60 Best Hotels in Madrid, Spain

Background Illustration for Hotels

Spain overtook the United States as the world's second-most-visited country in 2018, so it's no surprise that Madrid is in the throes of a hotel construction boom, the first the city has seen since the economic crisis hit in 2008. The Old Guard of hotels is shaking in its boots as newcomers offer modern-day amenities (Bluetooth speakers, international power outlets, bedside thermostats, etc.) at affordable prices: the Westin Palace is in the midst of a seemingly never-ending remodel, while the Ritz Madrid will remain closed for massive renovations until late 2019. The last couple of years have also ushered in several cutting-edge boutique and designer properties, the likes of which the city has never seen, such as Barceló Torre de Madrid, Tótem, and Only You Atocha. And Madrid can finally lay claim to a chic, immaculately clean hostel in The Hat.

Hotel Preciados

$$ | Calle de Preciados 37, 28013, Spain

In a 19th-century building on the quieter edge of one of Madrid's main shopping districts, Preciados is a charming midrange hotel ideal for travelers who value space and comfort. Though the rooms skew more modern than traditional, the purple backlighting and opaque glass make certain rooms feel dated. A number of (slightly more expensive) rooms have skylights and wrought-iron balconies.

Pros

  • Conveniently located
  • Complimentary minibar (you read that correctly!)
  • Helpful front desk staff

Cons

  • Expensive breakfast
  • Chaotic and noisy street
  • Dated decor
Calle de Preciados 37, 28013, Spain
91-454–4400
Hotel Details
101 rooms
No Meals

Quick Facts

  • $$

Something incorrect in this review?

Hotel Puerta América Madrid

$$ | Av. de América 41, Madrid, 28002, Spain

Inspired by Paul Eluard's La Liberté, whose verses are written across the facade, the owners of this hotel granted an unlimited budget to 19 of the world's top architects and designers. The result is 12 hotels in one, with floors by the late Zaha Hadid, Norman Foster, Jean Nouvel, David Chipperfield, and others. Most popular are the futuristic all-white layouts by Hadid, the elegant black wood and white leather proposal by Foster, and the imaginative re-creation of space by Ron Arad. There's also a well-regarded restaurant and two bars (one on the rooftop), which are all just as impressive in design. The only snag: you'll need a taxi or the metro to get to the city center.

Pros

  • Gym equipped with Technogym equipment
  • Top-notch restaurant and bars
  • Candlelit pool and steam room area

Cons

  • Miles from the center
  • Frayed at the edges
  • Design impractical in places
Av. de América 41, Madrid, 28002, Spain
91-744–5410
Hotel Details
315 rooms
No Meals

Quick Facts

  • $$

Something incorrect in this review?

Hotel Sardinero

$$ | Pl. de Alonso Martínez 3, Madrid, 28004, Spain

Steps from the trendy Malasaña and gay-friendly Chueca districts and slightly off the tourist track, Hotel Sardinero is a good mid-range value hotel in a turn-of-the-century palace. Rooms are handsome and minimal with dark wood floors, white linens, and vaulted ceilings. The free (nonalcoholic) minibar is a welcome perk.

Pros

  • Good deals on rates
  • Two rooftop terraces
  • Gorgeous neoclassical facade

Cons

  • Some guests report plumbing issues
  • No restaurant
  • Kettles and coffeemakers only available on request
Pl. de Alonso Martínez 3, Madrid, 28004, Spain
91-206–2160
Hotel Details
63 rooms
No Meals

Quick Facts

  • $$

Something incorrect in this review?

Recommended Fodor's Video

Hotel Urban

$$$$ | Carrera de San Jerónimo 34, Madrid, 28014, Spain

A five-minute walk from Puerta del Sol and Parque del Buen Retiro (El Retiro Park), Hotel Urban blends buttoned-up business aesthetics with tropical accents in the form of Papua New Guinean artifacts and other rare museum-grade works. Public areas are distinguished by alabaster pillars, tile-and-gold-inlaid walls, and Art Deco banisters. The newly renovated rooftop pool (summer only) and cocktail lounge are decorated with palms and banana trees and make for chic sunbathing and photos. Rooms are decidedly more dated and less polished than public spaces, with green-marble bathrooms, dark-wood floors, and wispy charcoal curtains. Note to sybarites: don't miss the hotel's Michelin-starred CEBO restaurant serving exquisite regional Spanish cuisine.

