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Review: the Sofitel London Heathrow Terminal 5 hotel

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This is our review of the Sofitel London Heathrow hotel at Terminal 5.

There are some odd gaps in the HfP review coverage, which we blame on familiarity breeding contempt. We’ve not reviewed The Concorde Room in Terminal 5 since 2014, unbelievably, and we’ve never done proper reviews of some of the BA lounges in Terminal 5A (5B has better coverage, because it is always a novelty to go there – if you call 2017 ‘better’, that is).

This is a roundabout way of explaining why we’ve never covered the Sofitel Heathrow hotel at Terminal 5, despite it being directly attached to the British Airways terminal. We’ve covered MANY other Heathrow hotels – all of our London airport hotel reviews are here – but never this one.

The nearest we got was in 2016 when, for a short period, the club lounge was opened up to Priority Pass cardholders!

Sofitel Heathrow Terminal 5 hotel review

I had some Accor Suite Night Upgrade vouchers expiring, however, and a double points offer. I thought this made it worth the splurge before a flight last week.

We paid cash for our stay. The hotel didn’t know we were coming and we did not get a formal tour. What I found is probably what you will find.

In summary, it is a surprisingly accomplished hotel and in many ways justifies its five star luxury positioning. The biggest issue is that the rooms are looking dated, although they are still in good condition.

The hotel website is here.

Getting to Sofitel London Heathrow

If you have ever been dropped off at Terminal 5 by car you will have passed the Sofitel as you head up the ramp to the terminal doors. If you are taken to the hotel by car you can be dropped directly outside the entrance, but most people will arrive by public transport or from an arriving flight.

Once landside in Terminal 5, you need to head to one of the many lift banks into the short stay car park.

Sofitel London Heathrow hotel review

Handy tip – using the lifts opposite Marks & Spencer will save you a chilly walk through the car park.

The M&S lift bank brings you out facing this sign and a doorway:

Review Sofitel London Heathrow Terminal 5 review

You may think you’ve arrived. You’re wrong. You head down this corridor:

Sofitel London Heathrow Airport hotel review

…. then this corridor:

Sofitel London Heathrow hotel review

…. then over a bridge:

Sofitel Heathrow Terminal 5 hotel review

…. then through the upper level of the hotel to the escalators you can just about see:

Sofitel London Heathrow Terminal 5 review

This drops you onto the ground floor of the hotel. You’ve made it.

Check-in at Sofitel London Heathrow

I had done online check-in the night before. If you are used to online check-in from chains that invest in IT, like Hilton or Marriott, you’re going to be disappointed here:

  • you can’t select a room online, or even see your room number
  • there is no ‘mobile key’ facility

The ONLY thing that happens with online check-in is that a pre-authorisation is taken from your credit card for the stay. This allows your key to be made up and left in an envelope at the front desk.

Here’s the problem.

I arrived at the desk, was asked if I had done online check-in, and said yes. A box was opened and an envelope pulled out with my name on. That was it.

The clerk had no idea I was in a top suite and no idea I had lounge access, so no additional help or advice was provided. I was given the envelope and pointed towards the lifts. End of discussion.

What was inside the envelope? Just my key. No welcome letter, nothing explaining where the lounge was or what time it opened, no information on the bars and restaurants …. nothing.

I’d say it was the sort of welcome you’d expect at a Holiday Inn Express, except that even there I’d expect a bit more communication. So, basically, a bad start.

The hotel has 605 rooms spread across six wings with a central spine, in a HHH formation. Despite the hotel being literally a few metres from the bottom of the runway, only a handful of room at the front of the first wings (rooms starting with a 6) would get any aircraft views. Aircraft views from the first few wings (1, 2, 3 and possibly 4, 5) are presumably obscured by the terminal.

If you want to look at aircraft from your room, stay at a hotel on Bath Road – you’ll pay at least 50% less too.

My suite at Sofitel London Heathrow

I’d used a Suite Night Upgrade certificate to guarantee a Premium Suite. You receive two of these when you earn Platinum status in Accor Live Limitless, with additional vouchers issued based on how much you spend throughout the year.

Whilst I had a suite, it was basically two rooms merged together. The bedroom area of the suite is virtually identical to a standard bedroom, judging from rooms I peaked into which were being cleaned. The only thing you won’t get is the sitting area.

Bedroom

Let’s start with the bedroom:

Sofitel London Heathrow suite bedroom

As you can see, the rooms are a good size with a very large, but slightly slopey, bed. Note that the bed has a throw on it, a feature which the Crowne Plaza at Terminal 4 (which has the same owners, Arora) has abandoned.

There is a lot of wood used which dates the room. The wood continues with the desk and unit:

Sofitel London heathrow suite bedroom review

The hotel opened in 2008 and has not been refurbished since, I believe. In truth, the style was probably out of date in 2008, and I can imagine that the design was signed off a long time before when work on the terminal began.

