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Review: the YOTELAIR Gatwick Airport hotel – what’s it like to stay in a windowless cabin?

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This is my review of the YOTELAIR hotel at London Gatwick airport.

The YOTELAIR at Gatwick opened about 15 years ago and offers the intriguing concept of sleeping inside tiny windowless cabins.

YOTEL offered Head for Points a free stay in a Premium room to give it a try, which I was happy to accept before an early morning British Airways Gatwick flight to Grenoble.

Review: the YOTELAIR Gatwick Airport hotel

What is YOTEL?

Founded by Yo Sushi creator Simon Woodroffe, YOTEL is based on Japanese capsule hotels.  YOTELs have rather small rooms, called cabins, and are designed for short stays.  You can pay by the hour and stay as little as four hours.

The YOTEL brand consists of three different hotel concepts:

  • YOTELAIR – airport hotels
  • YOTEL – city hotels
  • YOTELPAD – aparthotels

The YOTEL New York which opened in 2011 was the first city hotel offering small functional rooms at in a central location. With most people spending their time in the city and not their hotel room, this concept makes sense for people who want a level of quality but are less concerned about space. This year, YOTEL is opening a new city hotel in Geneva called YOTEL Geneva Lake.

Whilst the airport hotels are a similar design, they are generally smaller and with less communal space.  Most guests will only want to book the rooms to sleep and take a shower.

My night at YOTELAIR Gatwick

There is only one other hotel which is closer to the departure gates than YOTELAIR and that is the BLOC hotel (which a reader reviewed for us here back in 2017). YOTELAIR is literally a 5 minute walk from the train station and around 7 minutes from airport security.

For clarity, YOTELAIR Gatwick is landside and not airside.  (BLOC is also landside – there are no airside hotels at any UK airport as far as I know.)  If you are in transit through Gatwick, you will need to clear immigration and, the next day, pass back through security to your connecting flight.

YOTEL is in the South Terminal which is used mainly by British Airways.  There is a free monorail linking the North and South Terminals so you shouldn’t be put off if your flight is from North.  Trains from London arrive at the South Terminal so you are likely to pass through it irrespective of where you are flying from.

Review: the YOTELAIR Gatwick Airport hotel

As you come out of the station you turn right, walk towards Pret and take the lift down to the right. Unsurprisingly, for a windowless capsule hotel, YOTELAIR is on the ground floor.

Check in

Mission Control, the hotel’s reception, was to the right and as the hotel is very small and there was no one else waiting, check in was very quick.

I was offered a complimentary hot drink, which I declined as it was already past 10pm, and also if I wanted breakfast. This can be pre-ordered at £7.95 for a continental breakfast.

Hot meals, ready in 15 minutes, included Thai green curry, chicken tikka masala, vegetarian lasagne and Singapore noodles, all for £5.25. Given this is the cost of a meal deal airside, it doesn’t seem bad although I didn’t try any of them.

Wine is available for the shockingly affordable – for London – price of £3.95 per glass.

The cabins

YOTELAIR Gatwick offers three room types: a standard, which has a single bed only, a Premium Queen with folding bed and a Premium Twin with bunk beds. Given there were two of us, I tried the Premium Queen.

Review: the YOTELAIR Gatwick Airport hotel

The cabins are along a hallway and it felt a bit like walking along the cabins on a cruise ship – probably, as I’ve never been on a cruise ….

There are internal windows with blackout blinds for privacy. To be honest, I’m not sure if there’s much point to these.

Review: the YOTELAIR Gatwick Airport hotel

The occupied cabins had the curtains closed and the empty ones didn’t which means you could look inside the cabin from the hallway. 

The default lighting is pink, but you can change it inside the cabin with a few different presets. The lighting controls are a bit dated in our smart-home world (I’m not sure what more modern YOTELs are like). It took a second to work out what was what, but I managed to get the main lights on.

Review: the YOTELAIR Gatwick Airport hotel

The bed was in sofa-mode by default, with two cans of water next to it:

Review: the YOTELAIR Gatwick Airport hotel

Underneath the bed is a surprisingly large storage area, big enough for a couple of suitcases.

Review: the YOTELAIR Gatwick Airport hotel

Next to the bed was the ‘bathroom’.  You could shut the curtains and there was a sliding door which needed to be closed when taking a shower as apparently the smoke detector might go off.