Pros

  • Stellar à la carte breakfasts
  • Roof deck that's a destination in itself
  • Celebrity chef restaurant

Cons

  • Smallish rooms with so-so soundproofing
  • Tiny gym with no treadmill
  • Early-aughts interiors in desperate need of renovation
Carrera de San Jerónimo 34, Madrid, 28014, Spain
91-787–7770
Hotel Details
103 rooms
No Meals

Quick Facts

Something incorrect in this review?

Hyatt Regency Hesperia Madrid

$$$ | Paseo de la Castellana 57, Madrid, 28046, Spain

The legendary Hesperia hotel was bought and renovated by Hyatt Regency and is all about comfortable business stays. It's in the city's financial district, miles from the tourist hubbub and within walking distance of Bernabéu Stadium and the National Museum of Natural Sciences. What the hotel lacks in inspirational design, it makes up for with valet parking, a "sky gym" on the top floor, and multiple meeting spaces.

Pros

  • Corporate-chic decor
  • Spacious rooms
  • 24-hour room service

Cons

  • Interior rooms can be dark
  • Stuffy business feel
  • Miles from the city center
Paseo de la Castellana 57, Madrid, 28046, Spain
93-611–3131
Hotel Details
169 rooms
No Meals

Quick Facts

Something incorrect in this review?

Iberostar Las Letras Gran Vía

$$$ | Calle Gran Vía 11, Madrid, 28013, Spain

A modern, clubby hotel on the stately avenue of Gran Vía, Iberostar Las Letras is a welcoming oasis from the area’s constant hubbub of tourists and shoppers. Many of the rooms have street-facing balconies. You'll find uncommon luxuries like a rooftop bar, 24-hour state-of-the-art gym, and some rooms with outdoor Jacuzzis. The bottom floor houses a high-ceilinged bar called Gran Clavel, where you can order tapas and flights of small-batch vermouths.

Pros

  • Warm and friendly hotel staff
  • Many rooms have balconies
  • Happening rooftop bar

Cons

  • Lackluster service and food in Gran Clavel
  • No spa
  • Awkward bathroom design
Calle Gran Vía 11, Madrid, 28013, Spain
91-523–7980
Hotel Details
110 rooms
No Meals

Quick Facts

Something incorrect in this review?

ICON Embassy

$$$ | Calle de Serrano 46, 28001, Spain

This airy, playfully decorated hotel with larger-than-average rooms occupies a converted palace on Calle de Serrano, Salamanca's main shopping corridor. Tarruella Trenchs Studio is behind the 2018 renovation, which blends marbles, woods, and colorful dividers in the lobby and more sedate velvets, leathers, and white linens in guest rooms.

Pros

  • Sleek modern design
  • Steps from high-fashion boutiques
  • Health-focused dining at Florafina restaurant

Cons

  • So-so soundproofing
  • Inconsistent breakfast quality
  • Four-person room is cramped
Calle de Serrano 46, 28001, Spain
91-431–3060
Hotel Details
75 rooms
Free Breakfast

Quick Facts

Something incorrect in this review?

ICON Wipton

$$$$ | Calle de Jorge Juan 17, Madrid, 28001, Spain

Whites, grays, and dark woods define this boutique hotel on Salamanca's most opulent street, Jorge Juan. The gentlemanly, austere British-esque design is a welcome reprieve from the ersatz Art Deco aesthetic that invaded the city's restaurants and hotels in the 2010s. A quiet and comfortable lobby and excellent breakfast add to the appeal.

