The best hotels in Liverpool
Liverpool has 8,000+ places to stay, and most of them are not worth your time or money. We reviewed the standouts. these 10 made the cut.
Our Top Picks in Liverpool
Click any hotel to check availability and book at the best price.
Hatters Hostel Liverpool
City Centre, Liverpool
Free cancellation & Pay later
Tune Hotel Liverpool
City Centre, Liverpool
Free cancellation & Pay later
Jurys Inn Liverpool
Waterfront, Liverpool
Free cancellation & Pay later
Pullman Liverpool Hotel
Kings Waterfront, Liverpool
Free cancellation & Pay later
Aloft Liverpool
Ropewalks, Liverpool
Free cancellation & Pay later
Crowne Plaza Liverpool City Centre
City Centre, Liverpool
Free cancellation & Pay later
Titanic Hotel Liverpool
Stanley Dock, Liverpool
Free cancellation & Pay later
Hope Street Hotel
Georgian Quarter, Liverpool
Free cancellation & Pay later
30 James Street, Home of the Titanic
Waterfront, Liverpool
Free cancellation & Pay later
Signature Living George Best Hotel
City Centre, Liverpool
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 | Hatters Hostel Liverpool | City Centre, Liverpool | $45–75/night | 8.1/10 | Budget Pick |
| 2 | Tune Hotel Liverpool | City Centre, Liverpool | $65–95/night | 7.8/10 | Best Value |
| 3 | Jurys Inn Liverpool | Waterfront, Liverpool | $100–150/night | 8.3/10 | Most Popular |
| 4 | Pullman Liverpool Hotel | Kings Waterfront, Liverpool | $120–195/night | 8.5/10 | Business Pick |
| 5 | Aloft Liverpool | Ropewalks, Liverpool | $130–185/night | 8.6/10 | Hidden Gem |
| 6 | Crowne Plaza Liverpool City Centre | City Centre, Liverpool | $140–200/night | 8.7/10 | Top Rated |
| 7 | Titanic Hotel Liverpool | Stanley Dock, Liverpool | $155–220/night | 9/10 | Romantic Stay |
| 8 | Hope Street Hotel | Georgian Quarter, Liverpool | $170–230/night | 8.9/10 | Best Location |
| 9 | 30 James Street, Home of the Titanic | Waterfront, Liverpool | $250–380/night | 9.1/10 | Luxury Pick |
| 10 | Signature Living George Best Hotel | City Centre, Liverpool | $280–450/night | 9.2/10 | Top Rated |
Why These Hotels Made Our List
Every hotel earned its spot. Here's exactly why we picked each one.
Hatters Hostel Liverpool
Hatters occupies a converted Victorian building on Mount Pleasant, a short walk from the main shopping streets and Liverpool Lime Street station. Private rooms and dormitories are clean and functional, nothing fancy but well maintained. The common areas are lively and good for meeting other travelers. Staff are genuinely helpful with local tips. Ideal for solo travelers keeping costs low.
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Tune Hotel Liverpool
This compact budget hotel sits on Lord Nelson Street, directly opposite Lime Street station, making it one of the most convenient spots in the city for arrivals. Rooms are small but smartly designed, with decent beds and strong showers. Extras like parking cost more, so factor that in. The location saves you taxi fares from the station. Good for a short city break on a tight budget.
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Jurys Inn Liverpool
Jurys Inn sits on Keel Wharf right along the Albert Dock waterfront, putting you steps from the Tate Liverpool and the Beatles Story museum. Rooms are modern, spacious by city-centre standards, and most have pleasant views of the dock or the Mersey. The bar downstairs is a reliable spot for a drink after a day of sightseeing. Breakfast is solid and included in some rates. A dependable choice for first-time visitors to the city.
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Pullman Liverpool Hotel
The Pullman sits at Kings Dock, directly attached to the M and S Bank Arena and the Exhibition Centre Liverpool. Business travelers benefit most here, with large rooms, a proper gym, and a calm restaurant that avoids the tourist bustle nearby. The lobby bar has good cocktails and views toward the river. Leisure guests will find the location slightly removed from the main shopping and nightlife strips. Service is efficient and consistent.
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Aloft Liverpool
Aloft occupies a converted warehouse on North John Street at the edge of the Ropewalks district, one of the city's most creative and independently spirited neighborhoods. The interiors lean industrial-chic, with high ceilings and a lively WXYZ bar in the lobby that draws both guests and locals. Rooms are well-sized and the beds are genuinely comfortable. The area is walking distance from the Albert Dock and Bold Street cafes. A good pick if you want character alongside comfort.
