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Which Heathrow airport hotels are walkable from the terminals?

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Which hotels at Heathrow airport are walkable from the terminals, and don’t require a bus ride?

Whilst you are virtually guaranteed to be paying more to sleep within Heathrow airport, you can’t argue that it is the easiest option.

The ability to walk from your room to the check-in desk in a couple of minutes is fantastic – no-one wants to be messing about with buses at 6am. You can even nip out, check in your luggage and then pop back to the hotel for a leisurely breakfast.

Which Heathrow hotels are walkable from the terminals?

Remember that, unlike many big airports, Heathrow has banned dedicated hotel shuttle buses. The only way to your hotel is by a public bus – which is no longer free – or the expensive Hotel Hoppa shuttle service. Each Hoppa route stops at multiple hotels and can be slower than (and is 4x the price of) the local buses.

What are the onsite hotels at Heathrow?

We have reviewed most of the onsite hotels at Heathrow. You can see all of our London airport hotels reviews – covering Heathrow, Gatwick, Stansted, Luton, London City and, erm, Southend – here.

Let’s run through the options for staying directly at Heathrow airport.

Because transferring between Heathrow terminals can be more painful than getting a bus from a Bath Road hotel, especially with luggage, I recommend staying at a hotel in the terminal you are using.

Heathrow Terminal 5 hotels

There is only one hotel in Terminal 5 – the Sofitel (website here).

This is a five-star hotel so you will pay for the privilege, of course.

We reviewed the Sofitel at Heathrow Terminal 5 here. It was impressive, although the furnishings are looking a bit dated, and I stayed there again a few weeks later when I found myself on an unexpectedly early Terminal 5 flight.

Which Heathrow hotels are walkable from the terminals?

Heathrow Terminal 4 hotels

The great news is that Heathrow Terminal 4 is hotel central with options for all budgets.

Your options are:

  • Premier Inn London Heathrow Airport Terminal 4website here, review here. This hotel can offer fantastic value for money.
  • Holiday Inn Express London Heathrow T4website here, review here. This hotel shares the same building as the Crowne Plaza and you can cross-charge. All Holiday Inn Express guests get free breakfast too. If you don’t mind a slightly blander room, the smart money stays here, takes the free breakfast and enjoys the same bar and restaurant as Crowne Plaza guests.

All of these hotels are on the same covered walkway from the terminal, and there is very little in it when it comes to distance.

The YOTEL hotel which used to be in Terminal 4 is closed.

Heathrow Terminal 3 hotels

No hotel offers a quicker walk to your plane than the Aerotel in Terminal 3’s arrivals hall.

We reviewed Aerotel Heathrow here and the website is here.

It is a smart and modern hotel, but most of the bedrooms don’t have windows. You don’t really notice when you’re inside, however, and if you are arriving in darkness it doesn’t make any difference.

Which Heathrow hotels are walkable from the terminals?

Heathrow Terminal 2 / 3

Finally, the newest hotel on this list is the Hilton Garden Inn Heathrow Terminal 2/3, reviewed here. The website is here. An image is above.

This hotel is a bit more of a faff to reach, requiring a walk through the short stay car park if you are coming from Terminal 2. Terminal 3 is a little further away. The hotel is decent though, with a rooftop bar.

Note that, if you have Hilton Honors Diamond status, you do not AUTOMATICALLY get free breakfast at a Hilton Garden Inn. HGI is the ONLY Hilton brand where a Diamond has to opt in to get a free breakfast. You must change your ‘MyWay’ benefits option 24 hours before checking in.  The default MyWay option is to refuse the free breakfast and award you 750 bonus points – which I’d value at £3 – instead. Hilton Garden Inn hotels do not offer upgrades to elite members of Hilton Honors.

(Heathrow Terminal 1 has been closed for some years, hence the lack of hotel options there.)

Other options for a bus-free Heathrow hotel

If you are determined to avoid the buses but want other options, try these hotels.

The Hilton Garden Inn London Heathrow Airport at Hatton Cross, review here, is 3-4 minutes walk from Hatton Cross underground station. This is the station before the airport, and the trains will drop you at the terminals within minutes. This trip is now free. Check the time of the first train if you are departing early. The website is here.

Be aware that the walk to the Hilton Garden Inn isn’t the easiest, albeit short, and not recommended with heavy suitcases.

The other hotel at Hatton Cross is the Atrium Hotel Heathrow, reviewed here. This a new but slightly bizarre hotel, seemingly aimed at the Indian wedding market. If you don’t know the area, it is easier to find than the Hilton Garden Inn – you can’t miss its bright blue facade as you exit the tube. This hotel is currently unbookable – I believe it has been taken over by the Home Office.

Note that Hatton Cross underground station does not have an escalator or lift, although there are not many steps.

Readers have previously recommended the Staycity hotel which is directly opposite Hayes & Harlington station. Hayes & Harlington is an Elizabeth Line stop between Paddington and the airport. The hotel is currently being used by the Home Office and cannot be booked.

A slightly off-beat option is the Thistle Heathrow Terminal 5 hotel which we reviewed here (website here). This is a very dated but cheap hotel. The reasons we mention it is that the POD driverless monorail from the airport car park to Terminal 5 operates from behind the hotel and you can ride it for £8 per person each way.

