Hotel Café Royal

London, United Kingdom
Soho

160 Rooms

For well over a century Café Royal was a bar and restaurant frequented by the likes of Oscar Wilde — if there’s such a thing as “the likes of” Wilde — as well as many of the theatre world’s other bright lights, a century’s worth of statesmen and royals, and several generations of fairly eminent journalists. Today, it’s one of the city’s most luxurious...

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68 Regent Street, London, LND, W1B 5EL, GBR

Amenities

  • 24 hour front desk
  • Parking
  • Pet Friendly
  • Free wi-fi
  • Gym
  • Swimming pool
  • Spa
  • Restaurant
  • Bar
  • Cribs (subject to availability)
  • Wheelchair accessible
  • Room service
  • Concierge
  • Valet parking
  • Sauna
  • Yoga
  • Self service parking (charges apply)
  • Indoor swimming pool
  • Spa treatments (on request)
  • 24 hour room service
  • Babysitting (on request)
  • Kids' club
  • Adjoining rooms
  • 100% non-smoking hotel
  • Jacuzzi
  • Steam rooms
  • Turkish bath
  • Bikes available
  • Lounge
  • Luggage storage
  • Multi-lingual staff
  • Wake-up service
  • Doctor on call
  • Air conditioning
  • Pets allowed (charges apply)
  • Boardroom
  • Shopping area nearby

Hotel Café Royal

For well over a century Café Royal was a bar and restaurant frequented by the likes of Oscar Wilde — if there’s such a thing as “the likes of” Wilde — as well as many of the theatre world’s other bright lights, a century’s worth of statesmen and royals, and several generations of fairly eminent journalists. Today, it’s one of the city’s most luxurious hotels, the crown jewel of an ambitious multi-use development which aims at nothing less than to turn the elegant John Nash–designed Georgian curve of lower Regent Street into a new hub for upscale West End living.

That’s a lot of architectural history to contend with, but Hotel Café Royal seamlessly spans the years, from the Regency to the mid-20th century — the interiors are timeless, though with a contemporary sheen (and some very contemporary comforts). And while it seeks to recapture some of the artistic and intellectual atmosphere of its heyday, a central London luxury hotel will necessarily be tailored towards the business traveler, if not the business mogul. There’s no shortage of dining and nightlife options, as well as a phenomenally well-equipped spa and wellness center, and that’s just in-house — the south end of Regent Street has become something of a self-contained city unto itself.