The Ultimate 3-Day Scottsdale Bachelorette Party Itinerary
| Quick Summary | |
|---|---|
| Trip length | 3 days / 2 nights |
| Best time to visit | October through April |
| Ideal group size | 6 to 14 people |
| Budget per person | $500 to $1,800 |
| Vibe | Resort-luxe, sun-drenched, high-energy nightlife, unapologetically glam |
Why Scottsdale for Your Bachelorette?
Scottsdale has perfected the bachelorette resort experience. The resorts are extraordinary, the pool parties are among the best in the country outside Las Vegas, and the Old Town nightlife district keeps the energy high until last call. All of it happens under reliably perfect desert skies.
What sets Scottsdale apart from Vegas is the breathing room. The desert landscape is genuinely beautiful, the spa culture is world-class, and there are moments of calm between the big events that Vegas rarely offers. Groups who want to feel truly pampered, not just entertained, consistently rank Scottsdale at the top of the list.
Day 1: Arrive, Resort Up, and Hit Old Town
Morning
Fly in Thursday or Friday morning and head straight to your resort. For arrival day brunch, Proof at The Scott Resort on Chaparral Road does a beautiful weekend brunch with shakshuka, avocado boards, and a frozen Aperol spritz that is the unofficial start-of-trip drink. Budget $30 to $50/person. The courtyard setting with desert landscaping makes it genuinely lovely at 11am.
Afternoon
Check in and spend the afternoon at your resort pool. If you are staying at the Andaz Scottsdale Resort, the pool complex with private casitas, a fire pit, and a swim-up bar is the best single afternoon you will spend in the city. Day passes for non-guests are available at $75/person. Pool cabanas run $300 to $600 for the day and are worth splitting for groups of six or more. "The Andaz pool feels more like a private party than a hotel amenity," per a recent review.
Order bottles to the cabana and let the afternoon take its time. There is nowhere to be until 8pm, and this kind of afternoon is what everyone came for.
Evening
Dinner in Old Town Scottsdale at Origins on Brown Avenue. This contemporary American restaurant focuses on local Arizona ingredients and has one of the best tasting menus in the Valley at $95/person. The wood-roasted beet salad, the duck confit with hatch chile, and the smoked chocolate cake are all exceptional. The dining room has warm desert lighting and an open kitchen that makes the whole meal feel like a show.
After dinner, walk to The Living Room at W Scottsdale on North Scottsdale Road. The outdoor lounge with fire pits and desert views is the right entry point to Old Town nightlife: stylish, not chaotic, with a cocktail menu that is actually thoughtful. Drinks run $14 to $18.
Day 2: Spa Morning, Desert Adventure, and a Night That Goes Late
Morning
Book spa treatments at Palo Verde Spa at Andaz Scottsdale. The "Desert Rose" couples massage uses local botanicals and runs $195 for 80 minutes. Spa access with hot plunge pools, outdoor treatment terraces, and a eucalyptus steam room is $75/person. Plan on spending three full hours here. Book the earliest available slot so the spa experience does not bleed into afternoon plans.
Afternoon
Book a private desert Jeep tour through Arizona Jeep Tours. A two-hour private tour through the McDowell Sonoran Preserve runs $75 to $95/person for groups of six or more, and the Sonoran Desert is genuinely spectacular when you are in it rather than looking at it from a hotel pool. The saguaro cactus forests, the red rock formations, and the wildlife sightings make for excellent content and a genuine adventure.
Return to the resort for an hour to freshen up and get ready for the night. This is the getting-ready hour the bride deserves: good music, champagne, and everyone in the same suite doing hair and makeup before heading out.
Evening
Dinner at Orange Sky Restaurant at Talking Stick Resort. The rooftop location with 360-degree views of the Valley, the McDowell Mountains, and the Scottsdale skyline is the most dramatic dining room in the area. The prime filets, the Maine lobster, and the tableside bananas foster all deliver. Budget $90 to $140/person. Reserve a window table when you book and tell them it is a bachelorette dinner.