The biggest issue is that there are no sockets, of any kind, by the beds. This is shocking in 2023. No USB, no 3-pin plugs, nothing. If you want to charge your phone overnight you’ll be doing it at the desk.

Everything else was perfectly acceptable and in decent condition given 15 years of wear. Soundproofing is perfect – my room overlooked the approach road into Terminal 5 and I couldn’t hear a thing.

Bathroom

The bathroom is nothing to get excited about but, at the same time, delivered. There was a separate tub and shower – albeit not a huge shower.

Sofitel London Heathrow suite bathroom review

A double sink would have been better, but this was offset by the best selection of freebies that I’ve seen in a hotel bathroom for a while.

Sofitel London Heathrow bathroom

Many of the controls in the bathroom were exceptionally stiff. I was struggling to turn on the hot tap on the sink and move the temperature control in the shower, which is ludicrous.

Living room

The suite came with a good sized living room. It was, as you can see, very brown:

Sofitel London Heathrow suite

The 2nd desk was useful, and would allow a couple to work and sleep without disturbing each other. There was a coffee machine (a bit light on capsules for my liking) as well as a kettle. The mini-bar was free and contained beer and spirit miniatures as well as soft drinks – I’m not sure if this also applies to standard rooms.

Sofitel London Heathrow suite

In Part 2 of this review – click here – I will take a look at the club lounge and run through the various restaurants and bars.

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

The Sofitel London Heathrow website is here.


Accor Live Limitless update – April 2024:

Earn bonus Accor points: Accor is not currently running a global promotion

New to Accor Live Limitless?  Read our review of Accor Live Limitless here and our article on points expiry rules here. Our analysis of what Accor Live Limitless points are worth is here.

Want to earn more hotel points?  Click here to see our complete list of promotions from Accor and the other major hotel chains or use the ‘Hotel Offers’ link in the menu bar at the top of the page.

Comments (45)

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

  • Colin MacKinnon says:

    Throws on bottom of bed and nasty cushions on the pillows. Yeuck!

    Why do hotels and – worse AirBnBs – do this?

    I bet it has been a while since either the throw or the cushions have been washed!

    • Colin MacKinnon says:

      And what is a “slopey” bed? Which way does it slope? Side to side, front high or back high? And why?

      • Rob says:

        The mattress sloped from the centre to the edge, meaning I felt at risk of rolling out!

    • Andrew J says:

      Agreed – so disgusting. The throw I can make my peace with but the cushion placed on top of the pillow where I put my face is hideous.

    • Ian says:

      The throw is often there to prevent marks from the suitcase as it is put on the bed.

      • Nick says:

        oh no, one mustn’t place ones suitcase on the bed!

        • TGLoyalty says:

          Or god forbid their shoes but people do

          It’s not actually a throw either it’s a runner and I’m not sure what the issue is because you take it off before you use the bed and you sleep under a duvet not on top of it.

  • Peter says:

    We have stayed here many times, even flying out of T3 on occasion. We love the hotel. ‘New’ and ‘updated’ is not necessarily attractive to us. Quality is. The scent drifting through the walkway on your way to reception is wonderful and is just a hint of the treat that is in store for the weary traveller. Next time, review the Breakfast. One of the best!

  • Greenpen says:

    The shower door opens outwards and this makes using the bath mat difficult as it catches it, moving it and ruffling it up.

    I wonder whether hotel room designers ever stay at hotels? So many rooms have irritating characteristics that would be both cheap and easy to have avoided.

    The Bel Epoch is a restaurant worth visiting if you want a good meal and are staying in the Sofitel and worth travelling to from other LHR hotels.

  • Kwab says:

    One thing you forgot to mention with the Prestige suite is that you get an extra toilet which with a teenage female daughter in tow is a godsend!

  • TB says:

    The bed throws are back in Crowne Plaza T4….although I only ever stay on the 6th floor so not sure if it’s just the club rooms.

  • JohnM says:

    I’m actually writing this from the hotel after a 10pm arrival into T5 last night. Living in the midlands we regularly use the hotel before and/or after a T5 flight. It wins on sheer convenience – last night we were in our room 15 minutes after reclaiming our baggage. Yes, it’s getting dated in some respects, but we’ve always found it clean, well staffed, comfortable and incredibly quiet – watching an A380 landing a couple of hundred feet away in total silence is amazing.

  • Steve says:

    I stay here pretty regularly. I love the convenience for Terminal 5 (and also to T2/3) and the breakfast is fantastic – probably one of the best hotel breakfasts around. The only downsides is that there is usually a long queue to check in, and most of the rooms face inwards to internal atriums, meaning you need to keep the curtains closed most of the time. But as an airport hotel, it’s great.

    • Kwab says:

      If you have status and email ahead, they almost always will give you a runway view!

  • Rjn21 says:

    Did you get the welcome drink vouchers without asking for them? That has tended to be better recently as they build them into the key wallet. With OLCI I don’t use it for that reason.
    Did you get the welcome gift chocolate? I always have to chase it.

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

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