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Crowne Plaza Liverpool City Centre
The Crowne Plaza stands on St Nicholas Place with direct views across the Pier Head and the famous Three Graces buildings. Rooms on the upper floors have some of the best water views available at this price point in the city. The on-site restaurant is decent for dinner but breakfast is the stronger meal. The hotel pool and spa add real value for a weekend stay. Staff handle large group check-ins efficiently, which is rare at this scale.
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Titanic Hotel Liverpool
The Titanic Hotel is set inside the vast Victorian tobacco warehouse at Stanley Dock, north of the city centre, and the building itself is the main attraction. Exposed brick, soaring ceilings, and carefully restored details give the place a mood that modern hotels rarely achieve. The Rum Bar and Brasserie are both worth visiting even if you are not staying. The location is a ten-minute taxi from the Albert Dock, so it is not the most walkable base. For couples, the suites are exceptional.
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Hope Street Hotel
Hope Street Hotel sits in Liverpool's Georgian Quarter between the city's two cathedrals, a genuinely beautiful stretch of the city that most tourists miss. The building is a converted Victorian carriage works, with rooms that mix period architecture and contemporary design well. The London Carriage Works restaurant on the ground floor has a strong local reputation for its food. It is a quieter base than the waterfront hotels, but taxis downtown take five minutes. A favorite among returning visitors who know the city.
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30 James Street, Home of the Titanic
This hotel occupies the former White Star Line headquarters on Water Street, the same building where bookings for the Titanic were once processed. The heritage rooms on the upper floors feature original ornate plasterwork and views across the Pier Head that are genuinely hard to beat. The rooftop terrace and bar attract Liverpool residents as much as hotel guests, which is a good sign. Service is personal and attentive without being stiff. Rooms are large, quiet, and thoughtfully appointed. One of the most distinctive hotel experiences in the north of England.
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Signature Living George Best Hotel
The George Best Hotel on Victoria Street is a statement property from Signature Living, designed for groups and special occasions as much as standard overnight stays. Themed suites are extravagant and immaculately finished, with full kitchens, private bars, and enough space for large gatherings. The design throughout is bold and theatrical, not for guests who prefer understatement. Central location puts you within walking distance of the main bars, restaurants, and shopping. Pre-booking the full suite experience is strongly recommended over standard rooms.
Check AvailabilityWhere to Stay in Liverpool
The neighborhood you pick matters more than the hotel.
Best hotels for first-time visitors
Stay on the Waterfront. Jurys Inn on Keel Wharf puts you 5 minutes from Albert Dock, 8 minutes from the Beatles Story, and walking distance to the Pier Head. That's the holy trinity of Liverpool must-sees without a single taxi needed.
If Jurys is full or over budget, Crowne Plaza on Princes Dock is your fallback. It's rated 8.7 and runs $140-200/night, which is honest value for the location. Don't sleep on the Pullman either if you want a step up in room quality.
Best budget hotels in Liverpool
Hatters Hostel on Mount Pleasant is the best budget bed in Liverpool. At $45-75/night, it's clean, social, and a 12-minute walk from Albert Dock through the Georgian Quarter. The common areas are genuinely good and the staff know the city properly.
Tune Hotel in the City Centre is the next rung up at $65-95/night. It's leaner on extras but the beds are comfortable and the location near Liverpool One is hard to beat for the price. If you're here to explore and sleep, not to lounge in a hotel, these two cover you.
Best luxury hotels in Liverpool
30 James Street on the Waterfront is the real deal. It's a converted former White Star Line headquarters, the same company that built the Titanic, and the interiors reflect that history without being gimmicky. Rates run $250-380/night and every pound of it shows.
Signature Living George Best Hotel on Victoria Street is the other option at $280-450/night. It's theatrical, over-the-top in the best way, and the suites are genuinely unlike anything else in the city. Book the George Best Suite if you want a story to tell.
Liverpool hotels by neighbourhood
The Waterfront covers Albert Dock, Kings Waterfront, and Stanley Dock. It's the most visited stretch and hotels here range from $100 at Jurys Inn to $380 at 30 James Street. City Centre means Ropewalks, Liverpool One, and the area around Bold Street, where Aloft Liverpool sits in the middle of the best bar and restaurant scene in the city.
The Georgian Quarter, centred on Hope Street and Rodney Street, is quieter and more residential. Hope Street Hotel is the anchor here and it's excellent. Stanley Dock, where the Titanic Hotel is, feels slightly isolated but it's only a 20-minute walk from Albert Dock along the dock road.
