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Review: back at the InterContinental Boston hotel after 10 years

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This is our review of the InterContinental Boston hotel.

It was one of my stops on a US holiday we took over Easter. I will also be looking at the Newport Marriott briefly in the coming days.

InterContinental Boston was one of the first hotels we ever reviewed on HfP back in 2013. The hotel has had a full refurbishment since then and is looking good. The hotel website is here.

It is 35 years since I first came to Boston. It feels very British, being the oldest US city, and has a British-style layout (no city block layout here). There is also a large student population from Harvard and MIT as well as world class museums including the Museum of Fine Arts and the Isabella Stewart Gardener museum.

My various stays here over 35 years took in all stages of the ‘Big Dig‘ – a phrase you may not know if you’re under 35 (click the link) but which was a cause célèbre for many years. The InterContinental would not exist without the ‘Big Dig’ – no-one would build such a hotel overlooking a noisy elevated highway. Today, 95% of the taxi ride from Logan Airport to the hotel takes place in tunnels.

Where is InterContinental Boston?

InterContinental Boston sits on the harbour, with parkland in front where the elevated highway used to run. It is marginally out of the way, on the edge of the Financial District, but Boston is small and walkable. You are unlikely to regret staying here on grounds of location. Whilst Boston Common is 12-15 minutes walk – admittedly through, at weekends, a pretty dead Financial District – Quincy Market (the Covent Garden of Boston) is close, as is the Aquarium.

The building itself is oddly bland and anonymous. It’s hard to describe what’s wrong with it, but something just feels off.

I booked using an InterContinental Ambassador ‘free weekend night’ voucher. This article looks at how InterContinental Ambassador works – it is the paid-for loyalty programme for InterContinental hotels which sits alongside IHG One Rewards. My wife has her own Ambassador account so we had two vouchers to use.

We booked three nights and paid for two, saving $500 per room with the voucher. I booked two Junior Suites – one was upgraded to a full one bedroom suite (Ambassador members get a guaranteed one level upgrade).

We declined a full suite upgrade for the second room (it seemed a bit big) and kept the Junior Suite but did accept the club lounge access which the main suite would have given.

My one bedroom suite at InterContinental Boston

The best rooms here are ‘channel’ (water) view, because it is prettier and because you are free of any car noise on the other side.

The hotel is looking good following its refurbishment. Whilst not exactly a riot of colour, the bedroom of the suite I was upgraded to certainly looked classy:

Intercontinental Boston hotel review

This was the view from the bedroom window:

Intercontinental Boston hotel review

…. and to put the view in context to the size of the bedroom area:

InterContinental Boston review

What was less successful was the living area:

Intercontinental Boston hotel review

…. which felt a bit empty. What you can’t see from the photo is that there is also a lot of empty space behind me. There is a desk but out of shot. If the curtains had been open, you would have seen it looked directly into the building next door.

The bathroom was a little bland too – it did the job but didn’t shout ‘expensive suite’:

Intercontinental Boston hotel review bathroom

It had both a bath (reflected in the mirror) and standalone shower.

It’s worth comparing the room to the Junior Suite we also had. This photo is taken from the foot of the bed:

InterContinental Boston hotel junior suite

You have a sofa, desk and table plus the same channel view as the full suite. Obviously the view out whilst sitting in bed isn’t as good but, on the other hand, if you were sitting on the sofa in the suite you had no view at all!

Arguably a Junior Suite with a channel view is the sweet spot here.

Gym and pool at InterContinental Boston

You need to give full marks to the gym and pool complex at InterContinental Boston. Instead of being stuck away in a basement, it is sat one floor above reception. You get good views and lots of light:

InterContinental Hotel Boston gym

It’s not the biggest hotel gym ever but more than satisfactory.

This pool photo was taken in the early evening so is a little darker than it is during the day. The pool is a good size and suitable for lengths. There are a number of loungers by the windows, not visible in the picture, which were rarely busy.

InterContinental Boston review swimming pool

Club lounge at InterContinental Boston

I wasn’t expecting to get Club lounge access because it doesn’t come as standard with the Junior Suite that I booked. It is a benefit of suites and although Ambassador rules let hotels refuse Club access if you are upgraded to a room which offers it, InterContinental Boston was happy to oblige.

I was pleased that they did. It is a big space:

Intercontinental Boston club lounge

…. and the selection was good. Whilst we took breakfast in the restaurant (we have Diamond Elite status and so this didn’t cost us anything extra), we did have evening snacks in the lounge.

