The best hotels in United Kingdom
The UK has 200,000+ places to stay. We found the ones that actually earn the price.
Our Top Picks in United Kingdom
Click any hotel to check availability and book at the best price.
The Balmoral
Princes Street, Edinburgh
Free cancellation & Pay later
The Gainsborough Bath Spa
City Centre, Bath
Free cancellation & Pay later
The Principal York
City Centre, York
Free cancellation & Pay later
Hope Street Hotel
City Centre, Liverpool
Free cancellation & Pay later
The Chester Grosvenor
City Centre, Chester
Free cancellation & Pay later
Hotel du Vin Glasgow
West End, Glasgow
Free cancellation & Pay later
The Zetter Townhouse Marylebone
Marylebone, London
Free cancellation & Pay later
All Hotels Compared
Side-by-side comparison to help you pick the right hotel. Prices reflect shoulder season averages.
| # | Hotel | City & Area | Price/Night | Score | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | The Ned | City of London, London | £350–650/night | 9/10 | Best Design |
| 2 | The Balmoral | Princes Street, Edinburgh | £380–720/night | 9.2/10 | Best Luxury |
| 3 | The Gainsborough Bath Spa | City Centre, Bath | £280–520/night | 8.9/10 | Best Spa |
| 4 | Old Bank Hotel | High Street, Oxford | £180–340/night | 8.6/10 | Best Location |
| 5 | The Principal York | City Centre, York | £110–200/night | 8.4/10 | Best Heritage |
| 6 | Hope Street Hotel | City Centre, Liverpool | £140–260/night | 8.7/10 | Best Urban |
| 7 | The Chester Grosvenor | City Centre, Chester | £220–420/night | 8.8/10 | Best Historic |
| 8 | Hotel du Vin Glasgow | West End, Glasgow | £130–240/night | 8.5/10 | Best Neighborhood |
| 9 | The Zetter Townhouse Marylebone | Marylebone, London | £200–380/night | 8.8/10 | Best Boutique |
| 10 | Artist Residence | Pimlico, London | £120–220/night | 8.5/10 | Best Budget |
Why These Hotels Made Our List
Every hotel earned its spot. Here's exactly why we picked each one.
The Ned
The Ned transforms 1920s bank into London's most spectacular hotel. Vast banking hall houses multiple restaurants and members' club. Rooms have Art Deco details and luxurious bathrooms. Rooftop pool offers City skyline views. Easy access to Tower of London, Borough Market, Shoreditch.
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The Balmoral
Balmoral is Edinburgh's landmark hotel. Clock tower overlooks Princes Street with Edinburgh Castle visible from top floors. Afternoon tea in Palm Court is institution. Michelin-starred Number One restaurant excels. Old Town and New Town both five-minute walk.
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The Gainsborough Bath Spa
Gainsborough is Bath's only hotel with natural thermal spa waters. Roman-inspired spa has four pools fed by same springs Romans used 2,000 years ago. Rooms blend Georgian architecture with contemporary luxury. Bath Abbey and Royal Crescent steps away.
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Old Bank Hotel
Old Bank Hotel occupies former bank on Oxford's High Street. Rooms overlook All Souls College spires. Restaurant Quod is local favorite for modern British food. Contemporary art collection lines hallways. Perfect base for colleges, Bodleian Library, Ashmolean—all walkable.
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The Principal York
Principal York is Victorian railway hotel opposite York Station. Grand staircase and period features remain. Rooms modernized with comfortable beds and marble bathrooms. Walk to York Minster, medieval walls, and Shambles in ten minutes. Afternoon tea excellent value.
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Hope Street Hotel
Hope Street brings contemporary style to Liverpool. Exposed brick, wooden beams, modern art create loft-like atmosphere. Rooftop gym has city views. Between two cathedrals means Philharmonic Hall, Bold Street, Albert Dock all walkable. Restaurant sources locally.
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The Chester Grosvenor
Chester Grosvenor is half-timbered landmark in medieval center. Rooms blend period features with modern luxury. Extensive spa with pool and treatments. Michelin-starred Simon Radley restaurant one of northern England's best. Ideal for Roman walls and independent shops.
