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Review: Canopy by Hilton Boston Downtown hotel – a superb city centre location

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This is our review of the Canopy Boston Downtown hotel in Boston.

Almost by accident, I’ve found myself staying at a number of Canopy hotels recently. This includes Canopy San Francisco SoMa (review) and more recently Canopy Cannes (review). This is partly driven by a rapid expansion of the brand, launched in 2016 and now with over 40 hotels to its name.

There seems to be a particular expansion in the United States where new Canopy hotels – including Canopy Boston – have opened in the past couple of years. One of the benefits of such a new brand is that you’re pretty much guaranteed to stay at a modern hotel.

Review: Canopy by Hilton Boston Downtown hotel

After a little research on the hotel scene in Boston, which if I am honest isn’t particularly exciting, Canopy Boston seemed like the best option with a good location with a modern and characterful interior.

HfP paid cash for the hotel albeit at a slightly discounted media rate. The reason for my trip to Boston will become clear next week!

The hotel website is here.

Canopy by Hilton Boston Downtown location

As the name suggests, the Canopy is located in downtown Boston. This is an interesting area – right next to tourist attractions such as Quincy Market and Fanneuil Hall but also embedded in the city’s central business district.

Review: Canopy by Hilton Boston Downtown hotel

This puts it in an interesting position, with one of the most touristy areas on the doorstep but with little residential development around, except in the North End. Once the tourists leave it is generally very quiet.

The airport is exceptionally close – around 15 minutes by car – and Boston has a decent albeit not amazing public transport system as well.

Inside the Canopy Boston Downtown hotel

The six-storey new build is flanked by the Carolyn Lynch Gardens to the North and a collection of 19th Century buildings (including the Union Oyster House) to the south. The main entrance is on the park side.

Step inside and you’ll find a dual height atrium with a feature staircase leading up to the hotel bar and ROSE Town restaurant on the first floor and the hotel reception on the ground floor:

Review: Canopy by Hilton Boston Downtown hotel

Unfortunately, my room was not ready when I checked in with the lovely staff around 11am (rooms are only guaranteed from 3pm onwards) so I sat myself upstairs in the restaurant/lounge area, which was very quiet after finishing the breakfast service, and spent a few hours working.

My room was ready around 1:30pm and I finished my check-in.

Rooms at the Canopy by Hilton Boston Downtown

As a Hilton Honors Diamond member I was upgraded to a King City View Room on the top (6th) floor. There are just a handful of room types, with the biggest differences being the number and type of beds (twin, queen, king etc) as well as the view.

The Hilton website advises that King City View rooms are 26 square meters. It was perfectly comfortably for my two-night stay and there was plenty of space for more luggage than the cabin bag I was with.

Review: Canopy by Hilton Boston Downtown hotel

First up was an open wardrobe, standard in Canopy hotels, with a dedicated luggage rack, hanging rail and drawers featuring safe and a clothes steamer.

Review: Canopy by Hilton Boston Downtown hotel

Next to this is the mini bar, with a Nespresso machine and six pods, including two decaf.

Review: Canopy by Hilton Boston Downtown hotel

Opposite was a spacious bathroom with chunky-looking sliding door. This was decked out in white subway tiles and featured a toilet, shower and single wash basin.

Review: Canopy by Hilton Boston Downtown hotel

The shower featured Victorian-style hardware with a rainfall and handheld shower head, although I found the water pressure on the rainfall head a little weak.

Review: Canopy by Hilton Boston Downtown hotel

Toiletries are the usual Canopy ‘thankyou’ brand with extra-lemony scent.

Review: Canopy by Hilton Boston Downtown hotel

The bedroom featured a comfortably, king size bed.

Review: Canopy by Hilton Boston Downtown hotel

True to the hotel’s name, it featured a fabric canopy with a playful print of historic and modern Boston locals and activities, including the first First Lady Abigail Adams watching the Patriots play on TV and George Washington running the Boston Marathon. The famous ‘Make Way for Ducklings’ sculpture is also featured:

Review: Canopy by Hilton Boston Downtown hotel

I think this is the first Canopy I’ve stayed at with an obvious canopy over the bed ….

Each side featured bedside lamps with integrated mains sockets plus a USB-A and USB-C port. There was also an alarm clock.

Review: Canopy by Hilton Boston Downtown hotel

Opposite the bed is a large TV and desk, although the black veneer on the desk was already showing extensive chipping and clearly not up to the hard-wearing standards required.

Review: Canopy by Hilton Boston Downtown hotel

An empty ice bucket and empty glass bottle were on the desk. Canopy doesn’t provide bottled water but instead has filter taps in the corridor on every floor. Whilst I like this idea, it’s not quite as convenient as having my own filter tap in the room as I did at the EAST Hotel in Hong Kong. In fact, it was quite far down the lengthy corridor.

