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Review: The St Regis Venice hotel (Part 2 – where it went wrong)

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This is Part 2 of our review of The St Regis Venice hotel. Part 1, which looks at the public spaces, is here.

Unusually, I’ve done this review in reverse, leaving the room to last. This is because, frankly, it was a bit of a shambles. What I don’t know is how much was bad luck and how much is normal.

To put the room into context, I had booked using 70,000 Marriott Bonvoy points and was therefore allocated a standard room, which was selling for around €1,000 per night.

Review The St Regis Venice hotel

I used a Marriott Bonvoy ‘Suite Night Award’ certificate – which I had from making Titanium Status last year – to request an upgrade. The upgrade cleared at five days before arrival, which is the earliest time it can happen. I was not upgraded further at check-in despite my Titanium status.

The room I ended up with is classed as a ‘Venetian Suite’. It was selling for around €1,700 per night.

(I looked at a random night in June and the rates are higher, as you’d expect with the better weather – €1,500 for a base room with my suite selling for €2,100 per night.)

My comments on the room are based on what you might expect for €1,700 to €2,000 per night. I would be less critical of a cheaper hotel.

Venetian Suite at The St Regis Venice

As you can see, I had a beautiful room. Huge amounts of money have been spent here. What look like painted walls, for example, are actually fabric wall coverings.

Review The St Regis Venice hotel

It didn’t really do it for me, however, and I just got and more frustrated over the two days I was there. I will run through my gripes and I will let you decide if they are systematic issues or if I just got unlucky.

There were no issues with the bed, bedding, soundproofing, curtains etc. This was all done to the standard you would expect, including the usual high quality St Regis mattresses.

Review The St Regis Venice hotel

These were my issues:

  • My room simply wasn’t large enough to be sold as a proper suite. To call it a suite, the hotel installed some unnecessary doors which connect the bedroom to the living area. It would have been a nicer room – and more honestly described – if the doors had not been installed, the room opened up more and it was described as a junior suite. It’s also worth noting that the suites shown on the hotel website for this room category are larger, far larger in some cases, than what I received.
  • There was no view. The room was on the first floor, but the roof of the building outside came up beyond window level (albeit grassed over). It also got no sun – higher floors should fare better. It wasn’t enticing and another reason why this particular room shouldn’t be sold as a full suite.
Review The St Regis Venice hotel
  • There are no plug sockets by the bed. None. If you want to plug something in, you need to get on your knees and start unplugging the lamps at floor level.
  • Don’t even think of looking for a USB socket either, which is weird for a hotel that was opened in 2019.
  • The minibar was empty (I am guessing covid rules, although all other covid restrictions in Italy are gone). It was also turned off so you couldn’t use it yourself to chill items. Oddly, all glassware had been removed too – no wine glasses. Despite this, the hotel gave me a bottle of bellini. With nowhere to chill it and no glassware, I drank it lukewarm out of a mug.
Review The St Regis Venice hotel
  • It’s a good job my wife was not with me, because she wouldn’t have had any. Only one mug was provided in the room.

(Imagine coming here on honeymoon, to your €1,700 per night suite, and bursting into your room expecting to crack open a bottle of chilled champagne from the minibar into two crystal champagne flutes. Instead, you are stuck with a lukewarm bellini drunk from one – shared – coffee mug.)

  • The coffee machine only came with four capsules and no milk, real or powdered (I know it’s Italy but still ….). I had a jug of milk sent up, but with no working minibar or fridge I was forced to keep it out at room temperature.
  • The second time I rang for a jug of milk – because the first jug had gone off overnight due to the lack of a fridge – it took over 30 minutes to come. Of the three calls I made to the butler service line during my stay, only one was answered immediately. The other two went to a BA-style ‘we’re busy right now’ message.
  • For some odd reason, the ‘do not disturb’ and ‘please clean my room’ buttons do not light up clearly when pressed. This means it is very easy, as I did, to go out and not notice that ‘do not disturb’ is on. You return in the evening to an uncleaned room.
  • I made an arrangement with the hotel to clean the room when I was at dinner. In what, I admit, was bad luck, the turndown person arrived first, decided to do a full room service themselves without all of the necessary items and did a bodge job of it.
Review The St Regis Venice hotel
  • The bathroom has no tub. Whilst I didn’t mind, it’s worth noting that the Marriott website shows a lovely standalone tub in the photo gallery for its Venetian Suites. The bathroom was simply too small, full stop, and could have been made larger by removing some of the excessive wardrobe space next to it.
  • The bathroom has a hugely impressive range of niche products – facial scrub, face toner cream, deodorant cream and – ahem – a bottle of ‘intimate cleanser’ (which is orange!). There is an odd mix between Acqua di Parma products and St Regis products, but then Acqua di Parma doesn’t do ‘intimate cleanser’ as far as I know. What you don’t get are the basic items you may have forgotten (toothbrush or, in my case, a comb).