When to book and when to avoid
April is the danger month. Grand National week fills every decent hotel within 3 miles of the city centre, and prices can double overnight. Book 3 months ahead for April stays or accept that you're paying a premium. The same rule applies to major Anfield European nights, usually in October-November.
September is the sweet spot. The summer crowds have thinned, prices are 15-25% lower than July-August, the weather sits around 13-17°C, and the city has a post-summer energy that locals prefer. International Beatles Week in August is worth the crowds if you're a fan, but budget an extra $30-50/night for the privilege.
What locals know that tourists don't
Ropewalks is the neighbourhood your hotel concierge probably won't mention first. It's the creative quarter, running roughly between Bold Street and Duke Street, and it has Liverpool's best independent restaurants, dive bars, and music venues in about a 10-minute radius. Aloft Liverpool sits right in the middle of it.
The Mersey Ferry from Pier Head costs around $6 for a return and gives you the best view of the Liverpool skyline, the Three Graces, and the Royal Liver Building. Most visitors queue for a Beatles tour. The locals take the ferry instead. Do both, but start with the ferry on a clear morning.
Liverpool's best neighborhoods
The Waterfront and City Centre are where most visitors land, and honestly, they're the right call for most trips. If you want character over convenience, the Georgian Quarter on Hope Street is worth the 10-minute walk from the action.
Waterfront 3 vetted hotels Liverpool's showpiece strip. Walk to everything that matters.
Liverpool's showpiece strip. Walk to everything that matters.
The Waterfront runs from the Pier Head south through Albert Dock and Kings Waterfront down to Stanley Dock. It's the postcard version of Liverpool and for good reason. The Three Graces, the Beatles Story, and Tate Liverpool are all within a 10-minute walk of any hotel here.
Hotels range from $100/night at Jurys Inn on Keel Wharf to $380/night at 30 James Street. That's a genuine spread, not a marketing trick. Jurys punches above its price point for location alone, and 30 James Street is one of the most characterful hotels in the north of England.
Stanley Dock is the outlier. It's 20 minutes north of Albert Dock on foot, which feels isolated until you're actually there. The Titanic Hotel fills the entire converted tobacco warehouse and the sense of scale is something most city hotels can't replicate.
City Centre 4 vetted hotels Everything on your doorstep, noise included.
Everything on your doorstep, noise included.
The City Centre covers everything from Liverpool One shopping up through Mathew Street and across to the Ropewalks quarter. It's the most convenient base, and the trade-off is weekend noise, particularly around Concert Square and Bold Street on Friday and Saturday nights.
Hatters Hostel on Mount Pleasant is the budget anchor at $45-75/night, while Crowne Plaza on Princes Dock sits at the top of the City Centre range at $140-200/night. Aloft Liverpool in Ropewalks at $130-185/night is the most interesting mid-range option, with a rooftop bar that locals actually use.
Ropewalks specifically, the area between Bold Street, Duke Street, and Seel Street, is where the independent food and bar scene concentrates. You're 12 minutes walk from Albert Dock and 5 minutes from the Cavern Club. It's the best trade-off of access and atmosphere in Liverpool.
Georgian Quarter 1 vetted hotel Quiet, beautiful, and 15 minutes from the Waterfront.
Quiet, beautiful, and 15 minutes from the Waterfront.
Hope Street is the spine of this neighbourhood, running between Liverpool's two cathedrals. It's one of the most architecturally striking streets in any English city. Hope Street Hotel at $170-230/night is the only vetted option here, and it earns every penny.
You're 15 minutes walk from Albert Dock, which is slightly longer than from the Waterfront hotels. But the upside is a calmer street feel, genuinely excellent restaurants on Rodney Street and Hope Street itself, and a neighbourhood that locals actually live in.
This is the right base if you're here for the cathedrals, the Philharmonic Hall, or a conference at the nearby universities. If you're here primarily for the Beatles and waterfront tourism, stay closer to the dock.
Kings Waterfront 1 vetted hotel Business-ready, conference-close, views included.
Business-ready, conference-close, views included.
Kings Waterfront sits just south of the main Albert Dock stretch, anchored by the ACC Liverpool arena and convention centre. The Pullman Liverpool Hotel is the flagship here at $120-195/night, and it's specifically designed for the business traveller who doesn't want to compromise on location.
You're 5 minutes walk from Albert Dock, 8 minutes from the Echo Arena for evening events, and directly connected to the conference centre. The rooms are spacious by UK city standards and the Pullman brand delivers consistent quality.
If you're not here for business or a conference, there's not a strong reason to choose Kings Waterfront over Albert Dock proper. But if you are, it's the obvious call.
