Manchester gets over 10 million visitors a year and the hotel scene has caught up. From converted cotton mills in the Northern Quarter to glass towers in Spinningfields, the city has more good places to stay than ever. Here is the honest guide from people who actually live here.
Best Area to Stay
Quick version: Northern Quarter for independent bars, street food, and walking distance to everything. Deansgate/Spinningfields for smarter restaurants and rooftop bars. Ancoats for the best food scene in the city. Piccadilly for transport links. Avoid anything marketed as “Manchester city centre” that is actually in Salford Quays — it is a tram ride away, not walking distance.
Luxury (Over £200/night)
The Midland Hotel
The grand dame of Manchester hotels. The Midland has been on Peter Street since 1903 and the building is magnificent — Edwardian baroque, marble lobby, the kind of place where Rolls met Royce (literally, that happened here). Rooms have been modernised without losing the character. The spa is excellent. Mr Cooper’s House and Garden restaurant downstairs is worth eating at even if you are not staying.
Price: £200–400/night. Best for: Special occasions, history lovers. Location: Peter Street, walk everywhere.
Hotel Gotham
A five-star boutique in a 1935 art deco former bank on King Street. Hotel Gotham is theatrical — the rooms have a dark, glamorous aesthetic with brass fittings, velvet, and views over the city. The rooftop bar, Club Brass, is members and guests only and the drinks are strong. The building itself is one of the most striking in Manchester.
Price: £220–500/night. Best for: Couples, birthdays, Instagram. Location: King Street, dead centre.
The Edwardian Manchester (Radisson Collection)
In the Free Trade Hall on Peter Street — the building where Bob Dylan went electric and the Sex Pistols played their legendary gig. The hotel is five-star Radisson with modern rooms, a good spa, and Peter Street Parlour bar downstairs. The history of the building adds something that a generic five-star cannot match.
Price: £180–350/night. Best for: Music history nerds, business travellers. Location: Peter Street.
Mid-Range (£100–200/night)
King Street Townhouse
A boutique hotel in a Grade II listed building on King Street with a rooftop pool and bar overlooking the Town Hall. The rooms are well designed — exposed brick, roll-top baths in some, good beds. The infinity pool on the roof is tiny but the views are outstanding. Brunch in the ground floor restaurant is one of the best hotel breakfasts in the city.
Price: £130–250/night. Best for: Rooftop pool, brunch, central location. Location: King Street.
Hotel Indigo
On Chapel Street in Salford, just across the river from the city centre. Hotel Indigo is modern, well-priced, and the rooms are a good size by Manchester standards. The neighbourhood is up and coming — new bars and restaurants opening on Chapel Street. A ten-minute walk to Deansgate.
Price: £100–170/night. Best for: Good value near the centre. Location: Chapel Street, Salford.
Native Manchester
Aparthotel in a converted 1870s warehouse in Ducie Street, near Piccadilly. The apartments have full kitchens, living rooms, and the warehouse conversion is genuinely beautiful — exposed beams, iron columns, original brickwork. Good for longer stays or groups who want space. Ducie Street Warehouse bar and restaurant is on the ground floor.
Price: £110–200/night. Best for: Groups, longer stays, self-catering. Location: Piccadilly, walk to NQ in 5 mins.
Maldron Hotel
On Charles Street between Piccadilly and the NQ. Modern, clean, reliable. Rooms are not huge but well designed and the location is hard to beat — two minutes to the Northern Quarter, five to Piccadilly Gardens. The rooftop bar has decent views. Good mid-range option without paying boutique prices.
Price: £90–160/night. Best for: Location, value. Location: Charles Street.
The Cow Hollow Hotel
A small boutique on Newton Street in the Northern Quarter. Only a handful of rooms, each individually designed. It feels like staying in someone’s very cool flat rather than a hotel. The NQ is on your doorstep. The building is a converted Victorian warehouse. One of the most characterful stays in the city.
Price: £100–180/night. Best for: NQ location, character, couples. Location: Northern Quarter.
Budget (Under £100/night)
Motel One Manchester-Royal Exchange
German budget-design chain on Cross Street. Motel One consistently delivers rooms that look like they cost twice the price. The design is minimal, the beds are good, and the location next to the Royal Exchange is central to everything. No frills but no disappointments either. Book direct for the best rate.
Price: £60–100/night. Best for: Budget with good design. Location: Cross Street, city centre.
YHA Manchester
The youth hostel on Potato Wharf in Castlefield. Private rooms available alongside dorms. The canalside location is lovely and Castlefield is one of the nicest areas in the city centre. Clean, well-run, and a fraction of the price of a hotel. The bar overlooks the canal.
Price: £20–40/night (dorm), £60–90 (private). Best for: Backpackers, solo travellers, budget. Location: Castlefield, 10 min walk to Deansgate.
Premier Inn Manchester City Centre
There are several Premier Inns in the city centre. The Portland Street one is the best located. Premier Inn is never exciting but it is always reliable — clean room, good bed, hot shower, no surprises. The app frequently has deals under £50 if you book ahead. It is the boring choice that never lets you down.
Price: £45–90/night. Best for: Reliability, families, budget. Location: Multiple city centre locations.
Selina NQ1
A hostel-hotel hybrid in the Northern Quarter aimed at digital nomads and younger travellers. Co-working space, social events, rooftop area, and a mix of dorms and private rooms. The NQ location means you are in the middle of everything. The vibe is social — if you are travelling solo and want to meet people, this is the one.
Price: £25–50/night (dorm), £70–120 (private). Best for: Solo travellers, digital nomads. Location: Northern Quarter.
Tips for Booking
- Football weekends: Prices spike when Man United or Man City play at home. Check fixtures before booking.
- Festival weekends: Parklife (June) and Warehouse Project season (Sept–Dec) push prices up. Book early.
- Christmas Markets: November and December are peak. Hotels sell out weeks ahead.
- Best value: Sunday–Thursday rates are often half the weekend price at the same hotel.
- Airport hotels: If you are flying early from Manchester Airport, stay at the airport Premier Inn or Hilton Garden Inn. The city centre is 25–40 minutes away and the 5am taxi is not worth the stress.
The Verdict
Hotel Gotham and The Midland are the two best hotels in Manchester for completely different reasons — one is theatrical art deco, the other is grand Edwardian heritage. King Street Townhouse wins for the rooftop pool. For budget, Motel One is unbeatable for design at the price. And if you are after character over chain, The Cow Hollow in the NQ is the most Manchester hotel in Manchester.