The stand-out part is the cold counter:

Intercontinental Boston club lounge

…. because hot snacks are limited (there were no other hot items out):

Intercontinental Boston club lounge food

The alcohol selection was one of the best I have ever seen in a hotel lounge, and all self pour. Compared to some hotels which put out one bottle of wine each night and ‘when it’s gone, it’s gone’, this selection was remarkable.

Intercontinental Boston club lounge drink alcohol

Club access is only included with one bedroom suites. You would also get access if you had the invite-only Royal Ambassador status or had chosen club access as a 40 night milestone award in IHG One Rewards.

With any room, you can choose to pay at the following rates:

  • $150 per day, per room (two guests maximum)
  • $50 per day, per additional young adult (7-17 years of age)
  • Complimentary to children 6 and under

Arguably this is not bad value for a couple if you know you will be around in the hotel in the evenings.

Current opening hours are longer than the hotel website shows. Breakfast is 7am to 10am (7.30am to 10.30am at weekends), snack and soft drinks are available from noon to 4pm and drinks and canapes are available from 5pm to 8pm. The lounge closes at 9pm.

Breakfast at InterContinental Boston

The restaurant at InterContinental Boston is a little odd.

Called ‘Miel’, it is (accurately) desribed as a ‘rustic European-style restaurant’. It’s just not entirely clear why a ‘rustic European-style’ look was seen as a good idea for a glass and steel tower.

This is a hotel PR picture:

Intercontinental hotel boston restaurant miel

The breakfast buffet was (IIRC) $36 plus taxes, service etc, or you can pick from a range of a la carte items. The bill for four was around $180 on the first day when we had four buffets, but lower on other days when we realised one a la carte item each was a better option. The cost was wiped from the bill due to our IHG One Rewards Diamond Elite status.

(My wife and I both have Diamond Elite status. You should not expect to get four free breakfasts if only one guest is Diamond Elite.)

The buffet is, frankly, weak and was closer to what you’d expect from a three star hotel – it’s a million miles away from the spreads you’d find in the Middle East or Asia. I cannot justify the cost in any way unless you have it included in your rate or have Diamond Elite status. The a la carte options were good enough but not life changing.

Next to the restaurant is the hotel bar, which looks smart and less ‘rustic’:

Intercontinental Boston bar

We didn’t eat in the restaurant in the evenings. In Summer it appears that you can eat outside overlooking the water.

A quick word about check out

I should mention the mess that was our check out. For some reason the hotel had closed the bill and charged my credit card before I got down to the front desk.

Unfortunately:

  • I wanted the rooms charged to a different credit card, due to FX fees, to the one I had given at check-in for security
  • the bills for both rooms were a mess, with breakfast charges not removed

I got the first problem fixed with the room charge reversed. Unfortunately I ended up taking a small 1% hit when the charge and refund hit my credit card statement a few days later.

The second problem was more difficult. The front desk staff were not allowed to reopen a closed bill, which apparently required approval from a manager who was not available. All I could do was leave with a verbal reassurance that the charges would be removed and a refund issued.

It’s worth noting that the problems applied to both rooms, booked in two different names off two different IHG accounts. It wasn’t a one-off bit of bad luck on one bill. It looked like no Diamond Elite members that day were getting their breakfast charges wiped.

To be fair, the hotel did process the breakfast refund promptly. We kept the IHG One Rewards points on the $400 of breakfast charges as the points had already been processed!

Conclusion

InterContinental Boston is a high quality hotel and worth staying at. Whilst marginally out of the way – unless you need to be in the Financial District – the rooms look great following refurbishment and Boston is not exactly a large city.

It was the best hotel we stayed at during our nine day trip, exceeding the Newport Marriott (review to come) and Thompson Central Park New York (reviewed last year, but this time I didn’t get a suite).

I would especially recommend InterContinental Boston if:

  • you are willing to splurge for a water (channel) view
  • you have Diamond Elite status in IHG One Rewards and so get free breakfast (check your bill though!)
  • you are staying over a weekend, in which case buying InterContinental Ambassador for $200 and using the 2-4-1 weekend night voucher to get your second night free makes sense (the hotel offers ALL room categories for the 2-4-1 voucher, even the $6,000 per night Penthouse Suite!)

The InterContinental Boston website is here if you want to find out more.

Note that you can get substantial extra benefits on a cash stay, including a $100 hotel credit and free breakfast, if you book via our partner Emyr Thomas who is an IHG Luxury & Lifestyle agent. You pay the Best Flexible Rate shown at ihg.com and pay at check-out as usual. This article explains the IHG Luxury & Lifestyle scheme in more details and has Emyr’s contact information.


