The Swag: A Smoky Mountain Hideaway That Feels Like Home

Perched high amid the Great Smoky Mountains, The Swag has always had a way of staying with those who come to know and love it. Is it the boundless views across the peaks or the capable, kindhearted service? The farm-to-table meals or the serene stillness that makes time seem to slow to a crawl? All those things, and many others, certainly add to its charm. But what really sets this North Carolina gem apart are the people who have shaped it since the very beginning, from the founders who first saw promise in the rugged stretch of mountain terrain to the next generation upholding their spirit of hospitality. Their thoughtful stewardship infuses The Swag with a warmth that makes every moment feel meaningful while you’re here, and lingers well after you say goodbye.

This image shows a rustic wooden cabin or lodge with a covered porch featuring wooden railings and support posts, situated on elevated terrain. The structure is surrounded by lush green vegetation and tropical plants in the foreground, with a large tree with drooping branches prominently featured. In the background, rolling hills and mountains are visible under a partly cloudy blue sky.
The main house is oriented to make the most of the breathtaking mountain panorama

Full Review and Highlights of The Swag

A Heartfelt Welcome

The Swag sits on 250 acres toward North Carolina’s western tip, an hour or so from Asheville and a stone’s throw from the Tennessee border. Its twisting, thickly wooded drive climbs skyward as you leave the tiny town of Maggie Valley, and after you pass through the entrance gates, you’ll arrive at a bright, cheery cabin where a genial greeter is waiting to make you feel right at home. The staff takes your car off to the parking area and your luggage to your room; meanwhile, you can unwind with a glass of wine, Champagne or another welcome beverage as the greeter introduces you to the lay of the land and jots down your dinner selections for that evening.

You’ll also pose for a snapshot to be tucked into the latest of the many albums lining the shelves, a tradition that goes back to The Swag’s origins. Repeat guests are common here, and some of them have years’ worth of photos that they enjoy flipping through each time they return, reminiscing about past adventures.

This image shows a handwritten paper tag tied with green rope or cord to one of a group of wooden hiking sticks in a barrel. The tag appears to have text written on it in what looks like pen or marker, and the background is softly blurred showing an indoor space with warm lighting. The wooden structure appears weathered or rustic in appearance.
Guests’ personal walking sticks rest in a barrel by the entrance, ready for a day’s hike

Upon continuing to the main house (properly known as the Swag House), another sweet tradition awaits: You’re invited to choose a knobbly walking stick from the array in the lobby, each adorned with a badge designed to commemorate the current year, and then given a personalized tree-slice tag to attach. Many regulars either store their sticks at the property or bring them back for every visit, adding tag after tag to their expanding collection.

The walking sticks aren’t mere conversation pieces — they’re practical gifts, given that hiking the mountain trails is one of this region’s greatest draws. But more on that in a bit.

This image shows a landscaped outdoor area with a large green lawn surrounded by trees and vegetation, including a prominent tree with drooping branches in the foreground. Several wooden picnic tables and benches are positioned on the grass, with rolling forested hills visible in the background. The scene is captured during what appears to be sunset or sunrise, with a partly cloudy sky displaying soft lighting.
Artfully placed chairs and a garden swing invite lingering over the views

The Setting

Locals call the gentle dip between mountain peaks a “swag,” and this natural feature gives the property both its name and its outrageous views. The main house and adjacent structures hug a sloping expanse of well-manicured grass, fringed with native greenery such as pines, rhododendrons and hydrangeas, and clusters of chairs along the lawn and wide verandas offer a front-row seat to the Blue Ridge and the Smokies in the distance. Day or evening, the panorama is glorious; even better, because there are only several dozen guests at any given time, you can savor it in calm and quiet. From our very first afternoon, I could feel the pressures of daily life rolling off my shoulders as I set a porchfront rocker in motion and took in the overlapping ridges with their distinctive bluish haze.

