Travel Tales and Reviews website ... A project of Techno Tink Productions
Staybridge Inn, Reno, Nevada

Staybridge Inn, Reno, Nevada

In Reno

A Practical Hotel Guide for Space, Quiet, and Easy Drives

Let’s clear up the name first, because search bars can be mischievous little things. If you’re looking for “Staybridge Inn” in Reno, the property you’re after is Staybridge Suites Reno by IHG, at 10559 Professional Circle in south Reno.

That distinction matters, and so does the hotel itself. Among Reno hotels, this one catches the eye for a simple reason: it gives you more room to breathe. Vacationers get kitchens and living space, gamblers get a calmer place to sleep, and road trippers get easy highway access without the downtown clatter. Here’s the practical read on location, suites, amenities, nearby casinos, and day trips, plus what recent guests liked, and what made a few of them grumble. This was a free night for us with our IHG rewards night. I wish we had booked and stayed at this hotel for the extent of our trip. (We wound up staying at the Peppermill Casino Spa Resort, which was costly, expensive, and inconvenient.

Why Staybridge Suites Reno is a smart pick for longer stays and weekend trips

If you don’t need neon outside your window at 2:00 AM, this hotel starts making a lot of sense. Staybridge Suites Reno sits in south Reno at 10559 Professional Circle, near US-395/I-580, which puts you close to the places you may actually use, airport, casinos, shopping, and the road to Tahoe, without placing you in the middle of the casino district.

From here, Reno-Tahoe International Airport is about 7 miles away, usually around 8 minutes by car. Downtown Reno casinos are often a 15 to 20-minute drive. Atlantis Casino is much closer, around 7 minutes in typical traffic. Lake Tahoe usually lands in the 45 to 60 minute range, depending on where you’re headed and how kind the roads feel that day. If you want the lay of the land before booking, MapQuest’s directions page for the hotel gives a quick sense of where it sits.

Modern Staybridge Suites hotel exterior in south Reno at dusk with parking lot and highway sign in quiet suburb.

A quieter home base that still keeps Reno close

This is the sort of hotel that works best when you like choice. You can spend the evening downtown, have a proper casino supper, maybe lose twenty bucks with dignity, then drive back to a quieter part of town and sleep like a civilized person.

South Reno also gives you easier access to grocery stops, chain restaurants, and suburban conveniences that casino-core hotels don’t always make simple. For some travelers, that’s more useful than a lobby chandelier.

Best fit for families, road trippers, and gamblers who want extra space

A standard hotel room can feel like a coat closet with a TV after the first night. Staybridge’s suite layout changes that mood. Families get room for bags, snacks, and people. Road trippers get a kitchen for leftovers and early coffee. Small groups can split costs without tripping over each other every five minutes.

It’s also a smart pick if your Reno trip is part of a bigger loop, Tahoe, skiing, Carson City, or long-haul highway travel. Plenty of Reno hotels are built for one-night casino traffic. This one feels built for people who plan to inhabit the room, not merely pass through it.

What the suites and hotel amenities are really like

Staybridge Suites Reno has 94 rooms across 4 floors, and the property was renovated in 2020, which helps. It doesn’t read as brand-new, but it also doesn’t feel stranded in another decade. The room lineup is practical: king studio suites, one-bedroom suites, two-bedroom suites, plus accessible options.

Inside, the big story is layout. Expect full kitchens, workspaces, Wi-Fi, flat-screen TVs, and in many units a sofa bed that turns the living area into a useful sleeping space. That’s why the hotel feels more like a small apartment than a crash pad. A good suite details and pricing page lays out the basic feature set if you want a quick booking snapshot.

Spacious Reno hotel one-bedroom suite with full kitchen, living area featuring sofa bed and TV, and visible separate bedroom, in bright daylight.

Suite options that make this hotel feel less cramped

Solo travelers or couples often do fine in a king studio suite. You still get the kitchen and more elbow room than many regular hotel rooms. One-bedroom suites are the sweet spot for longer stays, because the separate bedroom gives the whole place a calmer rhythm. Someone can nap, someone can watch TV, and peace may yet be possible.

Two-bedroom suites make the most sense for families or friends sharing costs. You’re not booking this type of Reno hotel for glamour. You’re booking it because real doors, a couch, and a fridge make travel easier. Sometimes the humble refrigerator is the true hero of a trip.

Free extras that can help travelers save money

This is where the hotel starts earning its keep. Free buffet breakfast is included, with hours that are friendly to both early airport runs and slow weekend mornings, 6:30 to 9:30 AM on weekdays, 7:30 to 10:30 AM on weekends. There is also self-serve laundry, a 24-hour fitness center, a business center, outdoor grills, a patio, an indoor pool, and a small meeting room.

The pet-friendly policy adds flexibility for travelers who don’t want kennel logistics. Some stays also include evening social events on select days, which can shave a little off food spending.