IHG One Rewards update – April 2024:

Get bonus points: IHG One Rewards is offering 2,000 bonus points for every two cash nights you stay (not necessarily consecutive) between 1st April and 31st May 2024. You can read our full article here and you can register here.

New to IHG One Rewards?  Read our overview of IHG One Rewards here and our article on points expiry rules here. Our article on ‘What are IHG One Rewards points worth?’ is here.

Buy points: If you need additional IHG One Rewards points, you can buy them here.

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

Comments (61)

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

  • Ian says:

    Charging the card overnight is very common.

    Having also been caught out, I tend to swap cards the night before if I remember.

    Or I will hold in the USA with my Halifax Clarity card or in Europe with my Virgin Atlantic card – both being zero fx.

    Then swap to whatever I want to maximise the points or take advantage of an offer that might spring up.

    • mark2 says:

      Thanks for the tip about Virgin fx charges, but it not in Europe, only Euro, Swedish Kronor and Romanian Lei.
      We are going to Switzerland shortly and would like to go to Iceland.

      • Guernsey Globetrotter says:

        Yes, not ‘only Euro’ either but it’s actually fee free only in the countries of the European Economic Area (EEA)- as I found out last year on a trip to Nice & Monaco … all the Euro transactions in Nice were fee free but in Monaco I got hit with their 3% foreign transaction charges – as if that place isn’t expensive enough already ! 😫

        • Guernsey Globetrotter says:

          NB @mark2 Switzerland is neither an EU nor EEA member so the Virgin charges for Euro transactions will apply there like they did to me in Monaco!

  • Gordon says:

    Re card charging, I had the same type of issue at the Palazzo (IHG) Las Vegas 3 weeks ago at check out, But they managed to remove the majority of it so I could pay in cash with dollars as I was holding a lot of them after a successful night at the tables The Aria (MGM) was a different story 2 days ago I had the option.

  • barnaby100 says:

    I stayed in Feb. Very underwhelmed. IHG Platinum Ambassador with lounge access. No upgrade. Lounge had very limited offer in evening I thought and no people and so no atmosphere. No water in my room and was then charged a resort fee on leaving (on a reward night) which was apparently to cover water etc . They did remove it.

    I was only there for about 15 hours – handy for the airport by T. Uber back to the airport at 6 am was cheap.

  • K says:

    Can you book with Emyr and get the $100 hotel credit if you wish to use the weekend certificate?

    • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

      No.

      But there is no problem booking two nights yourself using the voucher and then using a Emyr to separately book any other nights you may need.

      • James C says:

        But do note that the hotel will normally not let you spread the dining credit across the bookings- you will need to use it during the nights booked via Emyr.

  • Nige says:

    Is there much to see and do in Boston for tourists (young family)?

  • Richie says:

    Re “….I should mention the mess that was our check out. For some reason the hotel had closed the bill and charged my credit card before I got down to the front desk…..”

    This has happened to me in the US and causes guest disatisfaction, am not sure why they do this. I was charged double for my stay and it was very painful to sort out by Hyatt.

    • Flyoff says:

      I had a similar issue with the Hilton CDG double charging on the card I had booked with and the one I changed it to at checkout. Currently have a 6% loss which I am trying to resolve as I think they refunded using their exchange rate rather than refunding in EUR on my MBNA card

    • rob keane says:

      Many will be corporate stayers who couldn’t care less if they get charged for a breakfast or not as the company is paying, so it’s in the interest of the hotel to always charge and then deal with the ones that make an issue out of it.

      • TGLoyalty says:

        Couldn’t care less? Some people must have far too generous expenses not to care

        • Rob says:

          When I left banking in 2010 my allowance was £300 per night, so would probably be £400 now 🙂

    • Bagoly says:

      One reason for charging before guest leaves is probably so that if the card company declines the amount they can hassle the guest for payment before departure, especially given (per the other day) that many guests leave without stopping at the front desk.

  • jj says:

    Looks like the Ford Mondeo of hotels: sensible, practical, delivers the essentials, but utterly devoid of style, flair or panache. I can’t imagine staying there myself; I give beauty higher priority than points.

    Of course, I am a lone voice here.

    • Richie says:

      A list of your favourite hotels with style, flair or panache would be appreciated. TIA.

      • JDB says:

        I have often mentioned such hotels, but there is never one iota of feedback! The chain junkies seem so comprehensively to rule the roost here that it’s a bit thankless to mention anything beyond the bland for which people oddly seem willing to pay more.

