Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Review: Dorothea Hotel, Budapest, Autograph Collection (Marriott Bonvoy)

Links on Head for Points may support the site by paying a commission.  See here for all partner links.

This is our review of the Dorothea Hotel, Autograph Collection, in Budapest.

The Marriott Bonvoy® American Express Credit Card® is currently offering 60,000 bonus Marriott Bonvoy® points for a limited time.

To show you what sort of hotels you could visit around Europe with Bonvoy points, the HfP team split up and visited four different properties across four different brands in four different countries.  We’ll be bringing you these reviews on alternate Saturdays whilst the 60,000 points offer is running.

If you want to learn more about the Marriott Bonvoy® American Express Credit Card® 60,000 bonus Marriott Bonvoy points promotion, then read our article here.

Review Dorotea Hotel Budapest

I (Rob) decided to kick off the series with a trip to Budapest.

Marriott provided all four hotels in this series for free for review purposes. HfP paid for all of its flights and incidental expenses. The articles are not sponsored and Marriott has not seen the reviews before publication.

The Dorothea Hotel website is here.

What is Autograph Collection?

Autograph Collection is one of my favourite Marriott Bonvoy brands. It allows independent five star hotels to join the Marriott ‘system’ without having to sign up to the strict brand standards that would be required with the core Marriott chains.

Autograph has allowed Bonvoy members to access some excellent independent hotels – you may remember that The University Arms in Cambridge was one of my ‘hotels of the year’ in 2022. You can earn and spend Bonvoy points as usual, and all Marriott Bonvoy status benefits will be honoured.

The story of the Dorothea Hotel

The Dorothea Hotel opened in November 2023. If you are looking for a new hotel where you know that everything will be fresh and functioning, this is the place for you.

It is housed across three historic buildings in District V, just a block from the river and the bridges that take you up to the castle. (The river-front InterContinental is very close, if you know where that is.) The hotel is named after Archduchess Dorothea, an influential character of the 1800s.

High profile Italian architect and designer Piero Lissoni had the tricky job of converting and merging a bank head office (built 1873), the head office of a shipping company (built 1913) and a modernist building with art deco and Bauhaus elements (built 1937). One result of this is that each level has two buttons in the lift because the floors do not meet up exactly across the three buildings.

Taking up an entire city block, it is a multi-use project. The rear of the building – still to be completed – will comprise high-end apartments and restaurants. There is a casino under the building, albeit not physically linked to the hotel. Some of the rooms you see overlooking the central hotel atrium are actually private apartments and not hotel rooms.

The location is remarkably good for everything you might want to do and once I arrived I never took a taxi, tram, bus or metro during my two night stay.

Dorotea Hotel Budapest lobby

The lobby

Budapest Airport is not well connected to the city so I took a taxi for around £25. (I think …. at 452 forints to the £ the calculations are not easy! You can pay for virtually everything with Euro but the exchange rate is usually 5%-10% above the spot rate.)

You enter into the highly impressive lobby above, which is a mix of heritage features, a huge (new) glass chandelier and modern photography. What look like historical paintings are actually carefully constructed modern-day images with individual twists.

The lobby is surprisingly calm because nothing happens there. Check in, concierge and the lifts are in a separate area to your left. To the right is the entrance to the all-day cafe bar, which is also accessible from the street and serves a mix of guests and shoppers. To reach the main restaurant you need to head up the grand staircase.

The heart of the hotel is the huge atrium, which comes as a surprise to anyone expecting a heritage interior. Glassed over, you can see the restaurant and breakfast area to the left and a second bar to the right.

Dorotea Hotel atrium

A contemporary or a heritage room?

Slightly confusingly, at least in terms of pigeon-holing the hotel, there are two totally different types of room at the Dorothea Hotel. There are 216 rooms and suites in total.

‘Contemporary’ rooms come in two variations. Some overlook the atrium and have no external view. My room, an Atrium Suite, was one of them. There are also contemporary rooms with a street view.

You also have ‘heritage’ rooms, based in the oldest part of the hotel, all of which overlook the street. I took a look at all three types.

Here is the bedroom of my Atrium Suite. The window on the right looks into the atrium:

Dorotea hotel budapest bedroom

…. and even has a balcony!

Dorotea hotel balcony budapest

You can’t see some of the detailing from the bedroom photograph. The brown panel above the bed, for example, is a carving – all of the rooms I saw had these. The furnishings were of the highest quality.