Indoor hotel swimming pool with blue water, lounge chairs, large windows, and fitness center in background.

For budget-conscious travelers, that bundle matters. Free breakfast plus kitchen access is a handy one-two punch. It cuts down restaurant costs without making the trip feel austere.

If you’ll use the kitchen and breakfast even once or twice a day, the room rate starts looking a lot better.

What to do near the hotel, from casinos to Lake Tahoe day trips

A hotel like this works best as a base camp. You sleep south of the noise, then point the car where you please. Downtown Reno’s casino cluster is still close enough for a dinner-and-gaming evening. Atlantis Casino is even easier for a shorter outing. If you want shopping or a meal that doesn’t involve slot-machine jingles, The Summit Reno is nearby and convenient.

For fresh air, you’ve got options that don’t require a grand production. Galena Creek Regional Park is good for trails and pine-scented wandering. Sparks Marina Park gives you water and walking paths. The Truckee River Walk and Wingfield Park work well if you want time in central Reno without committing to a whole downtown hotel stay.

Easy casino access without staying in the middle of the noise

This is the quiet compromise many gamblers end up liking more than they expected. You can drive to downtown Reno, park, play, eat, linger a bit, then retreat. The same goes for Atlantis, which is close enough to feel almost neighborly.

That arrangement won’t suit everyone. Some travelers want to roll downstairs and straight into a casino. Fair enough. But if you like your blackjack with a side of actual sleep, the south Reno location has a certain wisdom to it.

Good day, trip options for road trippers and vacationers

Lake Tahoe is the obvious day trip, and it remains a good one. South Shore beaches and Stateline are usually 45 to 60 minutes away, which is manageable for a full day of water, views, and expensive coffee. In winter, Mt. Rose Ski Tahoe is even closer, often 25 to 35 minutes, and that’s a fine setup if snow is on your mind.

People planning a drive-heavy trip may also appreciate how this part of Reno keeps the freeway close. No circling downtown blocks. No post-midnight parade outside your window. Just easier in, easier out.

Recent guest reviews, common praise, and a few things to watch for

Recent feedback, across 2025 and 2026, paints a mostly favorable picture. Scores have stayed strong, with an 8.6/10 rating on Booking.com and 4.2/5 on Tripadvisor cited in current rate-and-review data. If you want the hotel’s own review stream, IHG’s guest review page is worth a look.

What guests seem to love most

A few themes keep surfacing:

  • Clean rooms and roomy suites
  • Friendly, helpful staff
  • Kitchens that make longer stays easier
  • Good beds and solid sleep quality
  • Free breakfast that adds family value

That last point matters more than it sounds. Families and road trippers notice the difference between a token muffin setup and a breakfast that actually gets everyone out the door.

Small drawbacks to know before you book

The praise isn’t universal, and it shouldn’t be treated like scripture. A few guests mentioned maintenance hiccups, including broken sofa beds in some cases. Longer stays may come with limited housekeeping rather than daily full service. That’s common in suite-style hotels, but it’s still better to know before arrival than after your towels stage a rebellion.

The other catch is location style. You will likely want a car. This isn’t the kind of Reno stay where you wander out on foot and fall into nightlife by accident.

Booking tips, prices, and who should choose this Reno hotel

Rates move around with season and demand, but for late April 2026, one-night stays for two adults were starting around $190 with taxes and fees, with higher weekend pricing not hard to find. April is a busier month, so waiting too long can nudge the cost upward. A latest 2026 rate snapshot gives another quick reference point.

Check-in is 3:00 PM, check-out is 12:00 PM, and the minimum age to check in is 21. Common discounts may include AAA, AARP, government, military, group, and corporate rates. One extra practical note: parking has been listed at $5 per night in current booking data, so keep that in the mental math.

When this property is worth the price

The best value shows up when you actually use what makes the hotel different. If you want a kitchen, extra square footage, breakfast, and space to split costs with family or friends, it earns its rate. Among Reno hotels, that combination is hard to dismiss.

Who may want a different kind of Reno stay?

If your whole plan is casinos, nightlife, and walking everywhere downtown, you may be happier in the city center. A true casino hotel gives you instant access and a busier, flashier atmosphere. Staybridge Suites Reno is more apartment than spectacle, and that’s either the charm or the reason to book elsewhere.

Final Thoughts

Staybridge Suites Reno by IHG is best for travelers who want space, practical amenities, and a calmer address. It works especially well for longer stays, family trips, road trips, and casino weekends where sleep still matters.

For the right traveler, this is one of the more sensible hotels in Reno. If you want a suite, easy airport access, quick drives to casinos, and a clean path to Tahoe, it’s a strong pick. If you want the casino floor humming under your feet, downtown is probably calling your name.

Close Menu
Close Panel