After dinner, head to W Scottsdale for the main nightlife event. The WET pool deck transforms into an outdoor nightclub after 10pm on weekends, with a DJ and fire features. Table packages start at $1,500 and general admission is $25 to $40. Old Town Scottsdale has a dozen bars within walking distance, including Shenanigans for a more casual late-night bar experience and Kazimierz World Wine Bar for something with more depth and personality.
Day 3: Recovery Brunch, Kierland Shopping, and a Desert Sunset
Morning
Brunch at Honey Bear's BBQ at The Farm at South Mountain. This pastoral property south of Scottsdale has a breakfast and brunch menu served outdoors under pecan trees with chickens wandering the grounds. The granola bowl, the egg casseroles, and the house-made pastries are all excellent. Budget $20 to $35/person. The 45-minute drive is worth it for the setting, which is the most peaceful meal you will have all weekend.
Afternoon
Drive to Kierland Commons on Scottsdale Road for the afternoon. This is the best outdoor shopping center in the Valley: clean, walkable, with a mix of national brands and local boutiques. Free People, lululemon, and Anthropologie are all here for bachelorette wardrobe additions. The Westin Kierland hotel adjacent to the mall has a lazy river pool that is available to day pass guests at $50/person, including a lounge chair and towel service.
After shopping, head back to the resort for the golden hour. Scottsdale sunsets over the McDowell Mountains are legitimately one of the best things the American Southwest has to offer, and the resort pools and terraces frame them perfectly. Make sure someone has their phone out.
Evening
Final dinner at Talavera at Four Seasons Resort Scottsdale at Troon North. The drive up to the north of Scottsdale is worth it for the most beautiful restaurant setting in the entire Valley. The Sonoran-influenced menu features wood-grilled meats, local produce, and a view of Pinnacle Peak that is absurdly photogenic at sunset. Budget $80 to $120/person. "Talavera is the one dinner that made our entire Scottsdale trip feel like an event rather than just a good meal," per one bachelorette group recap.
End the trip back at the resort bar with a final round of cocktails and a proper toast to the bride. No agenda, no clubs. Just the group, the desert night air, and a clear sky full of stars that you genuinely cannot see through city light pollution anywhere else.
Budget Breakdown
| Category | Budget | Mid-Range | Splurge |
|---|---|---|---|
| Accommodation (per person/night) | $75 | $175 | $400+ |
| Food per day | $60 | $120 | $200+ |
| Activities (spa/Jeep/pool) | $50 | $150 | $350+ |
| Nightlife (drinks/cover) | $50 | $120 | $300+ |
| Total per person (3 days) | $550 | $1,200 | $2,500+ |
Pro Tips
- Visit between October and April. Scottsdale in July and August regularly hits 115 degrees, and outdoor activities become genuinely dangerous. The shoulder months of March, April, and November are the sweet spot for pool weather without extreme heat.
- Book spa treatments and resort pool cabanas the same week you book flights. The Andaz and Four Seasons cabanas sell out on weekends 2 to 3 weeks in advance, especially during peak season.
- Old Town Scottsdale is walkable, but the resort corridor on North Scottsdale Road requires a rideshare. Designate a rideshare coordinator for the group to manage logistics and avoid the chaos of eight people trying to book separate Ubers at 1am.
- The desert sun is deceptive in spring and fall. SPF 50 is not optional at pool parties, and hats are your best friend during any outdoor afternoon activity. Sunburns on Day 1 ruin the rest of the trip.
Where to Stay
Andaz Scottsdale Resort and Bungalows is the top choice for groups who want a boutique resort experience with a genuinely special pool. Bungalows sleep 2 and run $350 to $600/night depending on season. The W Scottsdale in the heart of Old Town is the best option for groups prioritizing nightlife proximity, with rooms from $250 to $450/night and the WET pool deck steps from the elevator. For the most luxurious stay in the Valley, Four Seasons Resort Scottsdale at Troon North delivers the definitive desert resort experience at $500 to $900/night, with unmatched views and the best spa in Arizona.
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