One issue with the atrium rooms is that they are a little dark despite the large (internal) windows. It’s not helped by the traditional European hotel trait of having very few lights.

The hotel told me that local guests like the modernity of the atrium rooms with an internal view. If you are coming to Budapest to embrace the art nouveau architecture, I think you would be happier with a street view.

More on those room types in a minute. Back in my Atrium Suite you have this very smart bathroom:

Dorotea hotel bathroom

The teal colour (as used heavily in Clubrooms airport lounges in the UK!) is very effective. There is only a single sink, even in a suite. The shower is very classy:

Dorotea Hotel budapest shower

Toiletries are in large bottles and branded ‘Botaniq’. Suites come with extra amenities such as shaving and dental kits.

The bathroom is not totally private from the bedroom as you can see in this shot:

Dorotea hotel budapest bedroom suite

….. although the shower and loo have their own doors.

I won’t dwell too much on the living area, as the standard atrium rooms don’t have one, but it was well designed with some interesting art books. A welcome plate of mini cakes was provided.

Dorotea Hotel budapest suite

There was no desk and whilst I could work from the table it did mean that my laptop cable was running across the room to the nearest socket. There are two TVs, one in the bedroom and one in the living area.

A coffee machine was provided with some lovely mugs and glassware but (a recurring complaint of mine) the capsules were not labelled. For the first time in a while, I found the mini-bar fully stocked with sparkling and still wine, local beer, soft drinks and water. A refillable glass bottle of still water was provided and there are refill stations by the lifts.

If you take a standard atrium room, you will get what I pictured above but without the living area.

And in the heritage rooms ….

The ‘heritage’ rooms are easily identifiable by the doors, each of which features a different element taken from a female portrait in the Hungarian National Gallery. They are surprisingly effective:

Dorotea Hotel heritage room

Inside you will see a modern take on a traditional four poster bed:

Dorotea Hotel heritage room

and

Dorotea Hotel heritage room bedroom

The windows have views of the neighbouring streets and the rooms overall are a lot brighter.

What really impressed me was the Studio Suite. This has the ‘contemporary’ decor scheme with an external view. Set in a corner of the building, the one I saw had wraparound windows with a great view over the square:

Dorotea Hotel studio suite

This is apparently a good room to book when the Christmas market is in full swing.

Whilst I am not going to go into details here, those with a big budget can book one of the suites added onto the roof of the building. Scroll back up to the top photograph and you will see some very modern boxes on the top floor. Some of these have side river views from their terraces:

Dorotea Hotel suite view

There will also be a Sky Bar on the top floor at some point, but this is not expected to open until early 2025.

Food and drink at the Dorothea Hotel

Breakfast is served in Pavilon restaurant in the atrium.

Depending on what package you book, there is a comprehensive buffet with an additional list of cooked items which may or may not be included. There is a mix of egg dishes along with open faced sandwiches, porridge, French toast and pancakes.

The restaurant is very proud of the fact that virtually everything (apparently everything bar smoked salmon and avocado) is sourced from the region. All of the buffet items looked home made, even the breakfast cereal. Local items such as Hungarian ratatouille and vegetable egg broth add a twist to your usual luxury hotel buffet. There was also shakshuka.

I’m putting in a picture of the pancakes because they were exceptionally good – cooked fresh and immediately delivered to my table.

Dorotea Hotel budapest breakfast

I also had lunch in Pavilon where I took the crispy chicken thighs, cooked with pickled apple, mushroom emulsion and truffle mash. The list of main courses has a strong Hungarian feel and, unlike many high end hotels, you won’t be missing out on local cuisine if you eat here.

Dorotea Hotel Budapest Pavilon

To prove how Hungarian it is …. the wine list is 100% Hungarian. It is a very long, multi-page, wine list and is totally local.

The hotel even makes its own butter for the restaurant, which was infused with spices and green tinted!

(It’s worth pointing out, because it is very easy to miss, that in one corner of the atrium is an original 19th century staircase which takes you down to the ground floor.)

The other eating option is Anton’s Bar & Deli which is a cafe bar with street and hotel entrances. There is a coffee stand here if you want a simple ‘coffee and pastry’ breakfast and live music on Friday and Saturday nights.

