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Review: the exceptional Six Senses Rome hotel, part of IHG One Rewards

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This is our review of the brand new Six Senses hotel in Rome.

It is our first review of a Six Senses resort, which since being acquired by IHG back in 2019 is slowly integrating with IHG One Rewards. Slowly is the key word though, with many properties still not participating as negotiations with owners continue.

This is a shame because Six Senses, at its best, is a ‘true’ luxury hotel group. It competes with the likes of Four Seasons and Mandarin Oriental rather than IHG’s other luxury brands, such as (and I mean this in the nicest possible way) InterContinental or Regent.

Six Senses hotel Rome review

I won’t beat around the bush: this is not a cheap hotel. As far as I can see, it is consistently pricing at over €1,000 per night. Even on points, you can expect to pay 200,000+ per night. Quality doesn’t come cheap.

IHG offered us a room to review, and we though it would be interesting to take a look at what Six Senses offers – and what sets it apart from IHG’s other luxury brands.

The hotel website is here.

Where is the Six Senses Rome hotel?

One of the reasons for the hefty price tag is, undoubtedly, the hotel’s location.

It is on Via Del Corso, which puts it slap-bang in the middle of the area around the Forum (including the Colosseum), the Pantheon, the Trevi Fountain and the Altar of the Fatherland.

Review Six Senses Rome hotel

To be perfectly honest, I’m not sure you could find a better spot. All the major central tourist destinations are within 15 minutes’ walk. That’s not something you can say about the many hotels around Via Veneto, including the soon-to-open InterContinental.

Traffic permitting, it is approximately 30 minutes from Rome Fiumicino Airport by taxi which is a €50 flat-fee. I would recommend this over Rome’s patchy public transport and particularly unreliable buses, which are basically all that is available in the city centre itself.

The closest metro station is probably the Colosseum – a bit far if you have luggage with you.

Despite being on the Via Del Corso, the hotel doesn’t feel crowded thanks to its set-back location next to a church, with a little piazza in front. In fact, the entrance is rather discreet:

Review Six Senses Rome hotel

Inside Six Senses Rome

The Six Senses Rome is steeped in history as a conversion of three historic buildings, one of which was a former bank. You are greeted by 600-year-old columns in the main entrance and a small, airy atrium with a centrepiece table resting on a unique sculpture of a face:

Review Six Senses Rome hotel

The reception is just to the left, where I was quickly checked in:

Review Six Senses Rome hotel

Behind the reception is a large, historic marble staircase:

Review Six Senses Rome hotel

Meanwhile, a modern extension in the courtyard adds some much-needed light as well as a lounge:

Review Six Senses Rome hotel

Half the courtyard has been retained as outdoor space, which will be particularly pleasant in the summer.

Rooms at Six Senses Rome

No two rooms are the same here, thanks largely to the unique constraints of the building with all its historic nooks and crannies. Of the 96 guest rooms there are four main types, as well as a handful of suites above, with rooms ranging from Classic (28 sqm) to Superior Deluxe (between 29 – 32 sqm).

As you can see, the size of the rooms does not vary hugely. I was told the major difference between room types is mostly the aspect and view. All rooms have the same amenities.

Review Six Senses Rome hotel

I was given a Superior Deluxe room on the third floor (there are four floors in total). It featured a fairly standard hotel room layout, with the bathroom to the left. This was clad, floor to ceiling, in travertine stone:

Review Six Senses Rome hotel

As you can see, there are two wash basins on a smoothly sanded piece of travertine stone. A large shower and toilet with bidet were in cubicles separated by reeded glass.

Toiletries were Six Senses own-brand, in beautiful earthenware pump bottles:

Review Six Senses Rome hotel

Two fluffy brown-grey bathrobes were also provided. These were by far the nicest hotel bathrobes I’ve ever used and I got very close to taking one home with me as my old one is getting a bit ratty!

The lights were very smart and would dim on slowly at night, whilst coming on at a higher brightness during the day.

Opposite the bathroom you have wardrobes with reeded mirror doors. Inside, you’ll find the usual bits and bobs such as luggage storage and hangers:

Review Six Senses Rome hotel

and

Review Six Senses Rome hotel

On the far left is the mini bar:

Review Six Senses Rome hotel

and

Review Six Senses Rome hotel

This is fully stocked and, bar the alcohol, complimentary. Items included various juices and soft drinks, water, almonds, dark chocolate and more. There’s also a Lavazza coffee machine and a funky kettle.

You then have the main room. On the right is a sofa, arm chair and small dining table / desk against a limewashed wall:

Review Six Senses Rome hotel

A Bluetooth speaker is also provided, as is a lamp (which I couldn’t figure out how to switch on!)

