The Independent's journalism is supported by our readers. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn commission. 

Best hotels in Oxford: Where to stay for location and culture

Make the most of a stay in the city of dreaming spires, with these top places to bed down

Julia Buckley
Wednesday 01 March 2023 11:16 GMT
Comments
Take your pick from grand 18th-century facades to mullion-windowed coaching inns and romantic cottage-style boltholes
Take your pick from grand 18th-century facades to mullion-windowed coaching inns and romantic cottage-style boltholes (Malmaison)

Your support helps us to tell the story

From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging.

At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story.

The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it.

Your support makes all the difference.

“Where’s the university?” people ask when they first visit Oxford. Truth is, it’s all around you, with 39 colleges scattered about the city – just follow those dreaming spires made famous by Victorian poet Matthew Arnold.

In the same way, the best hotels in this round-up may not be the most obvious ones – this is a city bursting with small, period properties. Some are slap-bang in the heart of the things, while others are a short bus ride from the centre. But all have their own unique charms – from slick interiors hidden behind grand 18th-century facades to mullion-windowed coaching inns and romantic cottage-style boltholes.

Don’t dismiss the surrounding villages, either, which are not only gorgeous but home to superb hotels, too, including high-class country pads complete with Michelin-starred food. Staying the weekend? Do one night in town and one night outside it, for an added Cotswoldy vibe. Wherever you choose to stay, make sure you leave plenty of time to explore one of England’s most beautiful cities.

Best for atmosphere: Malmaison

Neighbourhood: City Centre

Stay in a former prison at Malmaison
Stay in a former prison at Malmaison (Malmaison)

Sure, a night in the cells isn’t to everyone’s taste, but for those who don’t scare easily, this is hands down Oxford’s most atmospheric hotel.

Homed in a former prison, this hotel is somewhere you’d happily serve your time – from the Governor’s House and the House of Correction to A wing (the most Instagrammable one), where each room sprawls across three former cells. From here, the access corridor is the real jail wing – an open hangar of a place, with the original cell doors still in place and metal steps and walkways threading through the air.

Best for business: Old Bank Hotel

Neighbourhood: City Centre

Old Bank has free bikes and a daily walking tour for guests
Old Bank has free bikes and a daily walking tour for guests (Old Bank)

Plum on the high street opposite Radcliffe Square, this hotel on top of popular restaurant Quod offers quintessential views of those spires (and is itself in an 18th-century building).

The owner is an art collector, so, inside, you’ll find plenty of pictures and sketches livening up the walls. It’s smart, chic and good for business – rooms are modern without being over the top, though standard rooms can feel a little tight. The hotel offers free bike rental and a daily walking tour for guests. Night owl? Enjoy a tipple or three at the residents’ bar in the library, which is open until 2am.

Best for breakfast: Burlington House

Neighbourhood: Summertown

Burlington House has boutique-y style
Burlington House has boutique-y style (Burlington House)

Burlington House is nestled in the peaceful​ Summertown neighbourhood, just a 10-minute bus ride north of the city centre. More boutique hotel than B&B, it manages to be homey without being twee, and smart but not smart-by-numbers.

The 12 comfy, triple-glazed rooms have jaunty feature wallpaper and clashing chairs and cushions. A huge bonus is the ebullient manager, who treats you like a long-lost cousin and will knock you up a feast of a breakfast, including homemade bread, yoghurt and granola, and melting gruyere omelettes.

Neighbourhood: City Centre

Mercure Eastgate Hotel is based in a 17th-century coaching inn
Mercure Eastgate Hotel is based in a 17th-century coaching inn (Accor Hotels)

You wouldn’t know that this 17th-century coaching inn – a building that’s played host to the likes of Lewis Carroll and JRR Tolkein – is today a chain hotel. That’s because Mercure has used the lightest of touches, splicing four heritage buildings together opposite Magdalen College and its famous belltower.

The cosy rooms have feature walls sporting blown-up photos of famous Oxford sights. If you can, pick a room overlooking the ancient Exam Schools.