The Swag welcomes all ages, but it leans adult-oriented. I was there on a girls’ getaway with my best friend and most of our fellow guests were couples or multigenerational families with grown kids. It’s perfect for an empty-nest vacation or a romantic retreat. (In fact, current owners Annie and David Colquitt first stayed here for their honeymoon in 2011, and were so smitten with the property that they bought it when founders Deener and Dan Matthews were ready to pass the torch in 2018 — talk about coming full circle!)

This image shows the interior of a rustic lodge or cabin featuring extensive wooden construction with exposed ceiling beams and a large antler chandelier as the centerpiece. The open-plan space includes a seating area with upholstered furniture and wooden rocking chairs, a kitchen visible in the background, and a loft level with wooden railings above. The space is decorated with mounted deer heads on the walls, red and white checkered curtains at large windows, and has hardwood flooring throughout.
The living room sits at the heart of resort life, with the onsite gift boutique just upstairs

Although the buildings at The Swag are rustic, clad in weathered wood and rough-hewn stone, the trappings within are anything but. Fine linens, tailored draperies, luxe fixtures and Oriental rugs combine for an air of refined comfort that isn’t the least bit stuffy. Every detail is precisely overseen, from the daily supply of fresh apples in the lobby to the thermal mat at the coffee bar that keeps the earthenware mugs warm and ready, and yet somehow it all feels effortless.

A cozy living room anchors the Swag House, with ample seating arranged in view of the massive stone fireplace. The well-worn timbers and beams are the bones of an 18th-century church that was brought in from Tennessee, their patina offset by gleaming hardwood floors and colorful print textiles — inviting surrounds to catch up with other guests, settle in with a book on a rainy day or indulge in the freshly baked cookies that are put out each afternoon. The Swag’s experts-in-residence, who include artists, naturalists, musicians, photographers and historians, often host talks here as well, which are quite interesting and well worth a listen.

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This image shows the interior of a rustic wooden room featuring floor-to-ceiling built-in bookshelves filled with books along the left wall. The space includes a stone fireplace with an active fire in the center background, a wooden dining table with chairs in the foreground, and exposed wooden beam construction throughout the ceiling and walls. Natural light enters through windows on the right side, and a leafy plant is visible near the fireplace area.
The common area at Chestnut Lodge includes a long dining table and a cozy fireplace where guests can share a meal, play games or relax with a book from the well-stocked library. Photo by Chelsea Lane Photography/Courtesy of The Swag

Accommodations

The Swag has 18 guest quarters in all, divided between the Swag House and standalone cottages. We stayed in the two-story Chestnut Lodge, comprised of five rooms grouped around a handsome wood-paneled library and fireside sitting area. Each is named to honor a person with deep ties to the property, and ours, dubbed Davy’s Room, was incredibly spacious and comfortable, with sink-right-in bedding, leather club chairs facing a fireplace and a wet bar with a Nespresso coffeemaker plus a small fridge stocked with complimentary snacks, water and sodas. A steam shower and heated towel rack in the bathroom were nice touches for the cool mountain mornings.

Thoughtful extras brought us smiles throughout our stay. Our in-room radio was playing bluegrass music when we arrived, setting an apt sense of place; bite-size treats appeared on the wet bar at turndown; and we found little gifts such as embossed leather bookmarks waiting on the pillows. It’s as if the staff knows exactly what will make guests feel pampered without saying a word.

TIP: Chestnut Lodge can be reserved in its entirety if you’re traveling with a group of extended family or friends. Note that the upper-floor rooms require climbing a flight of stairs, so they’re not ideal for guests with limited mobility.