Review Six Senses Rome hotel

You then have the bed, set against reeded wood panels:

Review Six Senses Rome hotel

On either side of the bed were these funky bedside tables:

Review Six Senses Rome hotel

Both sides featured European sockets and USB ports, as well as bedside lamps.

Opposite the bed was a large wall-mounted flat-screen TV as well as two windows overlooking the roof of the church:

Review Six Senses Rome hotel

Overall, it’s hard to convey just how well done the rooms are. The photos don’t do it justice and don’t reflect the quality of the finishes either, which include travertine stone, wooden panelling and limewashed walls. The entire hotel showcases natural materials almost exclusively – no veneer here.

Taken together, it is a beautiful, warm design that feels connected to Rome’s history. It certainly felt like one of the most luxurious rooms I’ve ever stayed in.

Roman Baths and Spa at Six Senses Rome

Whilst you won’t find a rooftop pool here, what the hotel does offer is a big Roman Baths complex in the basement, reproducing the calidarium, tepidarium, and frigidarium circuit from Ancient Rome.

Like the rest of the building, it goes all in on the travertine, this time with beautifully carved stone walls:

Review Six Senses Rome hotel

There are three types of pools ranging in temperature from hot to cold, plus a steam room, sauna and tepidarium, as well as a handful of experience showers and a space to relax in.

Review Six Senses Rome hotel

The baths were perfect for a rainy April day before the sun beat back the clouds and are open from 10am until 8pm daily. It is free to use for guests, although you do need to book a reservation.

Review Six Senses Rome hotel

There’s also a lovely terrace on the roof of the building.

Breakfast at Six Senses Rome

Breakfast is served in the modern extension in the courtyard. This is the main restaurant / bar / cafe in the hotel and is called BIVIUM.

There is scope to eat outside in good weather but not so on chilly April mornings. It is quite a big space, centred around a finishing kitchen, with some unique features such as this large coworking space under an artificial skylight feature:

Review Six Senses Rome hotel

and

Review Six Senses Rome hotel

Of course, the majority of tables are dining tables:

Review Six Senses Rome hotel

There is a small buffet supplemented with an a la carte menu. The buffet includes some local hams and cheeses:

Review Six Senses Rome hotel

A selection of fruit, including pre-peeled mandarins:

Review Six Senses Rome hotel

Plus pastries, bread, cereals and more:

Review Six Senses Rome hotel

The a la carte menu features classic items such as eggs benedict or pancakes with a twist, priced between a surprisingly affordable €12 and €14.

For example, instead of serving the poached eggs with salmon, it comes with hummus and salsa verde, allegedly for sustainability reasons. In fact there is relatively little meat on the menu – the best you can do is parma ham in the buffet, streaky bacon as a side or smoked mackerel.

Review Six Senses Rome hotel

I’m aware this won’t be to everyone’s taste and – to be honest – I fancied some salmon myself, but the poached eggs with hummus was delicious in its own way.

Anyone expecting an expansive hotel breakfast buffet here will be disappointed, but that’s clearly not what Six Senses is going for.

Conclusion

Six Senses Rome is a seriously impressive hotel that delivers on virtually every metric.

I was sorry to leave the hotel behind and say goodbye to the beautiful rooms and stunning spa. The location is phenomenal too, and I now feel slightly spoiled for any future visits to Rome!

The service everywhere was friendly and attentive, albeit not quite as intense as a Four Seasons where the staff tend to know you by name after a day.

Of course none of this comes cheap, but if you can afford it then this is well worth a visit.

You can use IHG One Rewards points here. For a random night in June I was quoted 275,000 points per night against €1,444 for cash. At 0.47p per point this is actually above our 0.4p target valuation of an IHG point but it still feels like a huge number of points to hand over.

You can find out more on the hotel website here. Thanks to IHG for arranging my stay.


IHG One Rewards news

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Comments (66)

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

  • Phillip says:

    I’m a big fan of Six Senses; as you mention, I really wish they got their act together with the full integration of the brand. It’s taking way too long!

  • phantomchickenz says:

    Doesn’t it seem a bit ridiculous that at that price point you still need to pay for breakfast?

    • Ian says:

      Why? Surely if you are comfortable with £1,000 plus per night you are not going to worry about an extra £50 on breakfast.

      • Pb says:

        It’s perception , at the price point I’m inclined to think when I see such that they are trying to ‘nickel and dime ‘ you .

  • The Lord says:

    Are they still planning to open a Six Senses on Queensway of all places?

    • JDB says:

      Yes, the London building is well underway although the advertised 2023 opening seems maybe a bit optimistic. Your “of all places” comment would suggest you haven’t been to the area recently; there’s a lot going on.

      • Rob says:

        No there isn’t! Still fried chicken shop central. My kids go to the bowling place 200m away quite often for parties.