Pros

  • Calming atmosphere
  • Location on main dining and nightlife street
  • Standout breakfasts

Cons

  • Entry-level rooms are a tight fit
  • Noise travels from ground-floor bar
  • Small desks in guest rooms
Calle de Jorge Juan 17, Madrid, 28001, Spain
91-435–5411
Hotel Details
61 rooms
No Meals

Quick Facts

Something incorrect in this review?

Intelier Palacio San Martín

$$ | Pl. de San Martín 5, Madrid, 28013, Spain

In an unbeatable location across from Monasterio de las Descalzas Reales, this hotel—once the U.S. embassy and later a luxurious residential building crowded with noblemen—has the architectural bones of a turn-of-the-century mansion with its hand-carved ceilings, marble foyers, and intricate iron balconies. While the modern streamlined rooms are not exactly design-magazine material, they meet all your practical needs with good mattresses and plenty of storage space.

Pros

  • Good variety at breakfast
  • Spacious rooms
  • Lobby with glass-domed atrium

Cons

  • Bland interiors
  • Bare-bones gym
  • Church bells in the morning
Pl. de San Martín 5, Madrid, 28013, Spain
91-701–5000
Hotel Details
103 rooms
No Meals

Quick Facts

  • $$

Something incorrect in this review?

Intercontinental Madrid

$$$$ | Paseo de la Castellana 49, Madrid, 28046, Spain

Chauffeur-driven town cars snake around the block day and night at the Intercontinental Madrid, a classically decorated hotel frequented by dignitaries, diplomats, and other international bigwigs. Situated on the skyscraper-lined Castellana mall and removed from the tourist hubbub (you’ll need to take the metro to most attractions), the property is a dependable option for business travelers, families, and other visitors who favor comfort and service over centrality and trendiness. A fine-dining restaurant, sunny terrace, and an above-and-beyond concierge service round out the offerings.

Pros

  • Dependable if starchy elegance
  • 24-hour gym
  • Excellent business facilities

Cons

  • Cookie-cutter business hotel decor
  • Removed from the center
  • Street-facing rooms can be noisy
Paseo de la Castellana 49, Madrid, 28046, Spain
91-700–7300
Hotel Details
302 rooms
No Meals

Quick Facts

Something incorrect in this review?

Liabeny

$$ | Calle de la Salud 3, 28013, Spain

This reliable hotel situated between Gran Vía and Puerta del Sol was renovated in 2021 and has comfortable, Scandi-minimalist rooms awash with whites and grays as well as spacious bathrooms with marble walls. Some areas, like the grand old lobby, retain their original opulence. 

Pros

  • Spacious bathrooms
  • Near Callao shopping area
  • Personable staff

Cons

  • Small rooms
  • Crowded noisy neighborhood
  • Stairs to access public areas
Calle de la Salud 3, 28013, Spain
91-531–9000
Hotel Details
220 rooms
No Meals

Quick Facts

  • $$

Something incorrect in this review?

Mayerling Hotel

$$ | Calle del Conde de Romanones 6, Madrid, 28012, Spain

Minimalism at just the right value is the key at this former textile wholesaler's premises, now a 22-room boutique hotel a few blocks off Plaza Mayor and Plaza de Santa Ana. Serene (if slightly clinical) white rooms come in three sizes—standard, superior, and triple—and are decorated with colorful headboards, charcoal valances, and small open closets. Upgraded rooms add exterior-facing wrought-iron balconies.

Pros

  • Triples available
  • 24-hour complimentary coffee, snacks, and juices
  • Prime location

Cons

  • Rooms are small by U.S. standards
  • White walls show smudges
  • No restaurant or gym
Calle del Conde de Romanones 6, Madrid, 28012, Spain
91-420–1580
Hotel Details
22 rooms
No Meals

Quick Facts

  • $$

Something incorrect in this review?

NH Collection Madrid Suecia

$$$ | Calle del Marqués de Casa Riera 4, Madrid, 28014, Spain

The building housing the NH Collection Madrid Suecia was once home to Ernest Hemingway and Che Guevara; today’s guests are decidedly tamer, but the retro aesthetic lives on in the hotel’s brown velvet couches, towering tropical plants, and suave concierges. Renovated rooms feel fresh and sumptuous with evocative wall art and neutral tones. 

