Blanchette is a proper Soho bistro with Paris in its bones. Small plates made for sharing, French wines poured generously, and a room that fills quickly with noise, warmth, and regulars who know why they’re here.
For those who know cities have soul
London wears its layers well. A city of contrast and creativity, where history brushes up against the now and every postcode tells a different story. It is bold and buttoned-up, gritty and graceful, full of character and constantly reinventing itself. This London travel guide shares where to stay in London, along with the best hotels, restaurants, and neighbourhoods that capture its rhythm: design-led, rooted in place, and full of quiet confidence.
Walk long enough and the city softens. Behind the rush are galleries, wine bars, and studio shops that tell stories of craft and character. Style lives here, but so does substance. London is not a city to tick off; it is one to settle into. Notice the small things, stay a while, and it begins to feel like your own.
Our curated edit of the best hotels in London reflects the city’s layers, creative energy, timeless architecture, and a sense of ease tucked into the everyday. These are stays with substance: design-led, story-driven, and quietly confident. From grand icons to small neighbourhood finds, each hotel invites you to slow down, settle in, and see the city through a more thoughtful lens.
5 Star //Â 91 Rooms
28 Bow St, London
Velvet, mood, and Covent Garden magic – NoMad London is where layered storytelling meets rich design.
5 Star // 252 Rooms
27 Poultry, London
The Ned is a world of its own, all-day buzz, vintage glamour, and city views with serious flair.
4 Star // 51 Rooms
8 Pembridge Gardens
A local gem in Notting Hill, The Laslett blends cultured design with low-key London sophistication.
5 Star // 334 Rooms
1-8 Russell Sq
Victorian glamour reimagined with bold design, Kimpton Fitzroy is Bloomsbury elegance with a modern soul.
4 Star // 40 Rooms
14-15 Henrietta St
A boutique escape with 70s flair, nestled in the heart of Covent Garden’s culture, charm, and colour.
5 Star // 173 RoomsÂ
10 Berners St
Design-led luxury in Fitzrovia, where Georgian architecture meets bold interiors and standout dining.
4 Star // 203 RoomsÂ
7 Gracechurch St
A smart, soulful stay blending Beaux-Arts beauty with today’s comforts in London’s historic core.
5 Star // 57 Rooms
20 Broadwick StÂ
A flamboyant Soho hideaway where Italian glamour, English eccentricity, and bold design meet in effortless harmony.
5 Star // 120 RoomsÂ
57 Whitehall
Design-forward aparthotel in Dalston with local energy, smart studios, and serious style.
4 Star // 60 Rooms
60 Norfolk Square, Paddington
A design-led London hideaway where bespoke craftsmanship, soft colour, and intimate charm shape every stay.
London’s food scene never stands still. Yet some places stay with you, where bold cooking meets personality and atmosphere matters as much as the menu. From fire-lit basements to modern bistros filled with light, we’ve gathered the restaurants that balance creativity with soul. These are the tables worth returning to, full of flavour, feeling, and a point of view that could only belong to this city. This is London through The Revel Stay lens.
4 Redchurch St, London
Up a narrow stair in Shoreditch, BRAT hums with warmth and woodsmoke. Turbot hits the grill, glasses clink, and the room glows. This is fire cooking with soul, meant for sharing and staying awhile.
64 Shoreditch High St, LondonÂ
An East London establishment built on big flavour, Smoking Goat serves Thai drinking food with fire, funk, and soul. Loud tables, smoky air, and hands-on eating make it feel alive in all the right ways.
24 Clerkenwell Green, London
Sessions Arts Club is part dining room, part dream. Tucked into a faded courthouse high above Clerkenwell, it’s candlelight, velvet, and food that’s thoughtful without trying too hard. Come hungry, dressed up, and ready to stay late.
49 Frith St, London
Blanchette is a proper Soho bistro with Paris in its bones. Small plates made for sharing, French wines poured generously, and a room that fills quickly with noise, warmth, and regulars who know why they’re here.
London is at its best when you step beyond the centre. The buzz of Soho is brilliant, but the neighbourhoods carry a different rhythm: slow Sundays in a pub, long lunches that run into afternoon, and morning walks through green that feel far from the noise. This London travel guide highlights the pockets of calm and character where the city feels close, local, and quietly alive.
Broadway Market feels lived-in in the best way. Weekdays are calm: dogs, papers, coffee outside, vintage next to bakeries, and pubs built for slow afternoons. Weekends shift the pace. Stalls line the street, bread and coffee scent the air, and the canal pulls you along. People come for lunch and stay for wine. It never tries to impress, which is exactly why it does.
On Sundays Columbia Road is loud and lovely, arms full of flowers and music in the air. Step off the main stretch and it quiets. Tiled shopfronts hold galleries, bookshops, and unfussy stores that feel personal. Pubs sit on most corners, and many are good. Come for the market if you like, but you do not need it. Columbia Road works any day, especially if you are in no rush.
Hampstead Heath feels like space. Open, green, a little wild around the edges. You walk without thinking, swim without planning, and sit without checking the time. The city fades just enough. Nearby, Hampstead moves at its own pace: a good bakery, a quiet bookshop, a pub that keeps you longer than planned. The charm is in the stillness and the stretch of sky. You do not come to do much. You come to feel it.
Little Venice is London with the volume turned down. The canal moves slowly between narrowboats and leafy paths, with cafés where mornings stretch into early afternoon. It is not flashy, which is part of the charm. Small galleries, neighbourhood pubs, and benches invite you to sit for no reason at all. Spring suits it best, when the trees turn green and light plays on the water. Take the long way and let the pace soften as you go.
We love Paris for everything that happens between the highlights. The neighbourhood cafés, late dinners, galleries down side streets, and design that feels effortless rather than styled. It’s creative, romantic without trying, and full of moments that stay with you long after you leave.
Lisbon moves on its own terms. Days stretch across hills, tiled streets, and sun-warmed terraces, shaped by seafood lunches and slow afternoons. There’s creativity everywhere, but it never feels forced. It’s warm, soulful, and easy to settle into without trying.
You’ll love Amsterdam if you want a city escape with soul. It moves to its own rhythm: bicycles gliding past canals, mornings shaped by good coffee, an evolving food scene, and art and music woven naturally into everyday wandering. Amsterdam is the kind of place to discover slowly
You’ll love Rome if you want a city that lives inside its history rather than around it. Days unfold between espresso bars, markets, and long lunches, with beauty built into the everyday. It’s layered, generous, and deeply human, a place where wandering always leads somewhere meaningful.
You do not need a car. The Underground, buses, and trains connect the whole city, and walking shows you more than driving ever could. The Tube is fast, black cabs are easy to find, and buses give the best street-level view. For a slower pace, rent a bike or take the riverboat. It gives the city a different rhythm.
Spring and autumn are ideal. The weather is mild, parks are at their best, and the city feels alive without the summer crowds. Winter has its charm too, with lights, theatre, and slower evenings in pubs.
Four or five days is a good start, but a week lets you explore beyond the landmarks. Spend time in different neighbourhoods, each with its own rhythm and reason to linger.
It can be. Hotels and restaurants vary widely, but great food and design-led stays exist at every price. Markets, galleries, and public museums are mostly free, which helps balance things out.
Diverse, confident, and always changing. From old pubs and family-run curry houses to chef-led restaurants redefining British cooking, London’s food culture is built on character and choice.
Yes. London is generally safe and easy to navigate. Like any large city, stay aware of your surroundings and keep an eye on belongings in busy areas or on public transport. Most neighbourhoods are welcoming, and walking feels comfortable day and night, especially in central and residential areas.