Best blast from the past: Porterhouse Grill & Rooms

Neighbourhood: City Centre

Porterhouse Grill & Rooms always has steak on the menu
Porterhouse Grill & Rooms always has steak on the menu (Porterhouse Grill and Rooms)

Styled like an old British boozer that wouldn’t be out of place in London, the Porterhouse opened just a stroll from the station in 2017, and blasted onto the scene with an excellent steakhouse downstairs and seven slick, large rooms above it.

The rooms overlook a quiet residential street but there’s an urban, retro feel to the decor – think brass Art Deco-style lamps and velvet petrol-coloured headboards, paired with Somnus beds and Scandi wood furniture. Sleep well – because there’s steak for breakfast.

Best for location: Vanbrugh House Hotel

Neighbourhood: City Centre

Vanbrugh House enjoys an illustrious position
Vanbrugh House enjoys an illustrious position (Vanbrugh House Hotel)

Each of the rooms at this grand, three-storey Georgian house opposite the Oxford Union debating society (yes, the one all those politicians were president of) is named after a person or thing connected to Oxford. In case you’re not up on your history of, say, Lewis Carroll or the said Oxford Union, each room reveals more about the history of the relevant person or place.

The style is a deliciously modern update of “traditional”, with wood-panelled walls painted in shades of cream and dove, standalone bath tubs and plush velvet sofas, while bathrooms are stocked with White Company toiletries. Location-wise, you couldn’t get more central.

Best for river life: Voco Oxford Thames

Neighbourhood: Sandford

Voco Oxford Thames is set in 30 acres of grounds
Voco Oxford Thames is set in 30 acres of grounds (Voco)

This is a good bet for those after a taste of country life but who also want an easy bus ride towards the dreaming spires. Set in a manor dating back to the 1400s (though what remains is mainly 18th-century), it rests in 30 acres of grounds on the bank of the river Thames in Sandford, just beyond the bottom of Abingdon Road (one of Oxford’s main roads in and out of the city).

Despite the history, rooms are modern (and, yes, a wee bit boutique-by-numbers). Voco is the sustainability focused brand of IHG (Intercontinental Hotel Group), so you can expect initiatives, such as duvets and pillows filled with 100 per cent recycled materials and bulk-sized amenities.

Best for a boozy break: Head of the River

Neighbourhood: City Centre

Head of the River is a great place to enjoy a drink and while away the day
Head of the River is a great place to enjoy a drink and while away the day (Head of the River)

On the riverbank just below Christ Church, perhaps the university’s grandest college, the Head of the River pub has long been one of the best places to while away an afternoon.

Now, you can continue into the night, with 20 gorgeous rooms that walk the line between fun and overly styled, with features including walls dressed in faux bookshelf wallpaper, retro iron bedsteads and exposed brick detailing. Breakfast is served in the pub downstairs.

Neighbourhood: Great Milton, Oxfordshire

Le Manoir aux Quat’Saisons is a high-class country pad
Le Manoir aux Quat’Saisons is a high-class country pad (Le Manoir aux Quat’ Saisons)

Yes, it’s 12 miles out of town, but if ever there was a reason to taxi into the city, this is it: a 15th-century Chiltern manor house that’s spent the past 35 years as a two-Michelin-starred temple to food, thanks to owner Raymond Blanc (who runs a cookery school, plus a gardening school, on-site).

Expect individually designed rooms – some flouncy, some rustic, and some modern or masculine. You’ll also be treated to beautiful, wanderable gardens. But it’s the service that really stands out – from the fires that are discreetly lit while you’re at dinner, to the wake-up pots of tea in the morning, there’s an uncanny level of mind-reading.

Best for relaxation: Artist Residence

Neighbourhood: South Leigh, Oxfordshire

Creative design at Artist Residence
Creative design at Artist Residence (Artist Residence)

Want a taste of country life but can’t stretch to Le Manoir? Try this beauty, 10 miles west of the city, in the village of South Leigh. Part of the boho Artist Residence mini chain, this 16th-century thatched and mullion-windowed inn has eight bedrooms (three of which are in the converted outbuildings), plus a shepherd’s hut.

Artist Residence is a mix of traditional and daring, pairing William Morris wallpaper with House of Hackney’s finest, plus Kit Kemp-style brightly patterned beds, chairs and even tiles.

Read more of our hotel reviews:

Read more on England travel:

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in