Pros

  • Renovated rooms and overall serene feel
  • Rooftop bar with great views
  • Nine-minute walk from the Prado

Cons

  • Robes and slippers not provided in entry-level rooms
  • Windowless gym
  • Overpriced restaurant and so-so breakfast
Calle del Marqués de Casa Riera 4, Madrid, 28014, Spain
91-200–0570
Hotel Details
123 rooms
No Meals

Quick Facts

Something incorrect in this review?

NH Collection Paseo del Prado

$$$ | Pl. Cánovas del Castillo 4, Madrid, 28014, Spain

In a turn-of-the-20th-century palace overlooking Plaza de Neptuno, this hotel preserves the building’s erstwhile grandeur with wooden headboards, gold-framed mirrors, tufted sofas, and wing chairs. Despite recent renovations, which added floral wall decorations and area rugs, the decor still feels dated; the rooftop gym, however, with its state-of-the-art equipment and natural light, is not.

Pros

  • Within the Golden Triangle of museums
  • Gym has panoramic views
  • “lazy Sunday checkout” at 3 pm

Cons

  • Need to upgrade for good natural light and views
  • Inconsistent food at Estado Puro
  • Uninspiring interiors
Pl. Cánovas del Castillo 4, Madrid, 28014, Spain
91-330–2400
Hotel Details
115 rooms
No Meals

Quick Facts

Something incorrect in this review?

One Shot Fortuny 07

$$ | Calle de Fortuny 7, Madrid, Spain

One of the better values in Madrid hotels at the moment, this modern property off the Castellana thoroughfare offers bright, streamlined rooms with starched white linens and understated furniture. White-tiled bathrooms have overhead showers and plush towels.

Pros

  • Great price for the location
  • Pleasing design
  • Tasty breakfasts on the patio (weather permitting)

Cons

  • Thin walls
  • Inconsistent customer service
  • No room service or in-room coffee facilities
Calle de Fortuny 7, Madrid, Spain
91-088–5868
Hotel Details
74 rooms
No Meals

Quick Facts

  • $$

Something incorrect in this review?

One Shot Luchana 22

$$ | Calle de Luchana 22, Spain

Situated between Malasaña and the restaurant-lined Plaza de Olavide, this One Shot outpost has an ideal location for those looking to stay in a true-blue Madrid neighborhood with few tourists around. Colorful headboards and chairs pop in rooms that are otherwise minimally decorated (think white linens and walls), and bathrooms have towel warmers and wide shower heads.  

Pros

  • Low-key location
  • Terrific value
  • Bright airy lobby

Cons

  • Inconsistent customer service
  • Finicky AC units
  • Meager breakfasts
Calle de Luchana 22, Spain
91-292–2940
Hotel Details
43 rooms
No Meals

Quick Facts

  • $$

Something incorrect in this review?

Only YOU Hotel Atocha

$$$ | Paseo de la Infanta Isabel 13, Madrid, 28014, Spain

A trendy, youthful hotel, Only YOU Atocha has a big and buzzy lobby, a rooftop restaurant, spacious gym, and industrial-chic accommodations. Rooms with smart TVs, cushy armchairs, exposed brick walls, and vanity mirrors are by Contemporain Studio, the Catalan design firm behind Barcelona hot spots Boca Grande and Soho House.

Pros

  • Gorgeous designer furniture
  • Intriguing pop-ups and events
  • Cloud-soft beds

Cons

  • Exterior-facing rooms are very noisy
  • Food quality falls short
  • Looks out over major intersection
Paseo de la Infanta Isabel 13, Madrid, 28014, Spain
91-409–7876
Hotel Details
205 rooms
No Meals

Quick Facts

Something incorrect in this review?