        • The Savage Squirrel says:

          While I completely agree that chain hotels are often characterless and not the best option, this IS a website aboout the points schemes of the big chains – the site releasing a constant stream of independent boutique hotel reviews simply wouldn’t make sense (in normal times anyway, they did a nice series during COVID times)?

          Sometimes in a landmark city I’m indifferent to a bland hotel – it’s not the reason for the visit, I will spend little waking time there, and big city cash rates can be very high so if a points stay in a grey/beige hotel is the tradeoff for saving a massive pile of cash in that city, well, I’m tightarse frugal enough to take it.

      • jj says:

        I sense sarcasm but I’ll take the question at face value. In London, eschew the big names and stay in Batty Langley’s or Hazlitt’s. In the USA, you should use the family run Sonnenalp when skiing in Vail rather than the poorly located, bland chain hotels. In New York, you can find an example of a big chain getting it right in the utterly gorgeous Beekman.

        Europe is the land of utterly wonderful boutique hotels. But, wherever you are in the world, a few minutes with Google will find you a place of true beauty without a hint of grey carpet or international hotel furniture.

        • Gordon says:

          @jj I agree 100%, Not only in the US or Europe can you find these hidden gems, I’ve stayed at many beautiful off the beaten track boutique properties in Vietnam, Thailand and beyond,TBH I find that a lot of these smaller boutique hotels give a better more personal service than the main hotel chains at the reasonable cost a hotel should be. You only have to see many previous comments on posts regarding not getting certain benefits even having status with a major hotel chain, I didn’t have status but received a great service and benefits that made me return to many of these properties.

        • Richie says:

          Thanks for your replies.

        • mvcvz says:

          I don’t mind either grey carpet or international hotel furniture at all, as long as the former is clean and the latter isn’t so abundant that I can’t negotiate the room without tripping over it.

      • mark2 says:

        Fairmont (formerly CP) Chateau hotels in Canada.

        • Rob says:

          Not sure you can compare Victoria-era (Gleneagles style) resort hotels built literally in the Canadian wilderness to a new hotel in the middle of a US city.

          These hotels also, as befits their age, have lots of dodgy small rooms and all the other issues you get at historic properties. Obviously they serve their purpose and no-one is every going to get permission to build a glass and steel tower in the middle of a national park in Canada.

  • Magic Mike says:

    $180 for breakfast for four, $150 for lounge access per day, good to see the US is still doing its bit to discourage tourism…

    • Gordon says:

      Trust me the U.S. is stupidly expensive now, I’ve just spent 22 days in various locations out there and I’ll not be returning until it returns to some normality. The only reasonable cost I found were the Uber rides.

    • Michael C says:

      IC Park Lane would be £152 for four breakfasts…even though the US is indeed expensive, I think that’s more down to how ridiculous hotels generally are in their pricing.

      • Rob says:

        It’s primarily currency – $1.65 to the £ was the norm for many years pre the Brexit vote. Nobody wants to buy our currency these days so it has fallen in value.

        • mark2 says:

          Wasn’t the Euro worth less than a dollar recently?

        • VALittleRed says:

          ‘Nobody wants to buy our currency these days’ – no offence Rob but this really is a rather silly sweeping statement which is just categorically not true. Even if it were plenty more factors than just demand that determine the price of cable.

          • Rob says:

            The FX rate is simply the market price for buying (or selling) a £. More people want to buy than sell = price goes up, more people want to sell than buy = price goes down. It’s a commodity just like a Twix.

            There are literally no other factors that impact the price except the willingness of people to buy and sell.

            Government can impact the enthusiasm of people to buy or sell, based on interest rates etc, but fundamentally it can’t control the rate without massive market intervention.

          • JDB says:

            @Rob the issue is that it isn’t all about the £. The €uro and the ¥en are just as unpopular and it felt to me, and others, that the point you were making was a political one. $ for $ prices in the US for hotels and restaurants are up by much more than the exchange rate difference.

    • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

      iIRC Lounge access was $75 per person when I stayed at the IC in San Francisco last month.

      Some of these charges are set to actually discourage people from buying up.

      • JDB says:

        We have a friend who is COO of a big chain hotel in London that is required per the chain requirements to offer 24hr room service dining. They absolutely hate doing it because it is so costly and inconvenient. They have increased prices to bonkers levels in an attempt to stifle it, but there are still takers and it still loses money.

        • TGLoyalty says:

          They hate doing it so increase prices. Fair enough but surely if the brand standard is to offer it they are paying staff that aren’t being used and losing more money … or are they trying to show no one uses it so let us cut it?

          It loses money so they keep hiking prices sounds like they don’t have a grasp of economics as it’s not that simple either.

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