The Best Hotels in Budapest
![Párisi Udvar Hotel Budapest](https://media.cntraveler.com/photos/672e2ff59a7e0ccc64f3a08a/16:9/w_320%2Cc_limit/Pa%25CC%2581risi%2520Udvar%2520Hotel%2520Budapest-sept22-pr-global.jpg)
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Forget the “Little Paris” moniker that has haunted Budapest for decades. The majestic capital of Hungary, from the wooded and sedate hills of Buda with its old town and royal castle, to the buzzing ruin bars, grand palaces and shopping streets of downtown Pest across the broad Danube that divides the city, is so much more than just another pretty central European city. Here contemporary cool and old-school grandeur mix effortlessly, and all with a distinctly Hungarian flavor. To use another tired phrase, here there is something for everyone, whether you want to admire the most astonishing art nouveau and secessionist architecture in Europe, party all night at a grand 19th-century thermal bath, sip cocktails on a rooftop bar, or eat dinner while cruising down the moonlit Danube. And with several exceptional stays opened in the last couple of years, you may just find yourself falling in love with the best hotels in Budapest.
What is the best part of Budapest to stay in?
While the Buda side of the Danube may be the smartest part of town for wealthy residents looking for peace and quiet, Pest is where the action is and is packed with historical buildings and great places to eat, drink, shop and stroll, and this selection of the best new openings and old classics for you to lay your head down to rest in concentrates on the central Pest districts, where reaching the central landmarks is easy.
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Corinthia Hotel Budapest
$$$ |Readers' Choice Awards 2017, 2018, 2019
Of all the hotels on this list, the Corinthia is the only one, bar the Kempinski, that began its existence as a hotel. The Grand Hotel Royal Budapest, as it was called, in its heyday of the early 20th-century, hosted stars such as Josephine Baker, who performed in the hotel’s Orfeum cabaret. It has served more recently as the inspiration for Wes Anderson’s Oscar-winning movie, The Grand Budapest Hotel. A vast establishment created from three adjacent 19th-century buildings with the original side streets between them transformed into lofty glassed atriums, the Corinthia is perhaps most famed for its beautifully restored Royal Spa. The spa was originally opened in 1888 and was saved from the ignominious fate of being converted into a multi-storey car park. Guests can swim or bask in saunas and hot tubs surrounded by columns and period tilework. Equally impressive is the huge cream and gilded ballroom, once the venue of Budapest’s first cinema. For gourmets, the hotel has two fine-dining restaurants.
- Kimpton BEM Budapest / IHG / Jancsó Gergely / Greg Images
Kimpton BEM Budapest
Opened in September 2024 and the only full-service, 5-star hotel on the Buda side of the Danube, the Kimpton BEM occupies an elegant, white, neoclassical, 19th-century building that looks out to the Danube over a small garden square. Designed by Marcel Wanders, the creator of the Mondrian South Beach, public spaces are bold, with intricate mosaics and oversized sculptures in the lobby, while bulbous tiled columns rise to the lofty ceiling of the airy AGOS restaurant, and the corridors of the guest floors have black or green and gold-walled corridors, illustrated with images of the spines of books, fish, animals, and insects.
A short walk from the castle district and the leafy avenues of Margaret Island, and just across the river from downtown Pest, the hotel offers compact, comfortable rooms that combine glossy green or blue handmade tiles and coordinated carpets with furniture and fittings from Wanders’ own Moooi brand, as well as a handful of spacious, individually designed suites, the grandest of them all features a private roof terrace larger than the hotel’s serene rooftop cocktail bar, Fennen. On the ground floor, the AGOS restaurant serves imaginative, exquisitely prepared Mediterranean-inspired food with a Hungarian twist, and the Huso bar tempts guests with classic and signature cocktails. While the basement spa is a space where guests can unwind with a sauna, steam bath or jacuzzi.
Verno House
A notable addition to the boutique hotel scene in Budapest, Verno House occupies an elegant 19th-century building facing the peaceful Liberty Square Park, and is just a two-minute walk from the iconic Hungarian Parliament building and the Danube. Luxurious yet laidback, the 48 rooms and suites feature floor to ceiling windows, glass-walled bathrooms with freestanding tubs, and comfy, Nordic-flavored contemporary furnishings against a soothing natural palette of forest greens, ochre, and earth tones punctuated with contemporary photography commissioned from Zoltán Tombor. In the basement a giant red-lit jacuzzi feels like the underground launch-pad in a James Bond villain’s lair, while the excellent Flava restaurant, with its greenery-filled interior and tranquil terrace bordering the park, offers an imaginative fusion menu of North African, Latin American, and Middle Eastern-inspired dishes, delicious cocktails and chilled, beat-driven tunes from a resident DJ at the weekends.
