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10am: Book IHG’s Kimpton Fitzroy London for 38p (or possibly £50)

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IHG’s Kimpton Fitzroy London, the impressive Victorian pile in Russell Square, is 125 years old.

To celebrate, it is selling 125 rooms at the original 1900 price of seven shillings and sixpence, which is 38p.

The rooms are available from 10am.

Book IHG's Kimpton Fitzroy London for 38p

The hotel has been vague about how it works and what it will cost.

Reading between the lines of the small print, and looking at how the hotel currently sells gift vouchers, I suspect that it may be selling 125 gift vouchers, for any date, for 38p.

These will be sold from www.kimptonfitzroylondon.com and NOT from ihg.com.

Once you have secured a voucher, I think you will need to email the hotel and make a booking for a date of your choice. Vouchers will be valid for 12 months.

I am not 100% sure that the price will be 38p

It’s confusing. The PR company behind this says:

“125 rooms will be available to book at the original 1900 price of seven shillings and sixpence (approximately £50 today)”

Now, seven shillings and sixpence – as a direct conversion – is 38p. Is this what the hotel is going to charge? If so, why mention the £50 figure? And why not mention 38p?

What is a FACT is that, at 10am today, 125 rooms will be sold at www.kimptonfitzroylondon.com for a date in the next 12 months.

We are not sure if the price will be 38p or £50, and we aren’t exactly sure how the booking process works. I suspect you receive a gift voucher and can pick a date later.

Irrespective of whether you pay 38p or £50, you are getting a bargain given the price of 5-star London hotels. Rooms at the Fitzroy usually start at £300.

Note that your voucher books into the base room category and does not include breakfast. It isn’t clear if IHG One Rewards benefits will apply. I should warn you that the base rooms at Kimpton Fitzroy are VERY small (from just 15 square metres) although the hotel itself is lovely.

We will try to get one to do a review – let’s see!

PS. I know that we are not giving you much notice of this deal. This was deliberate. It has not been widely publicised and if we had written about it last week it would have been picked up by every travel and deals site and your chance of getting one would be very low.

Comments (293)

  • Apor says:

    Website back on but nothing showing on vouchers page. Signposting to the offer (if it ever existed) has been horrendous

    • David says:

      Yeah, if you click the tile on the website which says “we’re ready 121” it says page not found. Same clicking from the Link Tree from Instagram. It was previously going to the vouchers page, but nothing there

  • Andrew H says:

    The Instagram link to linktree does now say ‘we’re turning 125 – enter the competition!’ so they’ve clearly given up. The link still shows ‘page not found’ though.

  • Kowalski says:

    We’re 125 Ready

  • Petros says:

    Here for the comments too 😛 Anyone who’s been online for more than, uh, a week saw this coming. The website served up a lovely variety of errors—SQL, server, 500, 404, 401, 400… a real greatest hits collection!

    Jokes aside, it was obvious this idea came from someone with zero understanding of how the digital world works – and that’s honestly kind of worrying for the business itself.

    Hopefully no one here actually expected to grab a room…

    • Bagoly says:

      Was a problem pre-digital world too.
      Sheekeys did something simlar decades ago (1996?), and it was a similar farce – we eventually got in and paid the small amount of money, but as demand had overwhelmed them, got a very small amount of food.

  • A13 says:

    They’re clearly not 125 ready…

  • David Taylor says:

    a classic tale of irony when the website also behaved as if it was in the 1900s

  • Alex G says:

    I don’t understand why they changed the name of a world famous hotel to something obscure.

    “Up up up past the Russell Hotel,
    Up up up to the Heaviside layer”

    • Rob says:

      Because the old hotel was a dump and the name had baggage.

      Russell Group is so named because the original meeting was held there. Fact of the day.

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