can verify today: opening status, tour rules, booking availability, and how each property treats film tourists. The Screen-Tourism Friction Index is the research layer behind it.

Screen Stays: FAQ

Can you stay in hotels where movies were filmed?
Yes — several famous filming hotels are working properties. The Stanley Hotel (which inspired The Shining), the Beverly Wilshire from Pretty Woman, and the Four Seasons Maui from The White Lotus all take regular bookings.
Can you visit the Yellowstone Dutton Ranch?
The real ranch — Chief Joseph Ranch in Darby, Montana — is a working guest ranch. Cabin stays open in limited windows; otherwise the Bitterroot Valley towns nearby make an easy base.
Is the Home Alone house open to visitors?
No. The Winnetka house is a private residence: you can see it from the street, but the polite rules of movie-house tourism apply — stay on the sidewalk, no trespassing.
What is set-jetting?
Traveling to places you first saw on screen. It has grown every year since 2023, and this guide is built for it: every entry says what is bookable, tourable, or view-only before you plan the trip.
How do I plan a filming-location trip?
Start from access: confirm what is actually open (our per-location guides track this), book the closest historic stay, and cluster several locations in one region — North Jersey for The Sopranos, Asheville for Biltmore films, New York for a full screen-walking day.