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W Budapest
W Budapest is an exploration of duality. Housed in the Drechsler Palace, a building designed by architects Ödön Lechner and Gyula Pártos and previously home to the headquarters of the Hungarian State Ballet Academy, this is a hotel that firmly modernize the W brand while drawing deep influence from Hungary's past. A chessboard theme runs through the interior design, a homage to the city's national pastime: black-and-white tiles decorate every bathroom and elevator, and the two most splendid suites—the all-black Extreme Wow suite and all-white Wow suite—call back to both sides of the board, as well as the dueling black and white swans from Swan Lake. The Extreme Wow suite also houses a sculptural chessboard designed by artist Ronan Mckenzie, so you can practice your game while exploring the shops of glamorous Andrássy Avenue. Downstairs, the Away Spa is a veritable hall of mirrors inspired by Houdini's great illusions, and even a contortionist's sore muscles would be soothed by the clever massages. In the evening, enjoy refined Asian dishes at Nightingale by Beefbar, and then head down to Society25 for a nightcap. A speakeasy-style basement bar accessed through a bathroom mirror, it serves up a selection of intriguing cocktails, each inspired by the city's history: the Brew Bop is a coffee martini inspired by Budapest's 19th-century café culture, and the fun, frothy Strawberry Plié harks back to the era when trainee dancers rather than travelers roamed these halls.
- GEORGE FAKAROS/Matild Palace
Matild Palace
One of a matching pair of neo-baroque fin de siècle palaces built on the orders of Princess Clotilde of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, the wife of Archduke Joseph Karl, and protected by UNESCO, the Matild Palace, which opened in 2021, is an exceptional addition to the Budapest hotel scene that marries award-winning contemporary design with beautifully restored heritage elements. Home to the first Spago restaurant by Wolfgang Puck in Europe, already recommended for a Michelin star, the Matild also features a rooftop bar with panoramic views, and its beautiful galleried, art nouveau café offers seasonal cabaret performances and a fabulous Sunday brunch with live music and bottomless champagne. Rooms have soaring 13-foot tall ceilings, herringbone parquet flooring and contemporary furnishings that combine sumptuous bursts of rich color with high taste. For a unique experience book the extraordinary three-story tower suite, with 360-degree views of Budapest and the Danube that will stay with you.
- Adrienn Pucher/Párisi Udvar Hotel Budapest
Párisi Udvar Hotel Budapest
An expression of the golden age of early 20th-century Budapest in stained glass, ceramics and endlessly intricate patterns and sculptural details, the vertiginous and breathtaking atrium of the Párisi Udvar or “Parisian Court” is a masterpiece of art nouveau extravagance that was reopened to the public as a luxury hotel in 2019 after over 85,000 hours of painstaking restoration work. Rooms are a model of restrained modern elegance mixed with classical lines, where cool colors provide respite from the riot of detail of the historic building’s public areas. In the evening, the ÉTOILE Champagne bar offers over 50 bottles, with 20 available by the glass, and when you are suitably infused with bubbles, the Párisi Passage Restaurant offers delicious Hungarian and international classics with wine pairings. Or, for the more adventurous, just step outside to find yourself in the very center of Budapest’s pedestrian central shopping and tourist district.
- Eric d'Herouville/Kozmo Hotel Suites & Spa
Kozmo Hotel Suites & Spa
The Kozmo, which opened in 2021 in what was in Europe’s second-largest telecommunications center in the 1920s, is a hit for lovers of contemporary design. On a leafy square just outside Budapest’s Palace District and within walking distance of the Dohány Street Synagogue and Great Market Hall, behind the hotel’s façade with its original monumental sculptural reliefs, guests discover a contemporary haven of spacious, beautifully designed spaces. The tallest building in the area, expansive terraces furnished with sofas to sprawl on offer panoramic views of the tiled rooftops of Budapest from the hotel’s many suites, where glass, black metal and crisp whites, grays and cool blues are married with warm parquet floors and toe-warming, thick cream rugs. The stylish bar is a relaxing spot for an evening cocktail before heading out to the elegant courtyard bistro, which provides a peaceful haven for delicious dinners.