Best Areas by Vibe
Tell us how you travel and we'll point you to the right part of Liverpool.
Romantic
Stanley Dock and the Titanic Hotel is the pick. A converted Victorian warehouse with rooms that feel like a private loft, 5 minutes from the Leeds-Liverpool Canal towpath for an evening walk.
Culture
Base yourself in the Georgian Quarter on Hope Street, between the two cathedrals and a 3-minute walk from the Philharmonic Hall. The whole stretch is a living architecture lesson.
Family
The Waterfront, specifically around Albert Dock, keeps kids busy for 2 full days with the Beatles Story, the Museum of Liverpool, and Merseyside Maritime Museum all within a 5-minute walk.
Budget
Mount Pleasant in the City Centre is your zone. Hatters Hostel starts at $45/night and you're 12 minutes walk from Albert Dock through the Georgian Quarter, which costs nothing to walk through.
Beach
Stay on the Waterfront and take the Mersey Ferry across to Birkenhead, then connect to West Kirby or Crosby Beach in under 40 minutes for Anthony Gormley's iron men installation.
Foodie
Ropewalks is the neighbourhood. Bold Street and the streets around it have Liverpool's best independent food scene, from Mowgli to Maray, and Aloft Liverpool puts you right in the middle of it.
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.
When to Visit Liverpool
When to visit Liverpool and what to pay.
Winter (December-February)
This is Liverpool at its most affordable. Hatters drops to $45/night, and even Waterfront mid-range hotels hit $90-130/night without much effort. Christmas Markets on Liverpool ONE run through December and add genuine warmth to the city centre, but January and February are quiet, cold, and best for budget-focused city breaks.
Spring (March-May)
Spring is the smart call for most visitors. Prices are reasonable at $80-180/night across mid-range Waterfront hotels, the city is lively without being overwhelmed, and you get the Mersey looking its best on a clear March or April morning. The one trap: Grand National week in April sends prices up 40-60% and hotels near the city centre book out fast. Either book 3 months ahead or plan around it entirely.
Summer (June-August)
Peak season brings International Beatles Week in August, music festivals, and a city that genuinely buzzes along the Waterfront. Hotels on Albert Dock and Kings Waterfront hit $180-280/night in July-August, and anything under $100 disappears weeks out. Book 6-8 weeks ahead minimum. The upside: the city is at its most fun and the Pier Head terrace bars are genuinely great on a warm evening.
Autumn (September-November)
September is the best month to visit Liverpool, full stop. Prices drop 15-25% from summer peaks, sitting around $85-190/night for solid Waterfront options. The weather stays at 13-17°C through September, the crowds thin noticeably after the first week, and the city's cultural calendar picks back up with the Liverpool Biennial and autumn music events. Champions League nights in October and November spike hotel prices near Anfield, but city centre hotels hold steady.
Booking Tips for Liverpool
Insider tips for booking hotels in Liverpool.
Avoid Grand National week unless you're going to the races
Every April, Aintree Racecourse hosts the Grand National and Liverpool hotels spike 40-60% across the board. A $130/night Waterfront room becomes $200+ overnight. If you're not going to the races, book for the week before or after. If you are, book your hotel in March at the latest.
The 500 bus beats a taxi from the airport
Liverpool John Lennon Airport to the city centre is 30-35 minutes on the 500 Arriva bus, which runs to Queen Square Bus Station and costs around $5. A taxi or Uber to Albert Dock runs $25-35. Unless you're travelling with a lot of luggage, the bus is the obvious call and runs every 30 minutes from early morning.
Book Titanic Hotel and 30 James Street on weeknights for better rates
Both luxury properties serve a strong weekend leisure market. Booking Sunday through Thursday at Titanic Hotel at Stanley Dock or 30 James Street on the Waterfront can save you $40-70/night compared to Friday-Saturday rates. The hotels are quieter mid-week and the service, if anything, is more attentive.
Ropewalks is noisier than it looks on a map
Aloft Liverpool in Ropewalks is an excellent hotel, but the area around Concert Square and Seel Street is active until 3-4am on weekends. Ask for a room on the upper floors facing away from the street when you book. You'll sleep better and still be 5 minutes from everything. It's worth the direct request.
Merseytravel day tickets cover buses and ferries for $7
A Merseytravel SaveAway ticket covers unlimited bus travel across Merseyside and includes the Mersey Ferry for around $7 per day. If you're going to Anfield from the Waterfront, taking a day trip to Crosby Beach, or just moving around the city without taxis, it pays for itself in 2 journeys. Pick it up at any Merseytravel Centre including the one at Lime Street.
