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Review: the Sofitel London Heathrow Terminal 5 hotel (Part 2)

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This is Part 2 of our review of the Sofitel London Heathrow hotel. Part 1 is here.

In this final part I will look at the club lounge and the impressive variety of bars and restaurants on site, as well as drawing some conclusions.

The executive lounge at Sofitel London Heathrow

The lounge is called Club Millesime. Long-term readers may have visited it a few years ago when, for a short period, it was a Priority Pass lounge.

I had access via two routes – it was included with my suite booking regardless, but I also hold Platinum status in Accor Live Limitless which would have got me in.

It is based on the ground floor, up a short flight of steps. According to the timetable outside, it is open for breakfast between 6.30 and 10.30, afternoon team between 3pm and 5pm and evening snacks and drinks between 6pm and 8pm. In reality it seems to be open from 6.30am to midnight, albeit with nothing available except a coffee machine and cold drinks fridge outside the times above.

It is a surprisingly big space by hotel lounge standards, with a similar mix of wood and dark tones as found elsewhere:

Sofitel London Heathrow club lounge

and

Sofitel London Heathow executive lounge

Afternoon tea was a decent selection of cakes:

Sofitel London Heathrow lounge afternoon tea

Next morning, at breakfast, the food selection laid out was slim – just fruit:

Sofitel London Heathrow lounge breakfast

…. cereals (in cardboard boxes) and pastries. There was, however, a decent list of cooked to order options and so I took an Eggs Royale:

Sofitel London Heathrow club lounge breakfast hot items

I was totally alone in the lounge during breakfast and afternoon tea, apart from an attendant.

Evenings drinks and snacks in Le Bar Parisien

At present the lounge is closed for evening drinks and snacks. Instead you are invited to Le Bar Parisien directly opposite, which is one of two bars in the hotel.

This was an impressively slick affair. Cold items, mainly salads, bread, dips and cheese, were laid out on the bar. Staff came to your table and served you whatever drinks you requested.

You could also have a plate of hot items – in fact, I got two! The contents are fixed – a couple of spring rolls and gyoza:

Sofitel Heathrow hotel evening lounge snack

It was all very well done, and it was good to have (almost) full table service in an executive lounge.

Other eating and drinking options

La Belle Epoque

The main restaurant is called La Belle Epoque. This is very well regarded and has held 3 AA rosettes in the past (not sure about the present).

As you can see from the decor, this is not your typical airport hotel restaurant:

Sofitel London Heathrow La Belle Epoque restaurant

Incongruously, given the furnishings, the restaurant is one of the few places in the hotel where you can see British Airways aircraft parked up at the terminal.

La Belle Epoque does not come cheap. Starters run from £11 to £16 and mains from £19.50 to £35, with an extra £6 for each side dish.

Vivre

For something a bit cheaper, but not by much, there is Vivre. This is your standard burger / pizza / pasta / curry joint. Fish and chips comes in at £21, with lamb shoulder at £32. Pizzas are £14 – £18.

Sofitel London Heathrow hotel Vivre

Tea 5

There is also Tea 5, a tea room in the lobby.

This has a hugely impressive looking selection of cakes which looked as good as any I’ve seen in London. During the day, it also serves a selection on paninis, wraps, pasta, pizza and salads. PR photo below:

Tea 5 Sofitel London Heathrow Airport hotel

Gym and spa at Sofitel Heathrow

I will quickly run through the other facilities – but not the 40+ meeting rooms that the hotel offers!

There is a good size gym:

Sofitel London Heathrow gym

At some point I believe that there was a proper spa with a hot tub etc. This is all gone. The only facilities available now are in a small treatments area which seemed to specialise in facials and nailcare.

The lack of a proper pool is, I think, the biggest issue with the hotel. For a 5-star airport facility I think it is necessary.

The ground floor has a substantial gift shop:

Sofitel Heathrow gift shop

There is also a SIXT car hire office in the hotel. With Avis having relocated to the car park of the Holiday Inn on Bath Road, this is the only car hire office left in Terminal 5.

Conclusion

The Sofitel London Heathrow hotel is one of those places where the sum is greater than the parts.

It is easy to gripe about various things – lack of sockets, dated rooms, no pool, pricey restaurants, poor check-in experience – but despite this the hotel does give off an air of class and competence.

It was the little things – the high level of service in the bar / lounge in the evening, the quality of the cakes on display at Tea 5, the ‘cooked to order’ menu for breakfast in the lounge, a restaurant that has actually won awards for its food – that justify the five star rating and price tag.

Is it worth the money? Only you can tell. My suite – which was booked with a suite upgrade certificate for being Accor Platinum – was £299 vs £450+ at standard rate. I think the cheapest cash rate for the same night would have been around £249. Prices seem to be softening for advance bookings with £175-ish rates appearing for later in Spring.