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Hotel du Vin Glasgow
Hotel du Vin occupies Victorian townhouse in Glasgow's West End. Wine-themed rooms have monsoon showers and Roberts radios. Bistro serves French-Scottish fusion in vaulted cellar. Ashton Lane bars and Kelvingrove Art Gallery steps away. More intimate than large Glasgow hotels.
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The Zetter Townhouse Marylebone
Zetter Townhouse feels like quirky Georgian home. Cocktail bar serves creative drinks in cozy, eclectic setting. Rooms have vintage furniture, standalone bathtubs, taxidermy and antique books. Marylebone village charm with Regents Park steps away.
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Artist Residence
Artist Residence brings Brighton's bohemian style to Pimlico. Ten rooms uniquely designed with reclaimed furniture and local art. Ground-floor pub serves craft beer and British comfort food. Walking distance to Tate Britain and Victoria. Feels like staying at creative friend's house.
Check AvailabilityWhere to Stay in United Kingdom
The neighborhood you pick matters more than the hotel. Here's what you need to know.
London: Neighborhoods That Actually Make Sense
Marylebone is the answer for most first visits. You are 8 minutes walk from Oxford Street (if you must), Baker Street tube connects everywhere, and the restaurants on Chiltern Street and Marylebone High Street are for residents. The Zetter Townhouse Marylebone at $200-380/night is the best boutique address in the area.
Skip the South Bank hotels for your first London trip. Yes, Tate Modern and Borough Market are there, but crossing the Thames for everything else adds 20-30 minutes to each journey. Stay north of the river for your first 2 nights, south for nights 3-4 if you want to explore Bermondsey and Peckham properly.
The Ned on Poultry in the City of London at $350-650/night is the best design hotel in central London. It is in the financial district, which is dead on weekends, but that is when you get it at its best: marble lobby, 9 restaurants, and no crowds. Check the weekend rate, it often drops 30%.
Edinburgh: More Than the Royal Mile
The Royal Mile from Edinburgh Castle to Holyrood Palace is extraordinary but covers in 2 hours at a walk. The actual Edinburgh is Bruntsfield for coffee shops, Stockbridge for Saturday market, and Leith for restaurants. The Balmoral at $380-720/night anchors Princes Street correctly.
Arthur's Seat is a 30-minute walk from the city center and gives you the best view of Edinburgh with almost no effort. Go early (7-8am) before the crowds. It feels like the Highlands dropped into a capital city.
August Fringe Festival: 25 days, 3,000 shows, and hotel prices that triple. Book the Balmoral or Hotel du Vin 4 months ahead if Fringe is your goal. If it is not, avoid August Edinburgh entirely and go in October instead when the city reverts to itself.
Bath: Two Days and Done Right
Bath works perfectly as a 2-night stop. Day 1: Roman Baths (book ahead, they sell out), Bath Abbey, Pulteney Bridge, and the Circus neighborhood walking circuit. Day 2: Gainsborough Bath Spa at $280-520/night includes spa access, which is the right way to do Bath.
The train from London Paddington takes 1 hour 20 minutes and costs $20-45 return. There is no good reason to drive. Bath streets are narrow, parking is expensive, and the station is 10 minutes walk from everything you want to see.
Avoid hotels on the London Road east of the center. They look central on a map but add 25 minutes of walking to everything. Stay within the Georgian ring roads or on the south side near Widcombe for the best access.
York: The UK's Most Underrated City
York is often treated as a day trip from Leeds or as a stop on the way north. That is a mistake. The Shambles, York Minster, and the city walls deserve a proper overnight. The Principal York at $110-200/night is the best mid-range address in the city, 5 minutes walk from the Minster.
The railway station puts you in walking distance of everything. York is genuinely compact: you can cover the entire walled city on foot in one day without rushing. The National Railway Museum is free and one of the best museums in the UK outside London.
Old Town York (inside the walls) has the best hotel options and restaurant concentration. Skip anything marketed as a York hotel that is actually south of the river or near the racecourse: these add 15 minutes walk to a city where nothing is more than 15 minutes from anything.