Here is the impressive bar:

Dorotea Hotel Budapest Antons Bar

…. and this is how the seating looks:

Dorotea Hotel Anton's Bar

There will eventually be two other restaurants when the apartment side of the building is complete. BiBo will be an Andalusian brasserie whilst Alelí is planned as an authentic osteria from Italy.

Pool and gym

Despite being a city centre hotel, the Dorothea has a 15m swimming pool. It’s not somewhere to sit and laze for an afternoon but it is very atmospheric.

There is also a good size gym (no views as underground) and a spa.

Dorotea Hotel Budapest pool

Conclusion

The Dorothea Hotel is difficult to explain – three historical buildings but with a generally modernist interior, except for the heritage rooms.

Having seen multiple room types, it is a different experience (neither better or worse, just different) between the very modern atrium rooms, the more traditional and street facing heritage rooms and the street facing contemporary rooms and suites. I’d recommend you take a street view if you are in Budapest for sightseeing.

Budapest isn’t short of good hotels – it’s not even short of Marriott Bonvoy hotels, with W, Marriott, The Ritz-Carlton, Courtyard, Four Points, The Luxury Collection (Matilde Palace) and Marriott Executive Apartments – but there is a LOT to like here. The location is excellent, the Hungarian-focused restaurant is very accomplished (and even breakfast has some unusual twists) and the pool and spa are an added bonus.

As a brand new hotel, everything works and everything is fresh and modern.

Prices for a Friday to Sunday stay in early June run from €315 per night whether you want a contemporary atrium or ‘heritage’ room. However, I’d plump for a Studio Suite which is only about 25% more expensive and is actually cheaper than the Atrium Suite which I had.

For points, you are looking at around 60,000 Marriott Bonvoy® points per night for the same June weekend for an Atrium Room. This means that you can get one free night here with the current special sign-up bonus on the Marriott Bonvoy® American Express® Card.

The hotel also offers cash upgrades on redemptions, confirmable at the time of booking. For €60 (based on early June) you can upgrade your reward night to a contemporary or heritage street view room.

Thanks to Eliza and Aletta for taking the time to give me a tour of the hotel and explain its history with such enthusiasm.

The hotel website is here if you want to learn more or book.


How to earn Marriott Bonvoy points and status from UK credit cards

How to earn Marriott Bonvoy points and status from UK credit cards (April 2025)

There are various ways of earning Marriott Bonvoy points from UK credit cards.  Many cards also have generous sign-up bonuses.

The official Marriott Bonvoy American Express card comes with 20,000 points for signing up, 2 points for every £1 you spend and 15 elite night credits per year.

You can apply here.

Marriott Bonvoy American Express

20,000 points for signing up and 15 elite night credits each year Read our full review

You can also earn Marriott Bonvoy points by converting American Express Membership Rewards points at the rate of 2:3.

Do you know that holders of The Platinum Card from American Express receive FREE Marriott Bonvoy Gold status for as long as they hold the card?  It also comes with Hilton Honors Gold, Radisson Rewards Premium and MeliaRewards Gold status.

We reviewed American Express Platinum in detail here and you can apply here.

The Platinum Card from American Express

80,000 bonus points and great travel benefits – for a large fee Read our full review

You can also earn Marriott Bonvoy points indirectly:

and for small business owners:

The conversion rate from American Express to Marriott Bonvoy points is 2:3.

Click here to read our detailed summary of all UK credit cards which can be used to earn Marriott Bonvoy points.

Comments (58)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • lumma says:

    The internal atrium room thing must be a Hungarian thing. I once stayed in a cheap hotel in Budapest that was called the “Panorama Hotel”, and no rooms had a view!

    • BB says:

      Most buildings in inner Budapest were built with an inner courtyard. One enters through a big gate from the street, and the stairwells, halls and apartment doors were accessed off the courtyard. The courtyard would have some trees or some other decoration.

      When redeveloped into hotels, putting a glass roof over the courtyard provided convenient internal space and light. The Four Seasons Gresham Palace is similar, the bar area with the glass roof was all open to the sky when first built.

      • Rob says:

        Thanks. I thought it must be a cultural thing. Second time in a year I’ve stayed somewhere like this after Marriott Newport Rhode Island, except that the atrium there isn’t actually used for anything.