Review: the YOTELAIR Gatwick Airport hotel

The shower was larger than average, which you might find surprising given the size of the cabin.  There was a handheld shower head as well as a rainfall shower and water pressure was strong.

There were two bottles of Urban Jungle toiletries – one bodywash and one shampoo – in the shower. 

The design of the cabin is very clever I must admit.  A table and chair are stored within the wall storage unit (see below) which also had a TV and four UK sockets.

Review: the YOTELAIR Gatwick Airport hotel

The table could be flipped up and when the bed was in sofa mode there was enough room to sit at the table.

As most guests only stay for a few hours or overnight, there was no proper wardrobe.  There was one lonely hanger for a jacket or a shirt.

To turn the sofa into a bed you press a big round button on the right-hand bedside table. The bed fully slides down to extend, with just a small walkway around the base for access to the bathroom.

The mattress was very comfortable and I slept well, despite the fact that it needs to fold.

Some sort of air conditioning / ventilation was available. It had a few settings from ‘cooler’ to ‘warmer’ so it wasn’t a precise control. It worked well enough that we didn’t overheat in the small room.

Conclusion

Due to its location inside the airport YOTELAIR is a great choice for early morning flights or when landing very late.

In fact, you NEED to arrive late. Check-in is at 6pm for an overnight stay, with departure by 9am, if you want the lowest rate. You will be charged more if you arrive or leave outside these hours because the hotel effectively runs 24/7, selling the capsules as day rooms during the day.

Some of the technology and fittings are a little dated and could do with an upgrade, although as you are unlikely to spend much time here I’m not sure an HD TV would make much difference. Some iPad room controls would work a treat, however.

I believe the most important things an airport hotel has to offer are a comfortable bed, a good shower and easy access to the airport itself. YOTELAIR Gatwick ticks all three boxes and I can see myself booking a cabin again in the future. The only downside could be storage as with two people and more than two suitcases it could feel cramped.

For stays longer than a few hours, do shop around.  The Hampton by Hilton inside the North Terminal is a ‘proper’ hotel which we reviewed here back in 2016.  An alternative South Terminal option is the Hilton, reviewed here. You’re unlikely to beat YOTELAIR pricing if all you are doing is passing the time during a long stopover or arriving late for an early flight the next day.

Thanks to the YOTEL team for arranging my stay.  You can find out more, and book, on the YOTEL website here. Rooms start at £95 in April for an overnight (6pm to 9am) stay.

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


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Comments (77)

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

  • Stuart says:

    Is there any news on the Yotel Hotel in T4 at Heathrow?

  • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

    “Wine is available for the shockingly affordable – for London – price of £3.95 per glass.”

    Perhaps that’s because Gatwick isn’t in London!

  • Scott says:

    I stayed once at the LHR one and it wasn’t too bad.
    After that, for say a 6-8hr overnight stay, it was working out cheaper to stay at a Premier Inn etc. than there.

    • HampshireHog says:

      I too have always found the premier inns best value for money and just as convenient

  • The Savage Squirrel says:

    If you want convenience then the BLOC is infinitely better than this. Proper compact but sensible bed+bathroom rather than prison cell vibes here. Watching the runway in action from your bed is fun too.

    • Mark says:

      Stayed at the BLOC a year ago before a red eye and it was really good. It is 10 paces from security, and if you do twilight bag drop you can go from checking out to being airside in under 5 mins

    • Chrisasaurus says:

      Not all the rooms have that though

  • TimM says:

    I stayed at the Yotel at Gatwick, September 2008 for 4 hours early morning. It must have only just opened then. There was a single bed with the space above it taken off for the neighbouring cabin and a small TV at the foot of the bed, a shower room/WC about the same size as the bed and a space in between as wide as the narrow entrance door. Even then it was £37.50 for 4 hours – I checked my booking.

    It was a very clever use of space. Had there been a decent train service to Gatwick from the North of England I would not have needed Yotel.

  • Jenny Reed says:

    I once stayed at the Heathrow Yotel which was much the same. Shame it’s closed down now.

  • paul says:

    It sounds and looks horrendous.

    And “from £95” I’d much rather do Premier Inn

    • DaveP says:

      Likewise!

    • Gordon says:

      I agree re premier inn, I’ve just booked the one on Bath road for an early August flight to NBO from T3 LHR, cost £53! Plus £15 on parking, But the yotel is all about it’s convenient location.