- Courtesy Aria Hotel Budapesthotel
Aria Hotel Budapest
$$ |Readers' Choice Awards 2017, 2018, 2019, 2023
Just a little over 300 feet from the towering cupola of St. Stephen's Basilica and arranged around a glass-roofed 19th-century courtyard, the Aria Hotel is hands-down the place for music lovers in Budapest. Placido Domingo, Lennie Kravitz, and Rita Ora are amongst those who have enjoyed the hotel’s music-inspired hospitality, and the walls of the Mirror Bar are covered in the signatures of other famous musical guests. The four musically-themed wings contain 49 rooms, either with private terraces onto the courtyard, or views onto the elegant surrounding streets. Each room is inspired by an individual composer or musician, decorated with fabulous original art by Czech caricaturist Josef Blecha, and has its own marble fireplace, with décor ranging from the voluptuous and extravagant purples of the opera wing to the more restrained palette and lines of the classical wing. After a day of sightseeing guests can unwind in the early evening over complimentary cheese and wine in the courtyard, which from Thursday to Sunday is accompanied by live music from the best local performing artists.
- Courtesy Four Seasons Gresham Palacehotel
Four Seasons Hotel Gresham Palace Budapest
$$$ |Gold List 2020, 2024
Readers' Choice Awards 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2024
Named for the founder of London’s Royal Exchange and originally built for the London-based Gresham Life Assurance Company as the headquarters, the Gresham Palace is the hotel that set and continues to maintain the gold standard for the restoration and conversion of historical Budapest buildings into luxury hotels. Opened in 2004 after a $110 million dollar restoration and considered one of the finest examples of art nouveau architecture worldwide, the hotel occupies an enviable position by the landmark Chain Bridge, with views from rooms of the Danube and the Buda hills, old town, and castle beyond. A repeated motif of the building’s interiors is a love-heart, reputedly because the original designer was in love when he created his masterpiece; and this love is reflected in the attention to detail of the modern-day hotel, from the exquisite Múzsa cocktail bar to the refined and elegant rooms and suites.
- Courtesy Kempinski Hotel Corvinus Budapesthotel
Kempinski Hotel Corvinus
$$$ |Readers' Choice Awards 2017, 2018
Among the first international luxury hotels to open in Budapest, the Kempinski Hotel Corvinus celebrated 30 years last year, and a testament to its appeal are the many staff members who have been there since its debut. Unlike newer hotels that have made their home in exquisitely restored period buildings, the Kempinski is purpose-built, but its curving interior shapes, filled with the hotel’s Hungarian art collection, still feel contemporary, while the luxurious spa has just undergone a complete redesign and will be offering a new menu of treatments from this autumn. For dining, guests can choose from the hotel’s signature ÉS Bisztró for Hungarian classics and specialities from the grill, Asian fusion from Nobu or four more restaurants, bars, and cafes, while Budapest’s iconic shopping street, Fashion Street, is just a step away. Recently renovated rooms with cool, contemporary colors and brass, gold, and rich wood accents look out onto the Budapest Eye and, beyond it, the dome of St. Stephen’s Basilica.
- Courtesy Ritz-Carltonhotel
The Ritz-Carlton, Budapest
$$ |Readers' Choice Awards 2016, 2017
Facing the pretty Erzsébet Square in the buzzing center of downtown and built during WWI to house an insurance company and luxury apartments, and subsequently the headquarters of the Budapest police, the Ritz-Carlton had a ten-year stint as Le Méridien Budapest until being reborn in 2016. Comfortable rooms with clean, contemporary styling in crisp whites, cool blues and grays, and a swimmable indoor pool offer a pleasant sanctuary from the buzzing downtown location. Breakfast is taken under a soaring circular stained-glass cupola, while the keenly priced Ottimo restaurant, with its tan leather banquettes and mirrored columns, serves a selection of Italian cuisine and a delicious grilled balsamic marinated octopus that makes you doubt that you are in a landlocked country.
Anantara New York Palace
Just across the boulevard ring from the buzzing party district, muscular stone atlases support the grand entrance porch from Budapest’s busy downtown, leading, via a circular lobby of honey-colored columns, into the cool, calm, classical harmony of the five-story colonnaded white-marble paved courtyard that the New York Palace is centered around. A gem of the Budapest Belle Époque, the hotel is best known for the fabulous excess of rococo columns, chandeliers, and frescoed ceilings that is its New York Café. Guests can enjoy a truly exceptional breakfast in a private section of what is often called the most beautiful café in the world. Rooms are comfortable and well-appointed, and in the hotel’s new spa, guests can enjoy massages, saunas and a 50-foot long pool in an ambience with echoes of the whitewashed walls of the Greek archipelago, while the White Salon restaurant offers dining in an elegant white and gold gallery set high overlooking the riotous splendor of the New York Café.
This gallery was originally published on Condé Nast Traveller UK.