Hope Street Hotel's restaurant is worth a visit even if you're not staying
The London Carriage Works at Hope Street Hotel on Hope Street is one of Liverpool's best restaurants and a well-kept secret among visitors who assume hotel restaurants are average. A 2-course dinner runs around $35-45 per person. Book a table for the evening you arrive to skip the decision fatigue of finding somewhere after a long journey.
Hotels in Liverpool — FAQ
Everything you need to know before booking hotels in Liverpool.
What's the best area to stay in Liverpool for first-timers?
The Waterfront, specifically the Albert Dock and Kings Waterfront stretch, is where you want to be. You're within a 10-minute walk of the Beatles Story, Tate Liverpool, and the Museum of Liverpool, all without needing a taxi. Hotels here run $100-220/night, which covers everything from Jurys Inn to the Pullman.
Is Liverpool expensive for hotels?
Not compared to Manchester or London. Budget beds at Hatters Hostel on Mount Pleasant start around $45/night. Mid-range options on the Waterfront sit at $100-185/night. You'll only crack $250+ if you go full luxury at 30 James Street or the George Best Hotel on Victoria Street.
How do I get from Liverpool Airport to the city centre hotels?
The 500 Arriva bus from Liverpool John Lennon Airport runs directly to Queen Square Bus Station in the city centre, taking about 30-35 minutes and costing around $5. A taxi from the airport to Albert Dock will run you $25-35 depending on traffic. Uber is usually cheaper than black cabs for that route.
When is the worst time to book hotels in Liverpool?
Grand National week in April is the worst. Hotels within 2 miles of the city centre sell out weeks ahead, and prices spike 40-60% across the board. The same applies to any major Anfield fixture weekend, especially Champions League nights, and the International Beatles Week in August when Mathew Street gets absolutely packed.
Which Liverpool neighbourhood should I avoid for hotels?
Avoid booking anything directly around Lime Street Station without reading recent reviews carefully. The area has improved, but some budget hotels there are overpriced for what they deliver, and noise from the station and late-night Bold Street crowd can be relentless. You're better off 5 minutes further south into the Ropewalks or Georgian Quarter.
Is the Waterfront worth the premium over City Centre hotels?
Yes, for 2-3 night stays. You wake up to the Mersey, you're 5 minutes from Albert Dock, and the evening walk along the Pier Head is genuinely one of the best free things in the city. City Centre hotels like Crowne Plaza on Princes Dock are fine, but they don't give you that.
Are there good romantic hotels in Liverpool?
Titanic Hotel at Stanley Dock is the one. It's a converted Victorian tobacco warehouse, and the rooms are enormous, with exposed brick and ceiling heights that make you feel like you're in a New York loft. It's about 15 minutes walk from Albert Dock, which puts it slightly off the tourist trail, but that's part of the appeal. Rates run $155-220/night.
What's the best hotel for business travel in Liverpool?
Pullman Liverpool at Kings Waterfront is the default for corporate stays. It's a 5-minute walk from the ACC Liverpool conference centre, rooms have proper desks, and the Wi-Fi is reliable. Rates are $120-195/night, which is fair for the spec. Hope Street Hotel is worth considering too if your meetings are in the Georgian Quarter or the universities.
How far is Anfield from the city centre hotels?
From most Waterfront or City Centre hotels, Anfield is 3-4 miles north, which is about a 15-minute Uber or a 30-minute walk through Everton. The 26 bus from the city centre stops near the stadium. On match days, taxis surge, so build in extra time or walk the first mile to Walton Road and pick one up there.
Can I walk between the main Liverpool attractions from a central hotel?
Absolutely. From the Waterfront, you're 5 minutes to Albert Dock, 8 minutes to the Museum of Liverpool, and 12 minutes to Liverpool One shopping. Mathew Street and the Cavern Quarter is another 10 minutes northeast. The whole city centre is walkable in under 25 minutes end to end, which is one of its best qualities.
What's the cheapest month to visit Liverpool?
January and February are your best bet. Hotels drop to $45-90/night even at mid-range properties, crowds are minimal, and you'll often find Waterfront hotels at City Centre prices. It's cold, averaging 3-7°C, but the museums are free, the bars are quieter, and you'll actually get a table at Mowgli on Bold Street without waiting.
Is the Georgian Quarter a good base for visitors?
It's great if you like independent restaurants, coffee shops, and a calmer street feel. Hope Street is stunning, lined with Georgian townhouses and sitting between the two cathedrals. You're about 15 minutes walk from Albert Dock, which is manageable, and Hope Street Hotel here is one of the best-located properties in the city.