Palacio de Los Duques Gran Meliá

$$$$ | Cuesta de Santo Domingo 5 y 7, Madrid, 28013, Spain

In this luxurious urban oasis with an expansive courtyard tucked behind Gran Vía, reproductions of famous Diego Velázquez paintings feature in every room. Don’t let the Elizabethan facade and Golden Age paintings fool you: Palacio de los Duques is a state-of-the-art property complete with Nespresso machines, Bluetooth speakers, and bedside thermostats rounding out the digs.

Pros

  • Dos Cielos, one of the city's best hotel restaurants
  • Underfloor heating and deep-soak tubs
  • Rooftop bar and splash pool

Cons

  • Rooms are less attractive than public areas
  • Overpriced in high season
  • No great views from rooms
Cuesta de Santo Domingo 5 y 7, Madrid, 28013, Spain
91-541–6700
Hotel Details
180 rooms
No Meals

Quick Facts

Something incorrect in this review?

The Pavilions Madrid

$$$ | Calle de Amador de los Ríos 3, Madrid, 28010, Spain

Hitting the sweet spot between high-end luxury and state-of-the-art design, the Pavilions is a boutique hotel that stands out for its original art and sculpture by top Spanish artists, much of it available for purchase. Guest rooms feature plush velvet chairs and curtains, custom-patterned upholstery, and museum-quality abstract paintings above the beds. A top-floor gym and plant-filled breakfast area with a retractable roof round out the offerings.

Pros

  • Swanky feel
  • Breakfast in the solarium
  • Indoor-outdoor pool and wellness area

Cons

  • Small gym
  • Unexciting block
  • Entry-level rooms are cramped
Calle de Amador de los Ríos 3, Madrid, 28010, Spain
91-310–7500
Hotel Details
29 rooms
No Meals

Quick Facts

Something incorrect in this review?

Pestana Plaza Mayor

$$$$ | Calle Imperial 8, 28012, Spain

Opened in 2020, Pestana is the newest outpost from the Portuguese boutique hotel chain and the only situated directly on the Plaza Mayor. It has a pool, spa, fitness center, architectural elements from the original 17th-century Casa de la Carnicería, and—crucially—double-paned glass to keep out ambient noise. Leisurely breakfasts in the ground-floor solarium are a highlight.

Pros

  • Upgraded rooms have balconies overlooking the plaza
  • Sun-drenched breakfast area
  • Cloud-soft beds and linens

Cons

  • Newfangled interiors clash with the historical building
  • Spa has no chairs for lounging by the pool
  • Service foibles
Calle Imperial 8, 28012, Spain
34-910-052–822
Hotel Details
89 rooms
No Meals

Quick Facts

Something incorrect in this review?

Posada del León de Oro

$$$ | Calle de Cava Baja 12, Madrid, 28005, Spain

More like a modern village inn than a metropolitan hotel, this refurbished late-19th-century property was built atop the remains of a stone wall that encircled the city in the 12th century, which you can see through glass floor panels at the hotel entrance and in the casual restaurant. Rooms have white-tiled floors, headboards with historical prints of the city, and high ceilings with exposed wood beams. Enjoy a breakfast buffet in the restaurant, or opt for a more basic breakfast at the hotel bar-café. The owners have a similarly priced hotel next door called Posada del Dragón.

Pros

  • Located in tapas central
  • Restaurant with more than 300 Spanish wines
  • Independently owned

Cons

  • Interior-facing rooms are small
  • Late-night noise
  • Cramped entry-level rooms
Calle de Cava Baja 12, Madrid, 28005, Spain
91-119–1494
Hotel Details
27 rooms
No Meals

Quick Facts

Something incorrect in this review?

The Principal Madrid

$$$$ | Calle del Marqués de Valdeiglesias 1, Madrid, 28004, Spain

Dozens of hotels flank Gran Vía, Madrid’s main artery, but the five-star Principal rises above the fray—and not just on account of its swanky rooftop cocktail bar (a quiet alternative to the mobbed Círculo de Bellas Artes across the way). Accommodations feature soothing gray tones and minimal furnishings, design touches that make the compact rooms feel slightly more commodious than they actually are.