This rustic interior features a stone fireplace with an active fire, flanked by a red upholstered chair and a beige sofa with plaid throw pillows. The room has log walls, multi-paned windows with patterned curtains, a wooden coffee table, and a wrought iron chandelier hanging from the exposed beam ceiling.
In addition to its pleasantly homey common spaces, Trinity Cottage has three primary suites, each including a king bed and steam shower. Photo by Chelsea Lane Photography/Courtesy of The Swag

The Swag House contains six guestrooms, and the handful of cottages and suites ranges from three-bedroom Trinity Cottage to secluded Hummingbird, which backs up to Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Several accommodations have sleeper sofas to supplement the king beds. Depending on the specific unit you book, amenities might include an outdoor shower, a private balcony or terrace, an indoor or outdoor soaking tub, and/or a private sauna. One suite, Mountain Laurel, even comes with its own family game room.

Wifi is available throughout the resort, but there are no TVs in the guestrooms or common areas, and I loved the built-in digital detox. Screen time can’t begin to compete with the natural scenery that stretches in every direction, or watching hummingbirds flit around the hanging feeder at the main house — more than I’ve ever seen in one place.

This image shows a charcuterie board arranged on a dark slate serving tray, featuring an assortment of cured meats, cheeses, crackers, and garnishes like berries and olives with small identification labels. The board is positioned on a wooden table surface with cheese knives and other utensils nearby, and a striped cloth napkin is visible to the side. The background shows a blurred restaurant or dining establishment interior with seating and greenery visible through windows.
A spread of pre-dinner hors d’oeuvres awaits on the Dogtrot

Dining

Cuisine at The Swag is plentiful, hearty and exceptionally delicious, with much of the produce grown onsite and many other ingredients locally sourced. Breakfast brings light fare such as steel-cut oatmeal and Greek yogurt with muesli in addition to more robust selections, like a chorizo-laced Mexican scramble, cinnamon vanilla French toast and (my favorite) a tasty breakfast sandwich with chive scrambled eggs, bacon, cheddar and guajillo chile aioli. Lunch is a takeaway affair — if you’re headed out on a hike, the kitchen will pack your meal in an insulated backpack, or they’ll prepare a picnic basket or brown bag for guests staying closer to home. (If you see Swag Bars on the lunchtime dessert menu, don’t hesitate; these rich, chocolatey treats are a must-try!) Each week, the chef also hosts a midday alfresco picnic on nearby Gooseberry Knob, with classics like burgers, grilled fish and fried chicken and a buffet of sides, salads and sweets.

This image shows an elegantly plated restaurant dish featuring a seared piece of meat topped with green herbs, accompanied by colorful vegetables including orange carrots and green beans or snap peas. The plate has a terracotta-colored sauce with dark purple dots arranged around it, and includes a golden triangular potato cake. In the background, table settings with silverware and glassware are visible, and someone can be seen pouring sauce from a small vessel.
Each dish at dinner is a feast for the eyes as well as the palate

As evening draws near, everyone gathers in the open-air Dogtrot, a breezeway off the lobby, to mingle over hors d’oeuvres and cocktails. This was a highlight of our stay — it was great fun getting to know the other guests in such a relaxed, convivial setting, and the nibbles are just enough to kindle an appetite, from charcuterie with Carolina honey to Southern-inflected canapés. At 6:30, the staff rings the dinner bell — the signal for everyone to assemble in the living room for announcements about the next day’s events as well as any birthdays, anniversaries or other milestones guests are celebrating — and then you’re shown to your table in the dining room or, in good weather, on the lovely open-air porch.

While the food at breakfast and lunch is fantastic, dinner is the real star. The four-course menu changes daily, with at least one fish and one vegetarian dish among the mains; our choices included rack of lamb with harissa, fondant potatoes and romano beans; wahoo with purple rice, mustard greens and miso beurre blanc; and gnocchi with spinach, grana padano cheese and beetroot pomodoro. First and second courses are equally inventive, and the desserts, such as a luscious chocolate-chip skillet cookie topped with ice cream, take things over the top.