Finally, consider the Hilton London Paddington hotel – website here. This may be the best of both worlds – you can sleep in the city centre, inside the railway station – but, timed right, you can leave your room and be at Heathrow airport within 25 minutes via Heathrow Express or within 35 minutes via the Elizabeth Line.

Comments (68)

  • southlondonphil says:

    Worth noting that the life-expired footbridge at the Hatton Cross ‘magic’ roundabout was removed last year and has not been replaced so the best route to the HGI now involves crossing at the lights outside Hatton Cross station and walking past the Cargo Centre along the Great Southwest Road.

    • Rob says:

      Noted, thanks.

    • MKB says:

      They also put up a fence blocking the short cut across the grass from that road. You now have to overshoot the hotel and cross the service road at the pedestrian crossing. Happily, the rear entrance to the hotel always seems to be open, even arriving at midnight, so you don’t have to walk back round to the front entrance.

  • Inman says:

    Hope this might help somebody but a return ticket on Heathrow Express from Paddington could be as low as £20 with any railcard if booked 45 days+ in advance. I just booked my fully refundable open return HEX ticket for £26 with a network railcard for my travel in April. On the other hand Lizzie Line costs £12.50 each way.
    Staying in Paddington area makes it much more enjoyable with Edgware Road’s food scene and its much more wallet-friendly too.

    • DF says:

      Railcard discounts apply to the £10 advance fares (one way) too taking them down to £6.65, at which point it’s actually cheaper than the Elizabeth line even if you’re connecting back onto it or another tube from Paddington.

  • paul says:

    Are these walkable hotels under cover as any few minutes walk in the pouring rain is not of any benefit when sitting in damp clothes on a flight.

    Then, for most, the issue of car parking needs to be considered.

    And, the £6 drop off charge and taxi fare is small change when compared to the cost of an on airport hotel.

    • SammyJ says:

      The 4 at T4 are all walkable under cover – they’re linked by the covered skyway, takes maybe 5 minutes but you’re directly in the terminal. Think the Aerotel is in T3. Can’t speak for the others.

    • Geoff says:

      The T4 hotels are all connected via a covered walkway to T4, from where you can get to any terminal under cover. If you are at the Premier at T4 there is a closer bus stop right outside but to stay under cover you would need to use the walkway to T4.
      I’m also a car-parker. If I have any combo of pre or post flight hotel and parking I often use T4 long stay (now ‘park and ride’) and a T4 hotel, whatever terminal I am flying from. It is often the cheapest car park, it is walkable to T4 (and thence to T5 or T2/3 by train), there is the standard car park bus to T4, or there are bus stops immediately outside the car park, on the southern perimeter road, where you can get the 482/490 to/from T5.

  • The Original David says:

    Are there more good options along the Elizabeth line route into London, except Hayes & H? Staying all the way in Paddington sounds expensive compared to the likes of Ealing Broadway, Southall etc

    • LittleNick says:

      Stayed at the premier inn hayes/harlington during 2024, rooms were fine but the restaurant which was only open to guests was dire. First time I’ve ever sent food back because it was cold in the middle

    • Inman says:

      Ealing has the usual budget chains (Travelodge, Premier Inn and Ibis).

      I would avoid Southall. There aren’t any half decent hotels in that area and the Lizzie Line breaks down frequently (I am a daily commuter on it). You would find good, cheap and authentic Indian food though.

  • TokyoFan says:

    I’m staying at HGI Terminals 2&3 this evening. Is it signposted from the Elizabeth Line? It’s been ages since I stayed there!

    • daveinitalia says:

      It’s not signposted from the trains, the hotel is attached to T2 so the first thing you do is walk towards T2. Note that the tube is closer to T2 than the HEX station that the Elizabeth line uses.

      When you reach T2 there should be mentions of the HGI in the lifts from the subway. If there isn’t then select arrivals level and walk through the carpark. You should see a entrance to the HGI from there.

  • jj says:

    How many of these hotels have on-site parking? No point avoiding a bus to the airport if you need a bus from the car park.

    That’s where the Sofitel wins for T5: park on-site, eat on a great restaurant, stroll undercover to the airport, and stroll back to your car on the return. Worth every penny.

  • Jon says:

    I thought £8 a person was a little steep, but otherwise I can recommend the Thistle. It isn’t luxurious but we only needed abed for the night.

  • Sandy says:

    I use the Hilton at Terminal 4 in preference to HGI at Hatton Cross, even though I fly Star Alliance out of T2. Pricing is generally more competitive and although the walk to Underground/Heathrow Express is as long, it’s all under cover and has the benefit of a lift which is a huge benefit compared to Hatton Cross.

    My son also chooses Premier Inn at T4 for pricing and easy location even though he uses T2.

    • MKB says:

      A minor advantage the Hatton Cross Hilton Garden Inn is the fact that, if you come in on the Piccadilly Line from central London the night before, you pay only the Off-Peak fare, whereas you are dinged for an Anytime fare if you continue directly to Heathrow.

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