All in all, despite the huge amount of money that had been spent on the interiors of my suite, it simply wasn’t a pleasant or practical space to spend time.

I fully accept that my room was on points and I’d used a suite upgrade certificate to get what I got. If I was paying €1,700 per night I would have asked to be moved.

To help you decide if this was all bad luck or bad management, let me present you with this cup:

Review The St Regis Venice hotel

It sat on a fire extinguisher next to the lift outside my room for a long time – at least 12 hours – without being moved. Towards the end I was tempted to take it down myself.

Conclusion

The St Regis Venice is a tricky hotel to come to a firm conclusion about.

Let’s be clear. The public areas of this hotel are stunning. I will not see better public spaces in a hotel all year.

There is probably nothing else in Venice that comes close to The St Regis in terms of overall quality of interiors and finish except potentially Aman and that is in a different pricing league. Certainly not the Gritti Palace, virtually next door and also Marriott-run, which is only really worth visiting to eat on its own canal-side terrace. If you want new, shiny and fashionable, The St Regis is where to come.

The garden terrace and restaurant are beautiful. There are few better experiences in the world than sitting on a terrace overlooking the Grand Canal and watching the world go by. This is why you should stay here and this is what you are paying for – although of course non-guests are also welcome. It would help if at least half the large tables were swapped for tables for two, however.

Where it didn’t work for me was my suite. A mixture of bad design and bad management means that things are not as slick as they should be, especially for €1,700 per night.

Despite all this, I am not saying that I wouldn’t return. My wife would enjoy the location, garden, restaurant and public spaces and we’d probably spend less time in the room than I did on this solo trip. There also aren’t a lot of other fresh options if you want five star luxury in the centre of the action.

Are you getting value at The St Regis Venice?

It’s interesting to compare The St Regis Venice with the JW Marriott Venice Resort which is on its own private island in the lagoon. I have been there three times (JW Marriott Venice review here) and, if you book a junior suite, you will get a huge lovely open room.

The JW Marriott, not The St Regis, is the ideal hotel for families with its pools and kids club. Taking the boat to and from the main island is not a major inconvenience and of course the ride is a great sight-seeing event in its own right.

It’s worth remembering that The St Regis Venice remains astonishing value as a Marriott Bonvoy redemption, compared to cash prices. My standard room – before the upgrade – was selling for £960 (€1,140). I paid 70,000 Bonvoy points which, if you bought the points in a ‘100% bonus’ promotion, would cost you around £425. I got 1.35p per point.

From next year, when Bonvoy redemptions are uncapped and the current category thresholds disappear, I expect standard rooms at The St Regis Venice will cost around 175,000 – 200,000 Bonvoy points per night – an almost threefold increase on what I paid. If you want to come here on points, book soon.

The St Regis Venice website is here if you want to learn more.


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Comments (94)

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

  • ALISON P says:

    my partner and I went to Venice at beginning of April just as outdoor mask wearing ended. We stayed at Ca Di Dio – really would recommend. Lovely new design led hotel whose designer was iconic Spanish architect and furniture designer Patricia Urquiola . We had a suite overlooking canal – much nicer than the Regis pics which look v poky in comparison. (intimate cleanser obvs a Venice thing as they supplied that too – all toiletries were hotel’s own design with a Venetian twist) Service was superb, public areas beautiful in an understated modern way. Other suites/rooms have lagoon views if desired.

    • JDB says:

      That sounds ideal! It’s happening all over the world – as old hotels in super popular places up their prices and lower their standards, amazing smaller boutique hotels and Airbnbs have been able to pop up and offer far better accommodation and service at reasonable prices. As long as one isn’t hung up on staying at the big names or addicted to points, there are many great opportunities.

  • Panda Mick says:

    “It sat on a fire extinguisher next to the lift outside my room for a long time – at least 12 hours – without being moved”

    Was in the Conrad in Singapore a few weeks ago. Absolutely excellent stay in every way. Tonnes of water in the room, with some red velvet cookies and a bag of sugared local fruits (excellent).

    My only gripe: Room service flotsom and jetsom stayed in the halls over night… A simple thing like this could have resulted in a perfect stay….

  • lumma says:

    The problem with places installing USB sockets is that mostly they’ll be old type A sockets where the most recent phones will come with a type C to C (or to lightning) cable and they often have very low power output and will take many hours to fully charge your device.

    It’s not going to be a good look if a hotel has lots of obsolete connectors in their rooms and any decent hotel will loan you an extra adaptor/charger if you need an extra one.

    • Pogonation says:

      I agree with this. No point in any hotel installing USB or similar sockets. Type A now look old fashioned since type C has replaced them.. Before we know it there might be a type Z.