      • Gordon says:

        Meant £15 pn parking at premier inn.

        • paul says:

          Myparkingspace can do you a parking spot on people’s drives AND in real hotel car parks.

          Sign for an ongoing monthly rate (read on) to start the day before you arrive and cancel a week before you arrive.

          You get very cheap parking – they’ve even had the Premier Inn Bath Road on there before too.

      • paul says:

        Premier Inn Bath Road is good as you can sneak on the Purple Parking free shuttle bus to/from the airport 🤣

        I was only ever asked once and told them my car was with them but was staying overnight in Premier Inn so all good.

        • Gordon says:

          Yeah, haha, the driver used to check your purple parking ticket, but no longer does!

    • executiveclubber says:

      Premier plus room is far better — and cheaper — especially with the good night guarantee. You can’t really go wrong.

      • Gordon says:

        Yes the good night guarantee comes with all room types,but the Premier plus room comes with extras including top floor with airport views, in the LHR Bath road T2 and T3 one anyway.

    • Mark says:

      I’ve just booked the Premier Inn at the North Terminal for £97. Yes, it’s a trip on the shuttle to get to/from the station and South Terminal check-in but feels like a much better choice for the money.

    • flyforfun says:

      I’ve done the Bloc, Yotel, Marriot, Hampton by Hilton and Premier Inn directly and Gatwick and the Travelodge once with the Hoppa bus – won’t do it again unless there is a huge price difference. Even a £40 saving isn’t worth the hassle of the hoppa.

      Block I liked more than Yotel because it’s a bit bigger and they were responsive once to my comment (not a complaint, just a comment) that my room with a window didn’t have a runway view – and next time I was given one for no extra charge. A lot of the rooms only see the side of an office block.

      Yotel was ok. I used the single room. It was a bit cramped and awkward to get on the bed from the floor.

      The Marriot was just a Marriot. Space, facilities, food. Didn’t use them and having to trek outside was a pain.

      Hamptons was fine and good to be right in the North Terminal. They provided a cold early breakfast for those of us departing very early.

      Premier in is better now that the lift are all working and the building work stopped. It’s still a bit weird that one lift is behind a partition so you may not see it there. Check in terminals are good if you’re tech savvy but a lot of once a year travellers don’t seem to have the skill set so thankfully there is someone around to help. The Plus room is nice if you fancy a coffee when you get up – I got my money out of the 54p pods! I opted not to book it for my flight this summer as it departs at 7.30 so a little bit more time – hopefully their hot breakfast start a little earlier otherwise it’s the cold one again. Still good value and you don’t have to fight for seat as we’d need to do in the terminal or lounge. Getting out in the morning is always a shock to see the vast numbers being dropped off. Moonlight bag drop (which I think closes at 10!) saves having to queue with them to drop luggage off. It’s a short walk across the road into the terminal.

      I’d be sticking to Premier Inn as the Block and Yotel’s pricing has often been £70 more when I’ve looked. Not surprising given they are smaller compared to Premier Inn.

      • Rob says:

        Thank you

        • HampshireHog says:

          The other Premier Inn across the road from North Terminal also worth considering if HBO

      • Bagoly says:

        I found Blok wet room a nightmare in that after shower one can’t really use it.
        Is the Yotel bathroom design better for that or not?

  • Paul says:

    I have an 8 am flight from LGW in June and was astounded by how expensive hotels were compared to Heathrow for the same dates.
    I’ll risk a 4:30am train instead as if cancelled I take a taxi and claim on insurance. Absolutely crazy rates for what is still a bucket and space low cost departure point

    • Gordon says:

      Tell me about costs, I’ve booked parking for 3 weeks in August and Dec/Jan at around £300 each, cancellable rate, so will look at other options, just wanted to get them booked, as parking rates just rise.

      • HampshireHog says:

        Try Just Park or Your Parking space

        • Gordon says:

          Yes, I was told about this a few days ago, so I will have a look, Thanks for the heads up though.

      • lcylocal says:

        Just keep checking, but £100/week is about par for the course for valet and considerably cheaper than Heathrow. If you go through the offers page in myGatwick you can get 10% off. For the winter one, if they do winter saver rate again that will work well for you as caps out at 14 days for however long you want.

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

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