Best Hotels in New York City
Updated March 2026 · 10 min read
New York City has over 120,000 hotel rooms, more than any other US city. That enormous supply means there is a hotel for every budget and every travel style. The challenge is not finding a room — it is finding the right room at the right price in the right neighborhood.
This guide breaks down NYC hotels by neighborhood, budget tier, and hotel chain, with real pricing data from our tracking platform. Whether you are visiting for a Broadway show, a business meeting, or a family vacation, we will help you find the best value.
NYC Hotels by Neighborhood
Midtown Manhattan
Average Rate: $250-$450/night
Best For: First-time visitors, Broadway, business travelers
Midtown is the default choice for most visitors and for good reason. Times Square, Central Park, Rockefeller Center, and most Broadway theaters are here. The tradeoff is higher prices and more crowds. Stick to streets between 40th and 55th for the best walkability.
Notable Hotels: The Marriott Marquis (Times Square), New York Hilton Midtown (Hilton), InterContinental Times Square (IHG)
Lower Manhattan / Financial District
Average Rate: $180-$320/night
Best For: Budget-conscious travelers, weekend visitors
FiDi hotels cater to weekday business crowds, which means weekend rates drop significantly, sometimes 30-40% below Midtown equivalents. You are close to the 9/11 Memorial, Statue of Liberty ferries, and Brooklyn Bridge, with easy subway access to the rest of Manhattan.
SoHo / Greenwich Village
Average Rate: $300-$500/night
Best For: Boutique hotel lovers, dining and nightlife
The trendiest neighborhoods in Manhattan command premium hotel rates but deliver an experience that Midtown cannot match. Cobblestone streets, independent restaurants, and world-class shopping are at your doorstep. Boutique properties like the Crosby Street Hotel and the Dominick offer a distinctly New York experience.
Upper West Side / Upper East Side
Average Rate: $200-$350/night
Best For: Museum visits, families, Central Park access
Quieter than Midtown with easy access to the Met, Natural History Museum, and Central Park. Hotels here tend to be slightly more affordable than equivalent Midtown properties and the neighborhoods feel more residential and authentic.
Brooklyn (Williamsburg, DUMBO, Downtown Brooklyn)
Average Rate: $170-$280/night
Best For: Trendy vibe, value seekers, repeat visitors
Brooklyn hotels offer Manhattan-quality rooms at 20-30% less. Williamsburg has a thriving food and bar scene, DUMBO has iconic bridge views, and Downtown Brooklyn puts you one subway stop from Lower Manhattan. The 1 Hotel Brooklyn Bridge and Wythe Hotel are standouts.
Long Island City, Queens
Average Rate: $120-$200/night
Best For: Budget travelers, families
Just one subway stop from Midtown, Long Island City offers the best price-to-location ratio in New York. Modern hotels from chains like Marriott (Courtyard, Aloft) and Hilton (Hampton Inn, Home2 Suites) provide reliable quality at fraction of Manhattan prices. The tradeoff is a 10-15 minute commute.
NYC Hotels by Budget
Budget ($100-$180/night)
At this price point, focus on Long Island City, Newark Airport area, or outer Brooklyn. Pod Hotels in Midtown offer micro-rooms starting around $130 for those who want a Manhattan address on a tight budget. Hostels like HI New York on the Upper West Side offer private rooms in the $90-$120 range.
Mid-Range ($180-$350/night)
The sweet spot for most travelers. You can score a solid room in Midtown at chains like Courtyard by Marriott, Hampton Inn (Hilton), or Holiday Inn (IHG) for $200-$280 during off-peak periods. Boutique properties in the East Village and Lower East Side also fall in this range.
Upscale ($350-$600/night)
Full-service hotels with quality amenities. Properties like the Conrad Midtown (Hilton), The Ritz-Carlton Downtown (Marriott), or the Intercontinental Barclay (IHG) offer premium experiences with loyalty points earning potential.
Luxury ($600+/night)
Iconic New York properties like The Plaza, The St. Regis, The Peninsula, and The Mandarin Oriental. If you are going to splurge, consider whether a luxury hotel credit card with automatic elite status and property credits could offset the cost.
NYC Hotel Chains Compared
| Chain | NYC Properties | Price Range | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Marriott | 50+ | $180-$900 | Points redemptions, variety |
| Hilton | 40+ | $160-$700 | 5th night free on points |
| IHG | 20+ | $150-$500 | Value points, Holiday Inn Express |
| Hyatt | 15+ | $200-$800 | Best elite benefits, Park Hyatt |
Seasonal Pricing Patterns
NYC hotel prices follow predictable seasonal patterns:
- January-February: Cheapest months. Average rates dip 25-30% below the annual mean. Cold weather and post-holiday fatigue keep demand low.
- March-May: Spring brings moderate pricing. Cherry blossom season in April creates a brief spike.
- June-August: Summer tourism pushes rates up, especially near Times Square and family-friendly areas.
- September-December: Peak season. Fashion Week, UN General Assembly, fall foliage, Thanksgiving, and the holiday season drive rates to annual highs. December in particular sees prices 40-50% above January.
Booking Tips for NYC Hotels
- Book 3-6 weeks ahead for the best combination of availability and price. Too early locks in rack rates; too late limits options.
- Compare across platforms. Check Booking.com, Expedia, and the hotel direct site. Our booking platform comparison explains when each wins.
- Consider outer boroughs — Brooklyn and Queens offer significant savings with minimal commute time.
- Use a hotel credit card. Earning 5-12x points per dollar means a $250/night stay generates $12-$30 worth of points. Compare the best hotel credit cards here.
- Set price alerts for your target dates and let Hotel Price Watch notify you when rates drop.
- Skip rooms with "resort fees" — Unlike Las Vegas, most NYC hotels do not charge them, but a few luxury properties have started adding "destination fees" of $25-$40/night.
Track NYC Hotel Prices
Set a free price alert for New York City hotels and get notified when rates drop below your target.
Set NYC Price AlertAirbnb vs Hotels in NYC
New York City has some of the strictest short-term rental laws in the country. Since 2023, hosts must register with the city and be present during the stay, which has dramatically reduced the supply of entire-apartment listings. As a result, hotel prices and Airbnb prices in NYC have converged significantly.
For most visitors, hotels now offer better value in NYC when you factor in reliability, cleaning fees, and the risk of last-minute cancellations. Read our full Airbnb vs Hotels comparison for a detailed breakdown.
The Bottom Line
New York City has a hotel for every budget, but the gap between what savvy bookers pay and what everyone else pays is enormous. Focus on neighborhood selection (outer boroughs save 30%+), timing (January-February is cheapest), and loyalty programs (free upgrades and bonus points). Use Hotel Price Watch to track rates for your travel dates and book when prices hit your target.
Planning a broader trip? Check out our guides for Las Vegas, London, Paris, and Tokyo.
Affiliate Disclosure: Hotel Price Watch earns a commission when you book through our affiliate links to Booking.com, Hotels.com, Expedia, and other partners. This does not affect our recommendations or the price you pay. We only recommend products and services we believe provide genuine value to our readers. Some credit card links are provided in partnership with TravelCardGuide.com.