My view was across rooftops towards Boston City Hall with the famous Union Oyster House sign front and centre:

Review: Canopy by Hilton Boston Downtown hotel

Gym at Canopy Boston

As a four-star hotel, there are relatively few amenities in the Canopy but you will find a gym in the basement. This was larger than I expected with high ceilings giving it a sense of space and airiness.

Review: Canopy by Hilton Boston Downtown hotel

Breakfast at the Canopy by Hilton Boston Downtown

Breakfast is served in the ROSE Town Kitchen and Bar on the first floor. This is a pleasant space with windows along one side overlooking the gardens and lots of spring sunshine beaming in.

Review: Canopy by Hilton Boston Downtown hotel

Unlike elsewhere, Hilton Honors has an ungenerous breakfast policy for Gold and Diamond Elites in the USA, which meant I was only entitled to a credit of $18 per day. Annoyingly, despite my 3am checkout the following day, I was not allowed to rollover my second day’s credit. They did allow me to select some items from the grab and go section, although I realised two bags of M&Ms were out of date when I opened them ….

$18 doesn’t get you very far in the US these days. Fresh orange juice was $8 whilst tea was $5. My admittedly very good croque madame was $25:

Review: Canopy by Hilton Boston Downtown hotel

Add on taxes and tip and you quickly find yourself spending more than double your credit.

Conclusion

All things considered, Hilton’s Canopy Boston hotel delivers a functional and convenient stay with just enough design flares to keep it from being boring. The playful corridor and canopy bed prints are particularly charming.

In terms of location, I’ve realised that I personally prefer Cambridge for its low-rise residential neighbourhoods, but you really can’t argue with how well placed the Canopy is, with all of the key tourist attractions within walking distance. The North End, with all its Italian restaurants, is a stone’s throw away whilst you can walk a little further to reach Sea Port. Best of all, it’s just 15 minutes from Boston Logan Airport.

Staff throughout my stay were exceptionally friendly and helpful. You really do notice a real difference between Boston and New York ….

Prices start from $250 per night or 55,000 Hilton Honors points. You can find out more, and book, on the hotel website here.


How to earn Hilton Honors points and status from UK credit cards

How to earn Hilton Honors points and status from UK credit cards (April 2025)

There are various ways of earning Hilton Honors points from UK credit and debit cards.  Many cards also have generous sign-up bonuses.

There are two dedicated Hilton Honors debit cards. These are especially attractive when spending abroad due to the 0% or 0.5% FX fee, depending on card.

You also receive FREE Hilton Honors status for as long as you hold the debit cards – Gold status with the Plus card and Silver status with the basic card. This is a great reason to apply even if you rarely use it.

We reviewed the Hilton Honors Plus Debit Card here and the Hilton Honors Debit Card here.

You can apply for either card here.

NEW: Hilton Honors Plus Debit

10,000 bonus points, Hilton Gold status and NO FX fees Read our full review

NEW: Hilton Honors Debit

2,500 bonus points, Hilton Silver status and 0.5% FX fees Read our full review

There is another way of getting Hilton Honors status, and earning Hilton Honors points, from a payment card.

Holders of The Platinum Card from American Express receive FREE Hilton Honors Gold status for as long as they hold the card.  It also comes with Marriott Bonvoy Gold, Radisson Rewards Premium and MeliaRewards Gold status.

We reviewed American Express Platinum in detail here and you can apply here.

The Platinum Card from American Express

80,000 bonus points and great travel benefits – for a large fee Read our full review

You can also earn Hilton Honors points indirectly with:

and for small business owners:

The conversion rate from American Express to Hilton Honors points is 1:2.

Click here to read our detailed summary of all UK credit cards which can be used to earn Hilton Honors points.

Comments (42)

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

  • Rob says:

    #jetblue #a321LR

  • mradey says:

    Always book your room for two people – there is no extra cost in the US. You then have two lots of 18USD breakfast credit to play with.

    • Rhys says:

      But if you only check in as one…?

      • Gordon says:

        Better still check in as one, with a booking through Emyr, breakfast problem solved!

        • ken says:

          For a $250 Hilton Canopy ?

          Hope your not expecting breakfast for 2, upgrade, late checkout & $100 credit.

          • Rob says:

            Park Hyatt Hamburg used to offer all that via Hyatt Prive on €200 rates …. which is probably why Hyatt didn’t renew the hotel lease!

          • Gordon says:

            One can only hope!

          • Gordon says:

            @Ken – I have booked decent rates with Emyr before in Vegas, Aria, 7 nights = 5 x $143 pn, $211 pn, $407 pn.
            Also the Palazzo, 4 nights, $169 pn, April 2023.
            So it’s achievable!