The Regions Beyond London
Liverpool has genuinely reinvented itself. Hope Street Hotel at $140-260/night sits between the two cathedrals and next to Philharmonic Hall. The Albert Dock, Tate Liverpool, and the Beatles Story are a 15-minute walk. The food scene on Bold Street rivals any UK city outside London.
Glasgow is undervisited and underrated. Hotel du Vin Glasgow at $130-240/night gives you one of the best boutique experiences in Scotland for half the Edinburgh price. The West End around Finnieston has become one of the best restaurant neighborhoods in the UK.
Chester is medieval Britain preserved almost perfectly. The Chester Grosvenor at $220-420/night is the best hotel in the city and arguably in the northwest of England. The Roman amphitheatre, city walls, and the Rows (two-level medieval shopping galleries) all within 10 minutes walk.
Budget UK: Getting Value Outside London
Premier Inn and Travelodge are genuinely fine at $60-100/night in most UK cities. The rooms are predictable, central locations in most cities, and the breakfast (Premier Inn) is surprisingly decent at $12. No character, but that is the trade-off.
York, Liverpool, Glasgow, and Chester consistently offer the best value in the UK for interesting stays. $110-180/night gets you a proper hotel with history and character in a walkable city, compared to $280-350 for the same quality in central London.
University cities (Oxford, Cambridge, Edinburgh) have term-time and vacation pricing that differs dramatically. During university vacations (July-August, Christmas, Easter) some university accommodation opens to visitors at $50-80/night in extraordinary historic buildings.
Explore United Kingdom by city
We cover 17 destinations across United Kingdom. Pick a city for a dedicated hotel guide with neighborhoods, seasonal tips, and our vetted picks.
United Kingdom's best hotel regions
London is not the only story. Edinburgh has architecture and food that rivals the capital. Bath has Roman history and spa culture that London cannot replicate. York is medieval without the tourist overlay. Pick the right city for your trip.
London 3 vetted hotels The global city that rewards the prepared visitor
The global city that rewards the prepared visitor
Marylebone and Fitzrovia over Covent Garden and Piccadilly for value and genuine neighborhood feel. The Zetter Townhouse Marylebone at $200-380/night and Artist Residence at $120-220/night represent the boutique London that the chain hotels cannot replicate.
The Ned in the City of London at $350-650/night is the best design hotel address. Weekend rates drop significantly. Nine restaurants, marble banking hall lobby, and a rooftop with views that justify the entry on their own.
Browse all London hotels → Scotland 2 vetted hotels Edinburgh and Glasgow: two cities, one essential trip
Edinburgh and Glasgow: two cities, one essential trip
The Balmoral at $380-720/night anchors Edinburgh Princes Street with Michelin-starred Number One restaurant and Scotland's most recognizable hotel address. Hotel du Vin Glasgow at $130-240/night gives you the West End Finnieston restaurant scene at half the Edinburgh price.
Edinburgh Castle, Royal Mile, Holyrood Palace, and Arthur's Seat cover the major Edinburgh sights within a 1-kilometer radius. The 4.5-hour LNER train from London Kings Cross makes this a realistic add-on to a London trip without flying.
Browse all Scotland hotels → Northern England 2 vetted hotels York, Liverpool, and Chester: three cities worth slowing down for
York, Liverpool, and Chester: three cities worth slowing down for
York is the most complete medieval city in Britain. The Principal York at $110-200/night is 5 minutes from the Minster and within the city walls. Liverpool's Hope Street Hotel at $140-260/night sits between both cathedrals in the cultural quarter, not the waterfront tourist zone.
Chester Grosvenor at $220-420/night is the finest hotel in the northwest of England. The Roman city walls, the Rows, and Chester Cathedral are all within 10 minutes walk. Train connections: York to London in 2 hours, Liverpool to London in 2 hours 10 minutes.
Browse all Northern England hotels → Southwest England 2 vetted hotels Bath, the Cotswolds, and coastal Cornwall
Bath, the Cotswolds, and coastal Cornwall
Bath is 1h20m from London Paddington and deserves 2 nights minimum. The Gainsborough Bath Spa at $280-520/night is built above natural thermal waters and the spa access alone is worth one of those nights. Old Bank Hotel Oxford at $180-340/night anchors the university city perfectly.