  • George says:

    Hi Rob. Great review as usual. Could I request that on the following hotel reviews the HfP team could try to show a bit more of the gym as I weirdly enough base my hotel choices heavily around their gym and /spa facilities and the team always helps by giving great reviews about the rooms, dining and locality anyways

    • Rob says:

      I do have pics but they didn’t really work (mirrored walls) so I didn’t bother. It’s also over two areas so it would have needed 2 photos!

  • Alba says:

    I’m surprised you say that the airport is not well connected to the city. The airport bus runs every 10 minutes to the city centre.

    • JDB says:

      If one is paying to stay in a decent hotel such as this, why would one want to get onto a busy bus with one’s luggage and then trundle through the streets with a case (and it’s currently 25 degrees during the day) when an inexpensive taxi ride can take you to the hotel entrance more comfortably and quickly.

      • Gordon says:

        @Alba is correct in saying the airport is well connected to the city, with a bus available every ten minutes, irrespective if one prefers a bus to a taxi!

      • Londonsteve says:

        The 100E drops you off 3 minutes walk from this hotel and it’s generally not that crowded as it departs every 10 minutes. It’s effectively non stop to the city centre, stopping twice en route to drop people off (but not pick up new passengers). Tickets cost a fiver and can be paid with contactless on boarding the bus. If your destination is a short walk from any of the three stops you can disembark, there really is no reason not to use it if you’re a solo traveller. The buses are brand new with ruthlessly effective AC.

    • HampshireHog says:

      I think most folk understand well connected in this context to mean a metro, train or tram at the airport

      • Soloflyer1977 says:

        I got back from Budapest yesterday. When I landed on Wednesday, the bus was actually quicker than a taxi and perfect Aircon. The airport bus 100E departs every 8 minutes you can use contactless on the bus.

        • Londonsteve says:

          I’m not sure the bus is ever quicker than a taxi, unless there’s an enormous queue at the booth to order the taxi whereas the bus is leaving right away?

  • Scallder says:

    Was at the InterContinental last weekend which is extremely dated so this looks space-age in comparison. Having been a first time visit, Budapest is a lovely city so will definitely be returning so this looks lovely for another trip.

    Whilst not having a direct rail or metro link, there is a direct airport bus (100E) to the city centre which terminates about 5 mins away from this hotel and is under £5 a ticket, runs every 10 mins and is pretty efficient so if staying here wouldn’t suggest needing a taxi!

    • Rob says:

      I think if you’re paying £300 per night for your hotel you would want a taxi …..

      • Nick G says:

        We’re staying at the WA Berlin for 4 nights which ain’t cheap but getting the train from the airport as it’s over the road from the station and efficient. Granted it isn’t a bus……..

        • Rob says:

          I’d happily get a train but not a bus. Budapest airport is quite a way out too.

      • Erico1875 says:

        If I was paying £300 a night, I’d be wanting a helicopter to land on the roof 😁

        • Gordon says:

          Indeed, I pay £300 pn at AI properties in Mexico & the Caribbean with a butler! (AI Is not for everyone agreed) It didn’t pay off when our hotel took a direct hit from hurricane Fiona in September 2022, we were evacuated to a sister hotel to continue our vacation, but Hyatt gave us a complementary full stay return.

      • Niall says:

        Funny, I’m staying in Budapest soon at the Matild Palace for close to that amount per night. I was planning to take the cheap, easy, modern bus.

    • Ruralite says:

      Even pre Covid the IC was dated but I’d still rather have a river front room here just for the views, especially at night with everything lit up. The Hilton in the Buda castle district is nice too and also has Danube view rooms but it is a bit further away from the city centre although you are staying in a UNESCO world heritage site.

  • Paul says:

    The Intercontinental is right in front of this hotel and while a bit dated it does have the benefit of fabulous river views.
    The Dorothea is very trendy looking from the outside and I thought the the modern boxes on the roof looked stunning when in Budapest a few weeks ago.
    There is a taxi booth at the airport where you buy a ticket for the ride into town. It’s a fixed price and good value. I bought a pass for buses underground etc and found public transport very easy to navigate. Google maps helps.

    • Londonsteve says:

      NB taxis from the airport are NOT a fixed price, the order docket you receive at the booth provides you with an estimated price, but the final price depends on the meter. If traffic is heavier than anticipated or you have to detour due to a road closure, for example, the final price may well be higher. Generally the price is the same or even a little under what the order receipt states.