Pros

  • Outdoor breakfasts and rooftop with 360-degree views
  • Ramón Freixa–helmed restaurant
  • Luxurious feel with personal touches

Cons

  • Rooms not fully soundproofed
  • Rooftop pool is tiny
  • Middling breakfast
Calle del Marqués de Valdeiglesias 1, Madrid, 28004, Spain
91-521–8743
Hotel Details
76 rooms
No Meals

Quick Facts

Something incorrect in this review?

Room Mate Alicia

$$$ | Calle del Prado 2, Madrid, 28014, Spain

Room Mate Alicia's all-white lobby with curving walls, backlit ceiling panels, and gilded columns oozes early 2000s, but its prime location and competitive rates help make up for the passé aesthetics. Carpeted rooms are modern if compact; the black-slate bathrooms, most of them shower-only, are separated only by a glass door. For a few more euros, upgrade to an executive room with a terrace or to a mini-suite with large windows overlooking the action on the plaza.

Pros

  • Central location
  • Brightly colored rooms
  • Laid-back atmosphere

Cons

  • Standard rooms are small
  • Underwhelming breakfast
  • No restaurant or gym
Calle del Prado 2, Madrid, 28014, Spain
91-389–6095
Hotel Details
34 rooms
No Meals

Quick Facts

Something incorrect in this review?

Room Mate Macarena

$$$ | Calle Gran Vía 43, Madrid, 28013, Spain

Macarena's decor is colorful, textural, and geometric with bold wall tones, patterned tile floors, and undulating ceiling panels in public spaces; guest rooms, on the other hand, vary widely in design and hinge on monochrome color schemes (e.g., royal blue, flamingo pink, emerald green) that make a statement. The crown jewel is the rooftop terrace complete with a cocktail bar, sundeck, and swimming pool.

Pros

  • Photogenic and flamboyant design
  • Rooftop open until 2 am on weekends
  • Gran Vía location

Cons

  • Pool looks bigger in photos than in person
  • Poor-quality breakfasts more befitting of a youth hostel
  • Loud interiors
Calle Gran Vía 43, Madrid, 28013, Spain
91-116–1191
Hotel Details
130 rooms
No Meals

Quick Facts

Something incorrect in this review?

Room Mate Mario

$$ | Calle de Campomanes 4, Madrid, 28013, Spain

In the city center, steps from the Palacio Real and Teatro Real, Mario is small with limited services but provides a welcome alternative to Madrid's traditional hotel options at a good price. It has a bold quirky style: original silk-print headboards highlight the white, gray, and black color scheme.

Pros

  • Centrally located
  • Good breakfast served until noon
  • One of the most affordable Room Mate chain options in Madrid

Cons

  • No restaurant or in-room coffee-making facilities
  • Cramped entry-level rooms
  • Unremarkable views
Calle de Campomanes 4, Madrid, 28013, Spain
91-548–8548
Hotel Details
57 rooms
Free Breakfast

Quick Facts

  • $$

Something incorrect in this review?

Santo Mauro, a Luxury Collection Hotel, Madrid

$$$$ | Calle de Zurbano 36, Madrid, 28010, Spain

This fin-de-siècle palace, first a duke's residence and later the Canadian embassy, is now an intimate luxury hotel (managed by Marriott), an oasis of calm removed from the city center. Hand-painted frescoes crown stately halls, balconies jut out over a tranquil garden lined with hundred-year-old chestnut trees, and marble stairways spiral between floors. Rooms feel palatial with marble fireplaces, parquet floors, and contemporary floral wallpaper; some retain original crown moldings and double-height ceilings. Despite the old-world aesthetic, modern amenities abound including a gym area complete with a sauna and steam room, 24-hour room service, and indoor and outdoor restaurants serving Spanish and international cuisine, respectively.

Pros

  • Away from the city's hustle and bustle
  • Cushiest beds
  • Sophisticated restaurant

Cons

  • Staggeringly expensive
  • A hike from the main sights
  • Some smaller rooms
Calle de Zurbano 36, Madrid, 28010, Spain
91-319–6900
Hotel Details
49 rooms
No Meals

Quick Facts

Something incorrect in this review?