Oxford and Bath together make the ideal 4-night circuit from London: 2 nights Oxford, 2 nights Bath, back to London via Bristol or direct. The Cotswolds villages (Bourton-on-the-Water, Burford) work as half-day drives from either base.
Browse all Southwest England hotels →Best Areas by Vibe
Tell us how you travel and we'll point you to the right part of United Kingdom.
Culture
British Museum, National Gallery, V&A Museum, Natural History Museum: all free, all in London within 3km of each other. Edinburgh has National Museum of Scotland (free) and the castle. York has the National Railway Museum (free). The UK has more free world-class museums than anywhere on earth.
Romantic
The Gainsborough Bath Spa at $280-520/night for a weekend with natural thermal waters and Georgian architecture. The Zetter Townhouse Marylebone in London for boutique intimacy with serious cocktails in the townhouse lounge. Edinburgh in October: crowds gone, light extraordinary, fewer tourists.
Heritage
Chester city walls date to Roman times (60AD) and you can walk the entire 3km circuit. York Minster is the largest Gothic cathedral in Northern Europe. The Chester Grosvenor at $220-420/night puts you inside this medieval city. Edinburgh Castle has been occupied for 3,000 years.
Foodie
London Borough Market (Saturdays, 8am-5pm) for the best food market in the UK. Edinburgh Leith waterfront for serious restaurants without London prices. Liverpool Bold Street for independent cafes and restaurants. Bath Milsom Place has 6 good restaurants within 100 meters of each other.
Budget
Premier Inn central locations at $60-100/night are genuinely fine across the UK. York is the best value interesting city: $110-200/night for The Principal York, museums mostly free, compact enough to walk everywhere. Liverpool has better value than Edinburgh for similar quality at $140-260/night.
Family
London Natural History Museum and Science Museum are free and built for children. Edinburgh Zoo has giant pandas and a penguin parade that happens daily at 2:15pm. York has the Jorvik Viking Centre that children actually engage with. The UK rail system with a family railcard gives 60% off child fares.
How We Vetted These Hotels
Every hotel on this list went through the same evaluation. Here's exactly how we score them.
We reviewed 200,000+ UK hotels on Booking.com. Checked location in the neighborhood, value against comparable properties, and what repeat guests said when they stopped being polite. These 10 made the cut.
Location Quality
Is the neighborhood walkable? Are restaurants, shops, and attractions within 10 minutes on foot? How does it feel after dark? We evaluate safety, public transport access, and whether the area has genuine local character or just tourist traps. A hotel in the wrong neighborhood ruins a trip. That's why location carries the most weight.
Value for Money
We compare what you pay against what you get. A €150 hotel with a great location, clean rooms, and helpful staff can outscore a €500 hotel with fancy amenities in a bad area. We factor in seasonal pricing, cancellation policies, and hidden costs like tourist tax and breakfast surcharges. The goal is finding the best ratio, not the lowest price.
Guest Experience
We analyze thousands of verified guest reviews across multiple platforms, looking for patterns rather than individual complaints. Consistent praise for cleanliness, staff, and room quality counts. We also assess the intangibles: does the hotel have character? Would you recommend it to a friend? A soul-less chain hotel with perfect facilities still loses to a well-run boutique with personality.
Hotels that score below 8.0 don't make our list. Hotels can't pay for placement. We update scores every quarter based on new reviews. If a hotel's quality drops, it gets removed. Read more about our approach on the about page.
When to Visit United Kingdom: Season by Season
Hotel prices, crowds, and weather vary dramatically. Here's what to expect each season.
Spring (Mar-May)
May is the sweet spot. The daffodils are done but the school holidays have not started. London hotel prices are 15-20% below summer. Bath is at its best: mild enough for walking the Georgian streets, warm enough for the Roman Baths outdoor pool. Edinburgh in May has long days and manageable crowds. Book London 4-6 weeks ahead, everywhere else 2-3 weeks.