        • JDB says:

          @Rob I know you don’t Iike the area! There is very smart money investing there, including the development at the top of Queensway and SS hotel/flats. The leases on the sort of places to which you refer are slowly coming to an end and being bought by the various funds connected to the redevelopment. A few metres from the new SS in Westbourne Grove, more and more ridiculous expensive shops are opening. It’s not Chelsea, but it’s five minutes walk to Kensington Gardens and then a lovely walk on to Ken High Street or Knightsbridge. It’s also very well connected for quick access to the M40, on Queensway you have the Central, Circle & District lines, plus a short walk to Paddington – and yes, before anyone suggests that’s not relevant, the very richest/smartest people do travel on the tube!

          • Rob says:

            I know Alex Michelin who co-owns Finchatton and I still think he’s mad, although it’s not his cash in the main.

            I’ve been around their Four Seasons Residences project in Mayfair and it’s stunning, but Mayfair is not Queensway.

          • ADS says:

            do the ladies of the night still hang out on Cleveland Gardens during the day ?

            seriously though, areas do change, and presumably this development will spur further gentrification of Bayswater

    • Andrew J says:

      Agree that it’s an odd location to base a high end hotel.

    • aseftel says:

      Perhaps when they were doing their location research they reasoned that there’s already a Four Seasons on Queensway 😉

      • JDB says:

        There’s a Mandarin further up Queensway as well. Unfortunately recently very well reviewed in the standard so the secret’s out.

        • aseftel says:

          Oh yes of course. Rayner was already on it back in January I think.

    • The Lord says:

      Nothing against the area at all, I used to live right by the Waitrose. It is just a surprise to me that a £1000+ a night hotel is going to be based there. If I was spending that sort of money visiting London I would rather not be on Queensway next to American candy stores and one street over from some very dodgy looking accommodation on Inverness Terrace.

      • TGLoyalty says:

        Is that any different to anywhere near Oxford street or Piccadilly etc

        • The Lord says:

          Fair but I wouldn’t be paying £1000 a night to stay there either. On the plus side for tourists those locations are at least more central.

  • Ian says:

    How are Diamonds treated here? Don’t think the Ambassador program gives any benefits.

    Not sure that diamonds get free breakfast here, as Six Senses are not listed on the ihg benefits page.

    Diamond Elite Members’ Welcome Amenity choice also includes Free Breakfast at full-service and select-service brands (REGENT, InterContinental, Vignette, Hualuxe, Hotel Indigo, voco, Crowne Plaza, Even, Holiday Inn, and Kimpton)

    • Tom says:

      Actually, you have it the wrong way around – Ambassador, Royal Ambassador and Inner Circle get you free breakfast for two at the participating Six Senses, Diamond gets you nothing.

      • meta says:

        It would have been useful to know this info. For example Six Senses Douro Valley gives free breakfast, massage and a late-checkout to Diamonds. Since this was a freebie from IHG, I don’t think Rhys knows this information.

  • Bagoly says:

    Being ultra-picky, those arched columns in the spa do look to have (stone?) veneer on them? 🙂

  • Andrew J says:

    €1000 a night and refillable pumps of a generic shower gel provided? Not my idea of luxury.

    • Rob says:

      EU law, starts soon.

    • JDB says:

      The pumps are refillable because that’s part of the Six Senses ethos, something close to the heart of the SS CEO. Not everyone needs brands which also don’t mean luxury – there is no correlation; it’s the quality of the product that matters, not its name. Anyway, to the extent that the alleged non luxury status of the bathroom products is the only criticism that can be mustered, it sounds great.

      • meta says:

        It’s the quality of service more than anything. If the staff are bad, then they everything else falls apart.

    • Rhys says:

      Classy earthenware pump bottles and very nice contents. Four Seasons did this in Langkawi too 🙂

    • TGLoyalty says:

      What’s luxury about small bottles of toiletries?

  • Susan says:

    What a godawful place to be in Rome. The Corso and Piazza Venezia are always noisy with traffic on the cobbles and it’s just a really grubby street full of tourist tat shops. If you want to be central and in a chain hotel then the Hassler is right at the top of the Spanish Steps or the Cavaliere sits outside central Rome but with wonderful views – if you can afford 1k a night then a taxi into town is really not an issue. If the 4 Seasons opens at San Silvestro then I can’t see any positive for this one. Charging for breakfast items and a beer from the mini-beer is nickle and diming of the first order at these prices. Also, private limo transfers from the airport can be booked for €45-60.

    • Will says:

      It’s well out of the way but fully in agreement with the Cavaliere. Eat breakfast in tranquility around the pool overlooking the sights of Rome, taxi into town to do some sightseeing then come back for a swim late afternoon.

      I’m usually a fan of being central but I make an exception for the Cavalieri.

  • BC8 says:

    I’m confused, what kind of stone do they use?

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