The Carlton Hotel was constructed from 1909 to 1910 by Swiss hotelier
Henry Ruhl, and designed by architects
Charles Dalmas and
Marcellin Mayère. The hotel opened on 30 January 1911. It was such a huge success that the hotel acquired the adjoining Hotel de la Plage, on its western side, and demolished it for construction of a new wing from 1912 to 1913, which doubled the hotel's size and gave it its present form. In the late 1960s, the hotel was acquired by UK-based
Maxwell Joseph's
Grand Metropolitan hotel group. In September 1981, Grand Metropolitan acquired
Inter-Continental Hotels from
PanAm and on 1 April 1982, they merged their own hotel operations with Inter-Continental, placing 17 of their own hotels within that chain, including the Carlton, which became the
Carlton Inter-Continental Cannes. The hotel chain was reorganized as InterContinental Hotels Group in 2003, and the hotel became the
InterContinental Carlton Cannes. In June 2006, InterContinental Hotels Group sold the Carlton to investment bank
Morgan Stanley, along with six other InterContinental properties in Amsterdam, Budapest, Rome, Frankfurt, Madrid and Vienna for 634 million euros, while retaining management of the properties. In April 2011,
Morgan Stanley re-sold the portfolio of seven properties to Lebanese businessman
Toufic Aboukhater at a loss, for 450 million euros. purchased the Carlton, along with four other properties in the portfolio, in Amsterdam, Frankfurt, Madrid and Rome. After closing due to the
COVID-19 pandemic in March 2020, the hotel reopened briefly in August, only to close again on 10 September 2020, for extensive renovations. It reopened on 13 March 2023 The multi-day reopening celebration took place during the
2023 Cannes Film Festival and was attended by celebrities including
Michael Douglas,
Catherine Zeta Jones,
Helen Mirren,
Fan BingBing,
Uma Thurman,
Mads Mikkelsen,
Naomi Campbell and
Brie Larson. ==Design==