Summer (Jun-Aug)
The UK in July and August is busier and pricier than many visitors expect. School holidays mean London hotel prices spike 25-40%. Edinburgh August is Fringe Festival: 25 days, 3,000 shows, 500,000 visitors, and hotel prices that triple. If Fringe is your goal, book 4 months ahead and budget 2-3x normal rates. If it is not your goal, avoid Edinburgh in August entirely.
Autumn (Sep-Nov)
September and October are the best months for value and experience combined. London hotel prices drop, museum queues shrink, and the city feels manageable again. The Cotswolds in October is genuinely beautiful. Scottish Highlands driving is at its most dramatic with autumn color. Edinburgh reverts to itself after Fringe, with better restaurant availability and normal prices.
Winter (Dec-Feb)
The UK in winter is cold and dark but cheap. London hotel prices hit their annual low in January and February. Museums are empty. The Christmas markets in Bath (November-December) and London (Hyde Park) are worth experiencing once. New Year in Edinburgh (Hogmanay) is one of the world's great celebrations: book 4-6 months ahead and expect $400-700/night at Balmoral.
How to Book Hotels in United Kingdom
Smart booking strategies that save money without sacrificing quality.
Buy an Oyster card on arrival in London
An Oyster card for London transport costs $6.50 deposit and saves you 40-50% per journey versus buying paper tickets. Tap in and out on every tube, bus, and Overground journey. It caps daily spending automatically. The only alternative worth considering is a contactless UK bank card, which uses the same pricing. Never buy individual tube tickets from the machine.
Book National Rail tickets 3-4 weeks ahead for cheapest fares
UK trains have a confusing pricing structure but one rule cuts through: book 3-4 weeks ahead for advance fares that save 50-60% over walk-up prices. London to Edinburgh drops from $120 walk-up to $40-60 advance. London to Bath from $45 to $20. Trainline.com or directly at nationalrail.co.uk. Flexible tickets cost much more and are rarely necessary.
The Roman Baths in Bath require advance booking
The Roman Baths sell out, particularly in summer and on weekends. Book at least 1 week ahead at romanbaths.co.uk. The adjacent Pump Room restaurant does a good afternoon tea if you want the full Bath experience in one morning. Entry is $22-26 depending on season. The Thermae Bath Spa (open-air rooftop pool, modern building) is separate and also requires booking.
Oyster card does not work outside London
Outside London, each train journey is a separate ticket. Scotland has ScotRail passes for multi-day travel. The UK does not have a single nationwide rail pass that works the way European rail passes do. A BritRail pass for international visitors can work out cheaper for intensive multi-city travel: compare the pass price against individual advance bookings before committing.
Edinburgh Fringe Festival: commit or avoid
Edinburgh in August means the Fringe: 25 days, 3,000 shows from street performers to international theatre premieres, and a city transformed. Hotel prices triple from normal $130-240 to $350-700 for the same rooms. Either book 4 months ahead and budget accordingly (and it is genuinely extraordinary), or visit in September-October when Edinburgh is at its normal best price.
Hotel breakfast in the UK is often not worth the add-on
UK hotels frequently charge $18-28 per person for breakfast as an optional extra. In most cities, a better independent cafe is 5 minutes walk away for $8-12. The exception is The Balmoral Edinburgh: their breakfast buffet is part of the luxury tier experience and worth the included cost. Premier Inn includes breakfast at a fair price and it is functional. Most boutique hotels charge premium for average food.
Frequently Asked Questions About Hotels in United Kingdom
Straight answers from our team after reviewing hotels across United Kingdom.
What is the best area to stay in London?
Marylebone and Fitzrovia for first-timers. You are 10 minutes walk from Regent Street, Baker Street tube is around the corner, and the streets actually feel like London instead of a tourist corridor. The Zetter Townhouse Marylebone at $200-380/night sits in this neighborhood and gets it right. Skip anything around Leicester Square or Piccadilly Circus: overpriced, loud, and surrounded by fast food.
How much should I budget for hotels in the UK?
London is the outlier. Artist Residence starts at $120/night for a boutique stay, but decent mid-range in central London runs $200-350/night. Outside London the UK is dramatically better value: The Principal York at $110-200/night, Hope Street Hotel Liverpool at $140-260/night. Edinburgh mid-range runs $130-240/night. Bath is expensive: Gainsborough Spa starts at $280/night and feels worth it.