      • mradey says:

        You don’t need both people present at check-in!

        I’ve never been asked ‘May I see the other person?’ and I’ve done this hundreds of times at Hiltons…. If I was, I’d say “oh, they’ve gone shopping” etc..

      • LittleNick says:

        Do two people need to be physically present on check in?

      • TGLoyalty says:

        Never been asked to present the other person

  • Michael C says:

    As an alternative (especially for families, with 2 x double bed rooms), we stayed last month in the Hampton Seaport.
    Location not fantastic (especially in poor weather), but the Ubers were more than offset by the price, as well as the included breakfast and pool.

  • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

    I’m liking the maps you’ve started inserting into reviews – very helpful to see hotel locations

    • Rhys says:

      This isn’t new, been doing it for years!

      • Gordon says:

        Yes these have been around for quite some time! But a quick google maps search of a particular property would be the same.

  • Gordon says:

    I was enjoying this review Rhys, until I got down to the breakfast part, highlighting the high costs in the US at present, and the awful tipping culture. The breakfast at least would be offset by booking through Emyr!

    • Steve says:

      Doubt very much Canopy would be one that Emyr can provide terms for, although happy to be corrected on this.

      • Blair Waldorf Salad says:

        You can choose breakfast-inclusive rates on the Hilton site when booking US hotels. But the result varies. Some give you a coupon for whatever you like, no bill handed to you. Some let you have free run of the buffet, but then hand over a zero amount bill with a suggested tip based off the buffet price. Others, and this is increasingly common, give you a dollar amount (more than the $18 Rhys got, say $30) and then bill you based on menu prices – so you end up paying tax and service too.

        IHG’s Diamond free breakfast is more helpfully defined in the T&Cs as access to the hot buffet OR one main menu dish PLUS unlimited hot and cold drinks. So it’s much easier at IHGs to decline being served with any kind of bill at breakfast.

        • Fraser says:

          Hilton in SF was offering $18 which was not enough for a sandwich from their market to grab for lunch.

          • Gordon says:

            That was the price for a club sandwich in the farmers market in LAX, which was found to be soggy. Again the stupid prices in the US!

          • Rob says:

            I saw a salmon sandwich (wrapped in clingfilm) in a deli on the Upper East Side for $25 + tax last year. This was a standard ‘two pieces of bread’ sandwich.

  • RogerW says:

    Looked a decent 4 star hotel. Checked out 2 night in September (although we are in Boston pre-cruise 9/25). About $1200😲. Outrageous! It will likely be one night in Boston for us. The All included cruise is about £200 a night each.

    • Rhys says:

      Must be something on with those prices.

      • Rob says:

        ‘Buy Hyatt points’ is the default response in this scenario, since Hyatt still has a reward chart and keeps selling reward nights if it’s selling standard rooms for cash.

        • Steve says:

          @Rob, why have you quoted buying Hyatt points here?

          • Gordon says:

            @RogerW said he was looking for a decent 4 star hotel, so Rob has given him an option on a current points promotion, for a Hyatt stay example!

    • Robert says:

      Just checked prices for first week of October and it’s $632/night or 80k points, think I’ll stick with IC instead. Great review though, I would snap it up if I got closer to the $250 rate.

    • Ruralite says:

      Could be the start of the autumn semester & parents taking their kids & needing overnight accom. In addition to Harvard there are several other Uni’s/Colleges in the area.
      Interestingly in a well known travel agents last w/e the guy helping us commented for long haul he’d done nothing but book Asia, Oz & NZ trips over the last few weeks – people saying can’t be bothered with the US now because they are sick of being ripped off with extra resort fees/taxes & tips, a meal for 2 costing as much as a meal for 3 with all the add ons was a common reason he said.

  • pauls1 says:

    We stayed there in January as part of a 5 night BA Holiday package, it was one of the cheapest hotels in the downtown area at the time. Thoroughly enjoyed our time there, the staff were all very friendly and helpful and the room we were given was slightly larger than usual with a decent size sitting area between the bed and the window, despite just being a regular king room. Those larger rooms are located on the upper two floors at the same end as the Gordon Ramsay burger place, if anyone is staying here and wants to pick a larger room at online check-in. Would definitely book this hotel again when visiting Boston.

  • r* says:

    Stayed here a few weeks ago, was decent for a US hotel. The lobby area was nice.

    Officially, their check in time is 4pm, which I thought was kindof late especially as their checkout time is meant to be 11am – as diamond they only wanted to do 12pm late checkout but managed to get it to 1pm.

    They will give bottled water if you ask for it so youre not stuck with the filtered water, also the water jar had moisture/liquid in the one in the room, not sure if it hadnt been cleaned or whatever, I wasnt gonna be using it anyway.

    The best use of the breakfast credit is the snacks in the lobby imo.

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

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