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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)

  • Stuart says:

    The H30 bus is free from T4 to T5. I have used this many times at 5am to get from one of the T4 Hotels back to T5 prior to the trains starting between the terminals.

  • Stian says:

    Regarding getting “an Uber or similar” from Heathrow, in my experience, don’t ever, ever book an Uber from Heathrow unless you’re going into London (or possibly a similarly priced fare). You can be stuck for an hour or more as driver after driver drops you, unwilling to take the short fare, and if you try to cancel your booking, Uber slams you with a £10 cancellation fee. If you need a taxi for a “short” ride from Heathrow, call a traditional minicab instead.

    • memesweeper says:

      100% this, and similarly don’t rely on a short hop to the airport from Uber either.

    • signol says:

      Regular black cabs from Heathrow have a system whereby if they are on a short run, they can bypass the massive queue and go directly to a terminal. (Youtuber Tom the Taxi Driver has some insightful videos!)

    • CamFlyer says:

      During a recent stay (parking + hotel), the Marriott Heathrow had touchscreen displays to book their preferred minicab company. We ended up using FreeNow for a black cab, which also worked fine and was comparable in cost. On returning, we took a black cab from T3 to the hotel to get the car.

    • Ironside says:

      Taxis from Heathrow hotels are a complete waste of time and / or money.

      Uber, as has been mentioned, is an utter fail. We got stung because the driver cancelled our booking *as we were in the car on the Bath Road*, told us to pay him in cash (so no cut for Uber) and then added the LHR drop-off fee. Sneaky.

      Black cabs are no better. They have their own app, but I’ve never managed to get them to collect from a hotel even though the depot / taxi park is almost next door.

      The hotel’s own taxis usually work, but you’ll pay for them.

      Best experience I’ve found, if you can do overnight check-in, is get the suitcases dropped off before going to the hotel by whatever means and then next day use public transport (tube / bus / not Hoppa) for hand-luggage.

  • John says:

    We use the Premier Inn at T4 usually, but if on an early flight from T5 it’s a bit of a faff to get from there to T5, especially if the trains/tube are only just starting up.

    Our other choice is the Premier Inn at Hayes (described as Hyde Park!) which is 5 mins trundle from the station, or a 5 min drive to the T2,3,5 long stay car parks. It’s a bit dated, but usually quite cheap and adequate for a “night before” hotel.

    • MHARRI50 says:

      Staying at the Millington Rd Premier Inn at Hayes (not sure if this the Hyde Park one) this July in a Family room. £52 on a non flexible rate.

      The 350 bus route is very close as a big all night Asda, which i will be buying breakfast from to save me another chunk of change over buying food in T5.

      Combine this with £38 parking for 15 nights in West Drayton using Just Park. Will need to add 4 £1.75 bus fares (maybe 6 if cannot do twilight bag drop with the hour of tapping in for first bus)

      Would be interested to see if anyone can beat that price for overnight hotel and 15 days parking

      If anyone thinks they can beat this

    • daveinitalia says:

      You don’t get the train from the PI T4 to T5, there’s a bus stop right outside the hotel (not the Hoppa bus stop, but one on the main road, I think it’s called Sheffield Way) where TfL buses take you to T5 (via the cargo areas for people who work there). Unlike the trains it’s not free but it’s just £1.70 and you tap your contactless card on the bus to pay.

      The advantage of the bus is there’s no need to change like you do with the trains and there’s no need to walk back into T4.

      • Geoff says:

        Yes, Sheffield Way to go to T5, just out of the PI and to the right. Coming from T5, don’t get off at T4, stay on until Starlight Way which is opposite the PI and also a short walk back to HIX/CP front door.
        482/490 are plentiful and frequent but they are regular TfL buses so less convenient if you have big checked baggage. If you do elect to walk to T4 to get the bus onwards to T5, just make sure you get one going the right way – they both stop at the same stop in both directions – easy to rush and get on the wrong one!

  • Clive says:

    My go to hotel is the Premier Inn on the Bath Road because you can get a bus straight outside the hotel direct to T2/T3 (T5 on the Night Bus as well if it’s a very early start) and for as low as £49 if you book a long time in advance

  • freckles says:

    The Atrium appears to be bookable via Booking dot com at least from beginning of May

  • Joseph says:

    An easy way to avoid the £6 drop off charge in an Uber:

    T4 – request to drop off at the Crowne Plaza T4 and use the bridge
    T5 – request drop off at Sofitel

    In theory you could also request to drop off at any of the long stay car parks and then use the free shuttle bus.

    • Geoff says:

      Yes, I think a lot of people forget the free drop-off facility in the long stay (now called ‘park and ride’) car parks. Used to be 2 hours free, now only 30 mins I think, which is fine for drop offs but less easy for pick ups – so you need to wait elsewhere until your pax is getting the car park bus before you move to the car park.

    • signol says:

      Using the long stay car park is the official policy for free drop off / pick up. https://www.heathrow.com/transport-and-directions/heathrow-parking/heathrow-park-and-ride Free for first 29 minutes. Don’t forget however that they are all within the ULEZ zone.

    • tony says:

      Good insight – was wondering about that the other week when my son dropped me off at T4. Had thought about the park and ride but was too cold to be hanging round for a bus, so just ponied up the £6.

    • Paul L says:

      My previous experiences with taxi to the T5 sofitel is that they wont let you through the barrier without providing a name that matches a hotel reservation starting that day

  • Barrel for Scraping says:

    Staying in Paddington is bad advice. It’s not the best of both worlds, it’s the worst of both worlds. You’re paying city centre prices and risk waking up in the morning to find out there’s problems with the line into Heathrow. This could be overrunning engineering work, points failures, a suicide or if you’re booking well in advance you discover a strike is called that day. If there’s a problem with the line then you can expect taxis to be in high demand and Ubers to be surge pricing. Getting the tube from Paddington to Heathrow is also a bit of a pain if you think that’s an option.

  • daveinitalia says:

    “Because Heathrow is not in Central London, black cabs have no legal obligation to take you”

    It’s not Central London, but Greater London this rule applies to. Heathrow is in Greater London, if you ask for a taxi to a hotel on Bath Road (also in Greater London) then the driver can’t refuse unless there’s a valid reason, but the Hilton T5 is actually outside the Greater London boundary so they can refuse this one or charge whatever fare they like (agreed before taking the job).

    • Rob says:

      Thanks, will adjust.

      • daveinitalia says:

        In London taxi drivers have to take cards too, and I’ve never had a problem with drivers insisting on cash since that rule came in.

        It’s different to Italy where taxis are also supposed to accept cards but many drivers claim they’re cash only or their card machine isn’t working. The promise of a nice tip that more than covers the cost of the card acceptance usually magically fixes their machine.

        • Rob says:

          Good discounts for cash though! If you are 10% above a ‘note’ amount (ie £20-£22, £10-£11) then most drivers will accept the notes and not want a tip. This saves you 10-20% assuming you would otherwise have tipped.

    • Ray says:

      Your right that taxis cannot refuse a fair to any local hotel (or any local area) apart from the ones that fall outside Greater London, then it would either be a set fixed fare or meter fare.

      If it is a bit of distance you can negotiate for a fixed price so you know where you stand.

      The Hilton T5 is a fixed price of £30 which seems expensive for the short ride, especially if your on your own, but I suppose compensates for it being refusable and takes into account the fact the driver has been waiting a while and needs to make a living.

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