Whether you are happy to pay 100% more than a hotel on Bath Road for the convenience and quality of the Sofitel is up to you. If you’re not flying from Terminal 5 then it is a far less attractive proposition given the alternatives attached to Terminals 2/3 and Terminal 4. If you have Accor Live Limitless Platinum or Diamond status and can get club lounge access then I’d definitely recommend it – you don’t need to spend anything in the hotel in this case.

You can see our other London airport reviews listed here.

You can find out more about Sofitel London Heathrow, and book, on its website 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.

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Comments (54)

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

  • Lou says:

    Having stayed at both the Sofitel and the Thistle, I don’t think the Sofitel is any quicker to get to. Taking into account how long it takes to get there, check-in and getting to your room, I’d argue it’s much of a muchness compared to getting to the Thistle via the pod and their no-nonsense check-in

  • StillintheSun says:

    I live in London so I don’t usually need a LHR hotel, however I stayed at the Sofitel in 2015 and the Crown Plaza (connected to T4) when it opened. I’d pick the latter given the quality of the rooms and the bar even before you take into account the substantial price difference. CP is £100 for a random date in Feb as opposed to £185 for the Sofitel.

    • Chris says:

      Pre pandemic I stayed at the T4 regularly; and the stays were always adequate; im not a fan of the tunnel which needs a refurb.

      Post pandemic I have had issues on all my stays. It’s got to the point I can’t help but wonder if Arona are using the CP to train staff before moving good ones onto the Sofitel.

  • masaccio says:

    Wow, choosing free lounge food over La Belle Epoque says we have very different tastes. The restaurant is one of the reasons we stay there. The other being that I can park my car at the hotel and keep the keys without worrying how some 21-year old divot is going to drive it to/from meet & greet. The walk from car park to reception is not very far at all. Reception to T5 Check-in is pretty much as described by Rob and very much the kind of trek that LHR specialises in.

  • Jenny says:

    When we stayed there a little over a year ago, the service was appalling. 25 minutes to bring a glass of white wine over to my table in the bar after ordering, which was warm (the bar wasn’t busy) and then having to hunt for a member of staff to pay as they’d all gone AWOL. I love the Sofitel at Gatwick but the T5 one isn’t worth the money, and it’s certainly not 5* IMO, at least in a standard room.

  • Nick G says:

    Few of my observations when I’ve stayed here about 20 times now.

    1. I’m surprised you haven’t mentioned about car parking. Anyone thats driving can use the vast underground three level car park. I think it’s now about £20/day. I’ve never had any problem or even began to struggle for a space before. However, last time I went in august I’ve always rung up to add on car parking only to be told there was no room?! No room in a huge multi storey car park. Didn’t see right so, annoyed I booked and paid for the long term car park on bath road.

    Surprisingly I got there and there was loads of room in the car park. I was annoyed and said to the check in staff to which I got a blank look……If you do use the car park, lift access is only via the Sixt desk no other lifts.

    2. Access the hotel and take a ticket if arriving by car, even if you intend to park elsewhere. Don’t pay, but ask check in staff to stamp your ticket, which they do for free. They always do it for the whole of that arrival day. So there’s no rush to move your car once emptied.

    3. Also there’s usually a lovely scent wafting through the hotel which is always pleasant!

    4. Rooms are looking dated but are in good order.

    • Phillip says:

      They have an agreement with BA for BA staff to use the hotel car park. I wonder whether they try and keep an agreed quota free despite it not always being used.

  • Mark Smith says:

    We stayed here in June last year before an early morning flight. Only gripe was the lounge was full to the extent that I couldn’t get a seat during happy hour when I popped down for a drink once the kids were asleep. In the end I grabbed a couple of bottles of cobra and took them back up to our room! Would stay here again if flying early morning but compared to other lounges such as Hilton Park Lane or Robs favourite the IC Paris Le Grand this one is definitely lacking

  • NorthernLass says:

    I’ve stayed several times due to all the connecting we do from MAN. It’s ridiculously overpriced, presumably as it’s the only walkable option from T5, and if you want a room to sleep 3 adults (or 2 adults plus an older teenager) you have to book a suite, which will set you back at least £300. We did this last summer as we had an early onward flight and couldn’t face anything more complicated! So we got the lounge, which was actually very nice and we made the most of it. Trying to avoid going forward and using T3/4 hotels instead as most of our trips this year are from T3.
    I will concede that booking direct with Accor is convenient as you can get free cancellation right up to the day of travel for only about £20 more than a pre-paid booking.

  • Ian says:

    Have stayed here several years ago and then it was fine with the lounge.

    It was convenient for T5 and with parking etc.

    We were given a suite a couple of years ago when our flight was cancelled by BA.

    All very tired.

    Not sure if I would pay money to go there again.

    Much better options exist.

    It was however always the secret hotel on last minute – whether it still is, I have no idea.

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