      • Paul says:

        I stand corrected

        • Daniel says:

          I believe it is only “fixed” in the sense that the rate per km and minute is the same regardless of the driver or taxi company, and that it is not negotiable.

          • Londonsteve says:

            Yes, in the same way that rates for a black cab in London are controlled by a TFL calibrated taximeter, irrespective of who owns the cab. 1100 HUF flag fall, 440 HUF per km or 110 HUF per minute when stationary (or, presumably, beneath a certain speed in slow moving traffic, like a London cab). At 450 HUF to the Pound taxis feel 15-20% cheaper than a London Uber but not as cheap as some visitors might expect. Longer journeys, like airport runs at rush hour can be unexpectedly expensive.

            I was chatting to a cab driver yesterday evening and he told me he’s got virtually no Hungarian customers anymore as the rates exceed the threshold of affordability for most local people.

  • Ollie C says:

    I’ve watched this corner of Vörösmarty square be rebuilt as this hotel over several trips to Budapest in recent years and it’s great to see these photos. The excellent Onyx restaurant is just across the square. Dorothea is owned by a company controlled by Viktor Orbán’s son in law, which also owns the Gellért hotel to open as a Mandarin Oriental in 2027. A good businessman or an example of more crony capitalism from Orbán and his family …

    • Tom says:

      Indeed. Hotel looks nice enough but Hungary has joined Serbia on my “thanks, but no thanks” list. Would rather not give my tourist money to a county that is happy to facilitate the systematic undermining of the West.

      • Erico1875 says:

        NATO did bomb the hell out of Serbia during the Balkan war so it is hardly surprising they are a bit miffed with the West.

      • Richie says:

        Where do you prefer to spend your money in Europe?

        • Novice says:

          If one starts basing everything on how countries behave then sorry to say, we live in a country that is a weapons exporter and so complicit in every war ever.

          I don’t like the behaviour of a lot of countries but it doesn’t stop me going to tick them off my bucket list because I know I am pure and good and other peoples’ actions are not my fault.

        • Tom says:

          There are 30 other European countries that aren’t Serbia or Hungary – literally any of them.

      • JDB says:

        @Tom – The trouble is that unless you do actually visit these countries and meet intelligent people who understand what is going on, I’m not sure you are in a very strong position to have sufficient knowledge take this simplistic stance which achieves nothing.

        The current political situation and history of Hungary is entirely different to that of Serbia, one of the former Yugoslav republics, so I’m not sure why they are lumped together although at least parts of both countries were at various times parts of the Roman, then Ottoman empires and the Austro-Hungarian empire. The current situation in both countries is very complex and actually the tension between east and west and the pull of the different cultures is part of their attraction.

        @Tom – have you taken an official position on North Macedonia, Bosnia or Albania just some of the other interesting countries in the region to visit?

        • RussellH says:

          JDB – (why on earth do you put @ symbols in front of someone’s name here? I assume you do not do so when talking to people on the phone of face-to-face?) it is exceedingly difficult for the regular visitor (let alone the casual tourist) to “meet intelligent people who understand what is going on”.
          For many years I was a regular and frequent visitor to Germany, where I met many friendly and interesting people, but even those I got to know well enough to spend an evening in a bar with their friends enjoying several beers never raised any questions that could, even vaguely, have been considered as being about “what is going on”.
          TBH I can think of only one occasion when something of this sort happened: a hotelier I had met the previous year asked me at a trade fair “What does your Prime Minister think he is doing??” – this was about a week before the Bush/Blair invasion of Iraq.

          • JDB says:

            RussellH – it’s not at all difficult to meet intelligent people when travelling. On my recent trip to Serbia I spent a day with a guide who is also a lawyer, married to an architect, so an intelligent couple. He is also very interested and knowledgeable about history, so we had a very insightful discussion about the country and its culture – he was born in the then Yugoslavia, so had interesting reflections about that, and is pro-EU but was also able to explain why many people across the age and class spectrum are more pro-Russia; it’s complicated. I’m going back later this month to visit some other parts of the country with the same guide.

            Likewise, when I went to Bulgaria a couple of years ago, I spent three days with a guide who was a university professor, teaching Balkan history, born under communism who was able to explain a huge amount about the country and a seriously complicated region. She wasn’t allowed to act as a guide when she took me to Skopje in North Macedonia but handed me over to a university teacher from there, having warned me that her take on regional history would be very different.

            I met various other people in these countries albeit more briefly so discovered a lot about both history and what is going on today.

