Back
Club Quarters Hotel Trafalgar Square, London
First Impressions
Walking into Club Quarters Hotel Trafalgar Square, London, you immediately notice how they’ve managed to squeeze genuine character into what could have been just another corporate hotel. The lobby has this sort of gentlemen’s club vibe β dark wood, leather seating, and brass accents that actually feel intentional rather than trying too hard. It’s tucked right on Northumberland Avenue, which honestly puts you closer to the action than most tourists realize they want to be.
Location That Actually Matters
Here’s what I love about this spot β you’re literally a two-minute walk from Trafalgar Square, but you’re not dealing with the chaos of being right on it. The four-star property sits perfectly between Westminster and Covent Garden, meaning you can stumble back from a West End show or wander to the Thames without planning your route. The Embankment tube station is practically next door, and you know what? That matters more than you think when you’re hauling luggage or coming back late from dinner.
The Room Experience
The room sizes are honest β not huge by American standards, but perfectly reasonable for London. What impressed me was the attention to business traveler needs without forgetting leisure guests entirely. The beds are genuinely comfortable, and they’ve invested in blackout curtains that actually work (a small miracle in a city where summer daylight starts at 4 AM). The bathrooms are compact but well-designed, with decent water pressure that you can’t always count on in older London buildings.
Dining and Social Spaces
The Club Room β their main social space β becomes this interesting mix throughout the day. Morning brings business travelers grabbing coffee, while evenings see a more relaxed crowd settling in with drinks. The restaurant serves solid British fare with some international options, nothing groundbreaking but reliable when you don’t want to venture out. I mean, sometimes you just want to eat without researching the neighborhood, and they get that.
Why Guests Love It
What sets this place apart is how it balances tourist accessibility with local authenticity. You’re staying somewhere that feels connected to London’s business district rather than floating in some generic hotel bubble. The staff actually knows the area β they’ll point you toward the quieter entrance to the National Gallery or suggest which pub has the better Sunday roast. Plus, there’s something refreshing about a hotel that doesn’t oversell itself but consistently delivers on what it promises.
To book a hotel in London during opera season, visitors plan ahead to balance Royal Opera House nights with quiet Regentβs Canal strolls.
Guests are required to show a photo identification and credit card upon check-in