Is London worth the cost for a UK trip?
Yes, but you do not need to stay in the center for everything. Shoreditch and Hoxton have character that Mayfair does not. The City (financial district) has excellent mid-week deals when business travelers leave. For a 5-day UK trip, consider 3 nights London plus 2 nights Bath or Edinburgh rather than 5 nights London at premium prices.
When is the best time to visit the UK?
May to September for reasonable weather (14-22C), though July and August see school holidays driving London prices up 25-40%. Late September and October give you autumn light, thinner crowds, and hotel prices starting to drop. Bath and the Cotswolds are genuinely beautiful in October. Edinburgh Fringe Festival in August is extraordinary but hotel prices triple and you need to book 3-4 months ahead.
Is Edinburgh better than London for a UK first visit?
They serve different purposes. London is the cultural capital with world-class museums (British Museum, National Gallery, all free entry), the West End, and 15 million people. Edinburgh has Arthur's Seat in the city center, the Royal Mile within walking distance of everything, and a food scene that now rivals London. For a 7-day UK trip, do 4 nights London and 3 nights Edinburgh by train (5 hours on LNER).
Which UK city has the best food scene beyond London?
Edinburgh has transformed in the last decade. The Leith waterfront area has serious restaurants per square mile that rival anywhere in Britain. Birmingham (Michelin-starred Carters of Moseley), Bristol (Casamia), and Manchester (Mana) are genuinely world-class. Bath has one-Michelin-star Olive Tree within the Queensberry Hotel, 20 minutes from the Roman Baths.
How far in advance should I book UK hotels?
London in summer and Edinburgh during Fringe Festival (August): 3-4 months ahead. The Chester Grosvenor at $220-420/night books up for peak weekends 2 months ahead. Bath around summer is tight. The Balmoral in Edinburgh for Hogmanay (New Year) requires 4-6 months. Off-peak UK travel (November-March, excluding Christmas) can often be booked 2-3 weeks ahead with better rates.
Is the Cotswolds worth staying overnight?
One night, yes. The Cotswolds villages (Bourton-on-the-Water, Burford, Chipping Campden) are beautiful but small: you cover the main village in 2-3 hours. A night at a Cotswolds pub hotel at $120-180/night breaks the London-Bath circuit nicely. As a day trip from London it works too but the 2-hour drive each way is exhausting. Take the train to Moreton-in-Marsh instead.
Do I need a car to see the UK outside London?
Not for the classic circuit. London to Bath to Edinburgh to York: all by train. National Rail connects every major UK city. Car hire makes sense for Scottish Highlands driving (Inverness, Glen Coe), the Lake District, and rural Wales. In London, a car is actively counterproductive: congestion charge, parking fees of $30-50/day, and zones that take longer by car than tube.
What makes The Balmoral in Edinburgh special?
Location, almost entirely. It sits at the east end of Princes Street, a 10-minute walk from Edinburgh Castle and 5 minutes from Waverley Station. At $380-720/night you get white-gloved service, Number One Restaurant (Michelin-starred), and the sense that you are in exactly the right place. For value, Hotel du Vin Glasgow at $130-240/night gives you better food and atmosphere per pound spent.
What is the best way to get between UK cities?
Train, almost always. London to Edinburgh: 4.5 hours on LNER from Kings Cross, $40-120 depending on booking lead time. London to Bath: 1 hour 20 minutes on GWR from Paddington. London to Manchester: 2 hours on Avanti from Euston. Book 3-4 weeks ahead on trainline.com for the cheapest advance fares. Bus (National Express, Megabus) is cheaper but takes 2-3 times longer.
Which UK hotels are overhyped?
Most central London hotels charging $350+ for a standard double in Covent Garden. The rooms are usually small and you are paying for postcode, not quality. Large chain hotels on Bath Road near Heathrow: avoid unless you have a 6am flight. Budget chains (Premier Inn, Travelodge) are actually fine at $60-100/night and predictably comfortable. The hype-to-value ratio is worst in London tourist zones.
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