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Review: the Thistle Heathrow Terminal 5 hotel and the driverless pods to the terminal

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This is my review of the Thistle Heathrow Terminal 5 hotel at London Heathrow Airport and the driverless pods which take you directly into Terminal 5.

I’ve ticked off a lot of the key goals in the frequent traveller field.  Etihad First Class Apartment?  Check.  Lufthansa First Class and the Frankfurt First Class Terminal?  Check.  The Qatar Airways First Class Lounge in Doha?  Check.  Virgin Atlantic Clubhouse at Heathrow T3?  Check.

One thing still escaped me though …. I’d never taken the driverless pods at Heathrow Terminal 5.  It gnawed away at me every time I took a taxi to the airport and drove past them.

On Tuesday, I got my chance.

Review thistle terminal 5 heathrow hotel

The biggest downside of staying at one of the hotels at Heathrow which is NOT directly connected to the terminals is the slow and painful process of getting to or from the airport.  The local Heathrow buses are free (this article explains which ones to take) but you need to get to the relevant bus stop and know where to get off.  This is tricky enough before you start to consider carrying your luggage.

The Hotel Hoppa bus service picks up directly from outside the terminals and drops you directly at the hotels.  However, the journey can be slow because each bus stops at a number of different hotels on its route.  It also costs a rip-off £5 per person each way.

If you stay at the Thistle Hotel at Heathrow, there is a third option.

The Thistle is situated next to the Heathrow car park from where the driverless pods take you to and from Terminal 5.

The Thistle has done a deal with Heathrow Airport to allow its customers to use the pods.  This being Heathrow, it is not a free service – you are charged £5 per person, each way, all of which is apparently paid to the airport.

My trip

I needed to stay at Heathrow on Tuesday night and decided to give the pods – and therefore the Thistle Heathrow hotel – a try.

It is well known that this is, to put it mildly, not the most modern hotel at Heathrow.  That was reflected in the £85 price, booked the day before.

Getting to Thistle Heathrow from the airport via the pods

I took a taxi to the hotel.  However, if you are coming from Terminal 5, you simply following the signs for Pod parking on Level 2 of the car park and select Station B.  When you arrive, 5 minutes later, there is a short walkway to your right which leads you to a gate.  You can buzz reception from here to have the gate opened for you, in return for having £5 added to your bill.

My room

This is not meant to be a full review of the Thistle Heathrow hotel.  I arrived at 10pm and left at 7am.  However, I will show you a few pictures.

I had heard bad things about this place.  Frankly, without the Pod access, there is no reason – at all – to stay here.

And yet …. it tries.  The staff were very friendly.  They have moved with the times and installed a ‘grab and go’ fridge in the lobby so you can get a half-decent snack:

The rest of the hotel is untouched from the 1980s.  I got a very weird feeling walking through it.  It was a throwback to when I first started staying in UK hotels when I was 19 or 20 on university work placements.  Anyone else remember when Thistle ran the Avon Gorge Hotel – soon to relaunch as a Hotel du Vin – overlooking Clifton suspension bridge in Bristol?

The room … well, it was OK.  Whilst the room was small, the bed was big, comfy and clean:

The bathroom had clearly been redone in the last five years or so and, whilst not huge, was perfectly fine for a hotel of this calibre:

The weird thing was the desk.  It was, very possibly, the original desk.  I have never, ever, had a hotel room with a desk so old.  It was at least 30 years old.  The photo below does not do justice to the chips, odd stains and general sense of junk that it gave off:

It is weird.  For £100 they could have replaced it with something decent.  A few thousand pounds has been spent on the bathroom but the desk is ancient.  Wi-fi was at least free, but slow as I found when trying to upload these images.

Here is a blast from the past for those of you aged 45 or above:

Do you see the MCT logo on the bedside control panel?  That stands for ‘Mount Charlotte Thistle’ which is what the group was called back for a while in the 1980s.  I hadn’t seen that logo for literally 25 years.

There isn’t much more to say.  The rooftop (although this is only a 2-story building, with no lift) restaurant apparently has a great viewing terrace over the runway.  The bar looked like your average 3-star hotel bar.  I didn’t use either – I ate at home and decided to have breakfast in the Plaza Premium T5 lounge.

In conclusion, you can clearly do better.  For the £85 I paid, it was fine.  For comparison, the Hilton Garden Inn at Hatton Cross was £130 and the single bed rooms at the Holiday Inn Arial were £120.  Arriving at 10pm and leaving at 7am, the Thistle Heathrow Terminal 5 did the job and being able to get the pod to Terminal 5 was a real time saver.

Getting back to the airport via the pods

In Part 2 of this review – click here – I will talk about how the pods work and about how easy it is to get there from the Thistle.  I even made a little video ….

You can read our full series of London airport hotel reviews here.

You can find out more about the Pod service on the Thistle Heathrow Terminal 5 website here.


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Comments (77)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Ruth4325 says:

    We stayed at the Thistle by necessity last week when stranded at Heathrow thanks to the weather. The pods were fantastic I must say, an unexpectedly pleasant and quirky way to get around. The hotel is, well, much as you describe, old and run down. The staff were really helpful though and the food in the restaurant at dinner was better than I expected. Saying that…we did change to Sofitel for the next two nights of our unplanned Heathrow holiday.

  • Matt says:

    The Thistle is the hotel we stay in most often. It’s always clean and comfortable, which is all we need for one night with an early start to the airport. Walking distance to decent Indian and Chinese restaurants on Bath Road and the pods are great.

    It would be great if it was updated a bit (well a lot!), but the prices for parking plus a room are generally very good.

  • GW says:

    The bar / restaurant does indeed have fantastic views. And I had a great steak there too. Much nicer than the smarter hotels I ate in for the rest of the week

  • Bill says:

    Being in one of the regions of the UK without a direct flight to Heathrow I loathe the pace whenever I need to depart from LHR. By the time I get there and then faced with the rip off charges to reagents hotel it quickly becomes an airport I wish to avoid.

  • AspirationalFlyer says:

    Morning Rob – I love the Heathrow pods! I must confess that I may have made a couple more journeys than was strictly necessary on my return to Heathrow from a trip to Rome last year!

  • Clare M says:

    You must have been given an updated room, I stayed last year and the bathroom clearly hadn’t been refurbed since the 80’s. It was so old and dated it made it feel dirty (couldn’t tell if it was actual clean or not) although as you say, the pods are brilliant!

  • BTC says:

    The Thistle might be dated, but I found housekeeping had done a pretty good job on a high turnover room.

    Certainly cleaner and in better condition than the Waldorf-Astoria in New York when I stayed there.

  • Brian says:

    Or gnawed? :))

    I stayed in the Holiday Inn Ariel recently – it was just as outdated as the Thistle sounds. The Ibis Styles is probably the best budget option near Heathrow, I’d say. It’s almost always cheaper than the other options, too.

    • Genghis says:

      I always get upgraded to an Exec room at the Ariel which are decent – and free Mars bar – and never pay more than £50.

    • Alex Sm says:

      HI Ariel is a dog!
      IHG has better and newer properties near LHR

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

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