      • Ollie C says:

        I visit Hungary often, I have a Hungarian partner, and I encourage you to not judge Hungary or its people by its political leader. It has so much to offer and even after dozens of visits over fifteen years I can’t wait to go back. I am itching to enjoy some time in Budapest and at Lake Balaton (at Kàli Art Inn in Köveskál on the northern shore which is a real treat of a retreat) this summer. The hotel I know best is the Corinthia, whose spa is incredible, but the W, Matild etc are stepping out in front now.

  • Peter says:

    Yawn… I am amazed that it took until 7.51 for the first Orbán Orbán cries to be made in connection with an innocuous Budapest hotel review.

    • Londonsteve says:

      It’s a perfectly legitimate comment to make in light of the ownership of this hotel. Staying here enriches the Orbán family directly and encourages more crony capitalism and the rise of the oligarchy at the expense of downtrodden, increasingly impoverished ordinary Hungarians. It looks like a lovely hotel but it could cost £50 a night and I still wouldn’t stay here.

      • Peter says:

        Increasingly impoverished? LOL! Do you know a lot about Hungary, Steve? I was born there and lived there for 30 years. I vividly remember the unspeakable amount of corruption between 2002 and 2010. Orbán’s “cronies” pale in comparison.
        As a Hungarian, can I judge the democratic choices of Britain? And if yes, should I? In other words, do I have the moral grounds to do so?

        • RussellH says:

          Why should the fact of your being Hungarian disqualify you from commenting on British (or French, German, USA, Philippine, Chinese) democracy? Always assuming, of course, that you do not invent “facts” to support your case.
          In my opinion, Victor Orbán is probably the most dangerous senior politician in Europe today.

          • Peter says:

            The point I was trying to make, Russell, was that I try not to be overly judgmental about the democratically elected leaders of Britain (however difficult that may be at times), because I don’t know that much about Britain. I don’t know how much you know about Hungary, but, with respect, I do draw inferences based on what you say. (Viktor with a K in the middle by the way!)

        • Londonsteve says:

          Peter, does being a Hungarian citizen and speaking the language entitle me to opine on the matter? I know more about Hungarian current affairs than you might initially assume. With respect, I disagree with your assertion that big scale corruption was more of an issue from 2002-2010, for a start we didn’t see the extraordinary enrichment of people close to senior politicians and the rise of a billionaire oligarchy who travel by private jet. The latter is quite an ‘accomplishment’ in a country the size of Hungary with a relatively small population and a weak GDP per capita.

          Yes, people are unfortunately increasingly impoverished, the food prices are staggeringly high even compared to the U.K. while rents adjusted for local incomes are as bad as London. The Economist recently placed Budapest as no.1 least affordable city in Europe to rent a flat on a local average net income. Paying a flat 33.5% deductions from even a minimum wage salary (with no tax free allowance) is extraordinarily regressive and without precedent anywhere else in Europe, nor does 27% VAT even applied to ordinary groceries remotely help the situation. Ride a bus in Budapest and look at how people are dressed and what’s in their shopping bag, it’s sad in 2024 they should be far more prosperous like their brethren in Prague and Warsaw, not to mention Vienna and points further west. Fewer children were born last year in Hungary than in any year since 1989 and that’s WITH the often generous government incentives encouraging couples to have children. I think that really tells you something about the state of affairs.

          Regards from Budapest.

          • Peter says:

            Well, Steve, it is true that I haven’t taken a Budapest bus in 20 years, but as to your comment on points further west, judging purely by the travelling public on the trams of Austria’s second city Graz, and the contents of their shopping bags, Austria is clearly not a first-world country.
            In the early noughties, private jets were not a thing in Hungary, true. But endemic, unimaginable corruption and hopeless, Liz Truss-trumping economic incompetence were. People remember this stuff, which in itself explains the outcome of the last 4 elections.
            With all this said, I wouldn’t stay at this hotel either 😉 Better price to value ratio places are around.

          • Londonsteve says:

            Peter, your 20 year hiatus between bus rides in Budapest needs to be addressed! Come and see the current state of affairs and then you can form an overall judgement. It’s easy to get a distorted perspective from abroad. I recommend a stroll along Rakoczi ut between Astoria and Keleti station and see what you think about the level of progress, you may be disappointed how little things have moved on since you left.