Suite Prado

$$$ | Calle de Manuel Fernández y González 10, 28014, Spain

Popular with Americans, this basic yet comfortable apart-hotel is situated steps from the Prado, the Thyssen-Bornemisza, and Plaza de Santa Ana. It has attractive attic studios on the fourth floor (with sloped wood-beam ceilings) and larger suites downstairs; all apartments are brightly decorated and have marble bathrooms and basic kitchens. It also serves breakfast at no charge, which can be ordered as room service. Triples and quadruples are a great deal.

Pros

  • Variety of room types
  • Great for families and longer stays
  • 24-hour service and complimentary room-service breakfasts

Cons

  • A bit noisy
  • Dated decor
  • Low ceilings on the top floor
Calle de Manuel Fernández y González 10, 28014, Spain
91-420–2318
Hotel Details
18 apartments
Free Breakfast

Quick Facts

Something incorrect in this review?

Tótem Madrid

$$$$ | Calle Hermosilla 23, Madrid, 28001, Spain

Tótem checks all the boxes for a solid boutique hotel: genial service, streamlined design, sought-after location, and good food and cocktails. Rooms are minimally yet comfortably furnished with blond woods, bright white linens, and the occasional splash of color, while bathrooms feel loungier with black Marquina marble fixtures. Natural light pours into the Deluxe Exterior and Attic rooms, making them well worth the extra expense over their interior counterparts.

Pros

  • Charming tree-lined block
  • Excellent cocktail bar and restaurant
  • Bubbly service

Cons

  • Many attractions not within walking distance
  • Disappointing breakfast
  • Interior rooms not as pleasant
Calle Hermosilla 23, Madrid, 28001, Spain
91-426–0035
Hotel Details
64 rooms
No Meals

Quick Facts

Something incorrect in this review?

URBANSEA Atocha 113

$$ | Calle de Atocha 113, Madrid, 28012, Spain

A metropolitan outpost of the Blue Sea resort chain, URBANSEA Atocha 113 is a basic 36-room hotel just north of the eponymous railway station. Interiors are compact and cozy, and there’s a rooftop terrace with gorgeous views—a rarity at this price point. With all the minimalist, all-white decor, it’s easy to forget you’re in a charming turn-of-the-century building—though the hotel’s timeworn spiral staircase is a pleasant reminder.

Pros

  • Equidistant between Barrio de las Letras and Lavapiés
  • Complimentary 24-hour coffee in lobby
  • Single rooms ideal for solo travelers

Cons

  • Bare-bones services and somewhat deteriorated facilities
  • In-room sinks and bathrooms with no doors in some rooms
  • Exterior rooms facing Calle de Atocha are noisy and pricey
Calle de Atocha 113, Madrid, 28012, Spain
91-369–2895
Hotel Details
36 rooms
No Meals

Quick Facts

  • $$

Something incorrect in this review?

URSO Hotel & Spa

$$$$ | Calle de Mejía Lequerica 8, Madrid, 28004, Spain

In a neoclassical building so stunning it was featured in Almodóvar's 2021 film Parallel Mothers, URSO boasts old-world comfort and avant-garde design to satisfy alternative types and jet-setters alike. It is within walking distance of the city’s top attractions yet removed enough to lend it an air of exclusivity. Upgraded rooms feel like a sanctuary, with high ceilings, minimal wall art, taupe blackout curtains, and impeccable soundproofing. Deluxe and superior rooms come with complimentary passes to the Prado.

Pros

  • Stunning facade
  • Natura Bissé spa with 7-meter hydromassage pool
  • Calming rooms

Cons

  • Overpriced
  • Entry-level rooms are dark and cramped
  • Smallish gym and chilly pool
Calle de Mejía Lequerica 8, Madrid, 28004, Spain
91-444–4458
Hotel Details
78 rooms
No Meals

Quick Facts

Something incorrect in this review?