This image shows a rectangular swimming pool with clear blue-green water, featuring depth markings and a handrail, positioned on what appears to be a stone or concrete deck. The pool is surrounded by metal railings and overlooks a densely forested landscape with rolling hills or mountains visible in the background under an overcast sky. The setting appears to be elevated, providing a panoramic view of the surrounding natural terrain.
Located in a spot known as The Lookout, the spacious hot tub compels guests to linger

Activities & Amenities

True to The Swag’s easygoing vibe, you can be as active or as idle as you like. The daily schedule, delivered to your room, includes a rotating blend of guided hikes, wellness sessions like yoga (held on a pretty outdoor deck), barista and craft cocktail lessons in the Swag Bar, tours of the gardens and apiaries, and creative workshops, just to scratch the surface. The staff is happy to arrange wine tastings with a collection of bottles from the cellar, and multi-day cooking classes are held regularly throughout the year. If you’re a rider, you can book an excursion on horseback via The Swag’s nearby sister resort, Cataloochee Ranch.

On the ground floor of Chestnut Lodge you’ll find The Still, which houses three spa treatment rooms and offers a menu of massages, facials and body treatments. We both had amazing facials that left us glowing and totally relaxed, followed by a long soak in the hot tub that sits a quick walk away down the hill. It’s really more like a small swimming pool, and the trees frame perfect views of the mountain peaks as you luxuriate amid the jets that roil the steaming water.

This image shows a glass hummingbird feeder with red feeding ports hanging from a wooden beam or structure. Multiple hummingbirds are visible around the feeder, with some perched on the feeding stations and others captured in flight with their wings in motion. The background is softly blurred, showing greenery and what appears to be additional wooden structures or buildings.
Hummingbirds dart around the feeder on the main house porch

If you prefer to explore the surrounding terrain on your own, the staff is happy to provide a hiking map along with pointers about the various routes. There are also pickleball courts, badminton courts and a croquet field available at your leisure, a stocked pond for casting a line, lawn games such as cornhole and a small gym. Jigsaw puzzles sit in various states of completion on tables in the living room and Chestnut Lodge, and as you chat with your travel companion or other guests, you’ll probably find yourself searching for the right piece without thinking twice about it.

This image shows a large grassy lawn area during sunrise, with the sun visible in a hazy sky above rolling forested hills in the background. The scene includes outdoor furniture such as wooden picnic tables on the left side, a flagpole with a flag on the right, and trees including one with drooping branches in the upper left corner.
Sunrise over the lawn — a perfect way to wake up! Photo by Denise Weiner

As your stay draws to a close and you get ready to make the winding drive back down the mountain, you’ll understand why so many people are drawn here year after year. The Swag has mastered something rare in the superfast pace of life these days: the art of making strangers feel like family for a short time, connected by face-to-face conversation rather than by text or social media. And when you come back (which you likely will), don’t forget to pack your walking stick — another tag will be waiting to celebrate your return.

Things to Know

  • Room rates are based on double occupancy and include all meals, evening hors d’oeuvres, nonalcoholic beverages and some activities.
  • There’s never a bad time to visit, but fall is especially beautiful with the brilliant Blue Ridge foliage all around. Leaf-peeping season is in high demand, so book early! The property closes for much of the winter. Exact dates vary, but for 2025-26, closure is from mid-December through mid-February.
  • Asheville Regional Airport is about an hour away by car, and the major hubs of Charlotte (CLT) and Atlanta (ATL) are within a 3- to 3 1/2-hour drive.

Relevant Links:

Browse all accommodations and destinations in North Carolina on Ciao Bambino

Natural wonders at Great Smoky Mountains National Park

Best spring break ideas for families in the Southeast

Southeast college tour & vacation itinerary

72 hours in Charleston with kids

Photos by Lisa Frederick except where noted.

Editor’s note: This post was accurate when published. We advise checking independently for the latest information and updates. Ciao Bambino does not accept responsibility or liability for any errors or omissions in, or for any actions taken based on, the information presented. 

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