        • Bagoly says:

          Orbán’s dismantling/takeover of the independent institutions of the state is the biggest problem.
          That makes the reports of corruption by his cronies less than that of the previous regime, but that is not the same as it being smaller.

      • RussellH says:

        This is a very interesting comment.
        I know enough about Victor Orbán not to want to do anything that might support him and his acolytes in any way, so if this hotel is owned, wholly or partially, directly or indirectly by his family, that should certainly be a very good reason for not patronising it.
        Actually, this matter of ownership is probably something we could all be more aware of when considering where we stay.
        As it happens, the price, at some 3x what we are paying for our room in Budapest next month, means that it is not somewhere that we would be considering anyway

        • Novice says:

          @RussellH, but a person can’t really live like how some of you are suggesting. Because, if we start looking into everything then possibly 99.9% people in various roles of power are corrupt. To the west, Zelensky is a hero for what he is doing in Ukraine but wasn’t he also in the Panama papers???

          All this sports washing by MBS in Saudi, have you all stopped watching all the sports??? Which football club do you support? The airlines we fly, who owns them; BA is part owned by Qatar…The energy you use, the petrol in your cars, is it from a pure source with no corruption involved? Has it ever occurred to you when you are buying your engagement rings etc that how are all africans still starving if the have diamond mines??? Driving your teslas, does it cross your mind the lithium was mined in Africa so why are kids still apparently famished.

          As Rob has stated millions of times here, top city people in London are on this site. What are all you bankers and traders doing trading commodities and various assets from corrupt individuals or is it ok as long as you are benefitting?

          This isn’t the place to get political. Nobody is forcing anyone to stay there. Rob is just reviewing the place as an option. It smacks of double standards when UK is not exactly a beacon of uncorrupt parasitic officials and us brits go around harping on about other corrupt officials in other countries.

          First, get your own parasites out of the government then we’ll talk about other countries.

          • RussellH says:

            Novice – (I say to you too, why on earth do you put @ symbols in front of someone’s name here? I assume you too do not do so when talking to people on the phone or face-to-face?) I think one has to try to have some principles.

            I do not watch sport, or support any football club, I do not care who wins the fight in Riyadh tonight, though from what I have read, Tyson Fury is an unpleasant person I would not like to meet. I am well aware that Ukraine has long been a hotbed of corruption and that London is one of the world’s main money laundering centres. The way that super-rich oligarchs have been encouraged to live in the UK is a blot on our reputation. I would never consider visiting Saudi Arabia, nor Israel. I cannot say that I am happy that IAG is part owned by Qatar.
            But I (sort of) have to live here and put up with it.
            But I do think that it is perfectly valid for someone here to point out the ownership of a hotel. Would you stay in a Trump Hotel??

  • RussellH says:

    Bus 200E takes you from the airport to metro line 3, which may be more useful for some.

    Bus, tram, trolleybus, train, taxi… The Budapest City Transport website https://bkk.hu/en/ is, in my opinion, excellent. They even have detailed plans of all the main interchange hubs which mark the lifts up from the metro, and zebra and traffic-light controlled street crossings.

    As to taxis, I was brought up in a family focussed on public transport and with a strong anti-taxi ethos. Taking taxis was always something that was just not done.

    As a result I still have a strong anti-taxi bias, and I have never felt able to trust taxi drivers – with the exception of Germany, where I am always asked if I need a receipt, even before paying, which makes me believe that they are, actually honest.

    There is detailed information on Budapest taxis at https://bkk.hu/en/travel-information/taxi-services/

    • Novice says:

      Funny story about taxi drivers. I had a scare in Busan recently. Was taking a taxi from airport to hotel and the driver was pretty old; seemed to be nodding off at the wheel. I thought we will definitely crash as car was swaying all over. Usually I make small talk with drivers but as everyone knows; Koreans don’t speak English so I was just clearing my throat millions of times hoping that would keep him awake. I was so glad when I reached the hotel that I was opening the door before the taxi fully stopped.

      • lumma says:

        That’s not a funny story…

        • Novice says:

          Well after surviving something @lumma; to me everything becomes a funny story.

          Comedy is any story that has a happy ending and in this case, I was very happy to be alive so it’s definitely a happy ending and not a tragedy.

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

The UK's biggest frequent flyer website uses cookies, which you can block via your browser settings. Continuing implies your consent to this policy. Our privacy policy is here.