      Hotels should just install multiple sockets throughout the rooms in convenient locations. I agree with Rob that it is unacceptable not to have spare sockets next to the beds in modern times.

    • cinereus says:

      People have no clue about usb sockets. They are worse than useless. Even worse than being type A, like the ones people stupidly got installed into their houses, they can’t negotiate PD protocols correctly so you’re stuck with worse than nothing charge speeds and incompatibility with things like magsafe charging or anything >10W.

      if you’re in a hotel and especially if you’re popping in to top up on charge you’d be insane to not use a your normal PD charging brick.

      • Chris L says:

        All I know is if I plug my phone into a USB port before I go to sleep, it will be charged by the time I wake up. That’s about all I’m looking for in a USB port.

  • Nick G says:

    From what I read and what I’ve seen on our travels it looks like bad luck to me. Some can have the best size room, best view, best service, then with other it seems to go wrong the second you walk in. That cup in the hallway would have annoyed me as well! I agree it sucks and shouldn’t happen at that price but I think that is life. Lesson learned don’t return would be my thought process. The world of hotels is far too huge to waste staying again.

    I was expecting less of an experience when we booked the grand suite at the Sheraton deal on park lane last year. I know lots of us booked but honestly it was amazing the way the staff interacted with us. Whether that was luck or the standard they deliver, or the fact they think you’ve paid £2k who knows.

    Also I would have used the glasses in the bathroom to drink the luke warm Bellini😉

    • meta says:

      I had the worst experience at Sheraton Grand Park Lane on that deal. Really shocking, so much that they comped the stay twice over.

      • Lady London says:

        oh, do tell us, meta! what happened? how could I have missed this. Did you post on it?

  • Paul says:

    “The St Regis Venice is a tricky hotel to come to a firm conclusion about.”

    No it’s not

    The room was dire, too small, ill equipped and frankly downright shoddy for 1700 a night. The cup on the fire extinguisher is just pathetic at these prices and in any event this is a pet peeve of mine.

    The saying a fool and their money are soon parted springs to mind!

    • TGLoyalty says:

      2020 was the time to Stay then because I paid £500 a night (4 for 3 deal) and my SNA cleared into a liberty proper suite with a Bath tub and small balcony overlooking the canal.

      A a couple minor service niggles but we were between wave 1 and 2 and it was just that awkward can’t enter room if stuff etc

      Found breakfast lovely on the sunny terrace and we had no issues using a table for 4/6 just for 2 if that’s all the had.

  • ChrisD says:

    Rob, would the hotel typically respond to you off the back of a review like this? Would love to hear what they have to say!

  • MD says:

    Rare that I fundamentally disagree with any of Rob’s conclusions but this statement “There is probably nothing else in Venice that comes close to The St Regis in terms of overall quality of interiors and finish….Certainly not the Gritti Palace, virtually next door and also Marriott-run, which is only really worth visiting to eat on its own canal-side terrace” is just completely wrong.

    Compared to this review, The Gritti Palace is incomparably better than the StR in every possible way. The interiors actually feel like a palace, stunning art and antiques everywhere, beautiful. We were admittedly lucky with a multi level suite upgrade, but for similar prices we had a huge, ornate suite with a large separate living room. Massive, marble-clad bathroom with tub, wall to wall Acqua di Parma toiletries. Ice bucket with a lovely bottle of prosecco, plus the most stunning fresh roses, which filled the room with their fragrance, on arrival. Your room is actually laughable in comparison.

    Breakfast buffet much bigger than that in your review, and delicious. Outdoor spaces at the Gritti managed much better than the StR, wonderful bar in which to soak up the sun and views, plus the excellent restaurant in the evening. Staff and service superb, very responsive and efficient. Genuinely couldn’t fault the place (not cheap obviously). Seems a million miles better than everything you’ve described about the St Regis frankly.

    • JDB says:

      The Luna Baglioni, supposedly only 4 stars almost next door is also better. Unfortunately they used to have two wonderful suites with huge terraces overlooking the lagoon at c. €400/night that are now €7,500.

  • Harry T says:

    I understand the frustration with the details that weren’t right and not in keeping with what you would expect at a hotel of this calibre. However, the hotel cannot improve or address your issues if you don’t provide feedback and complain where appropriate. As a titanium member, it’s surely more than acceptable to ask for a room with more space or a better view? It’s not great that they forgot the glassware and didn’t turn the fridge on, but a quick call should have sorted that out and maybe even instigated some service recovery. If you had raised issues and the hotel were still not responsive, then involving a manager would likely have rectified the situation. The truly great hotels truly do get just about everything right, but some hotels need a nudge in the right direction and ultimately the establishment will not improve without feedback from Marriott’s most experienced guests. I do not enjoy complaining, but I have politely and firmly complained at a few hotels of this calibre and always felt that it was well received and led to a more favourable and amicable outcome for all parties.

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