Rome, Italy

The Hoxton, Rome

Price per night from$257.57

Price information

If you haven’t entered any dates, the rate shown is provided directly by the hotel and represents the cheapest double room (inclusive of taxes and fees) available in the next 60 days.

Prices have been converted from the hotel’s local currency (EUR221.80), via openexchangerates.org, using today’s exchange rate.

Style

Upscale Sixties sequel

Setting

Salario stalwart

Roam (pardon the pun) through Villa Borghese’s sun-dappled gardens for a side of the city that’s beloved by locals — The Hoxton, Rome as its epicurean centre. Buzzy communal spaces reflect the esteemed set-up of this group's abundant outposts, and an adjoining restaurant offers comfort in its Italian fare (a creamy cacio e pepe, per favore) and convivial ambience. You’ll feel the influence of Fellini’s films through Sixties-inspired rooms, and the pull of Salario’s sophisticated streets just beyond your dusty-pink door.

Smith Extra

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Guaranteed late check-out until 3pm

Facilities

Photos The Hoxton, Rome facilities

Need to know

Rooms

192.

Check–Out

Noon, but you’ll get guaranteed late check-out until 3pm included with your stay. Check-in, 2pm.

More details

Rates don’t include breakfast, but à la carte options are available at Elio restaurant for around €22 each.

Also

All communal areas are accessible; there are dedicated toilets, and 10 of the Cosy Up rooms have been adapted with wheelchair-friendly bathrooms for guests with limited mobility.

Please note

The hotel’s national identification code (CIN) is IT058091A1YT8UF7ZI

At the hotel

Bikes to borrow, boutique, co-working space, neighbourhood guide, charged laundry service and free WiFi throughout. In rooms: TV, Roberts radio, air-conditioning, tea- and coffee-making kit, mini fridge, free boxed water, clothes steamer (on request) and bespoke bath products.

Our favourite rooms

Unless you’re sauntering around solo or spending most of your time out, we’d avoid Shoebox’s more intimate set-up, favouring Roomy Terrace — or its older sister, Biggy Terrace — instead. Both come with the same mid-century-inspired interiors that define all rooms, but tout sweet sitting spaces and private outdoor areas as appealing additions.

Packing tips

A memory for maps — Salario is the sort of place you’ll want to explore with the confidence of a Roman.

Also

Fitness fiends can collect discounted passes to a selection of local gyms from reception.

Pet‐friendly

Dogs are welcome for free in all rooms and suites. See more pet-friendly hotels in Rome.

Children

Welcome; there’s a devoted-to-tots ‘Tiny Hox’ team on call to arrange everything from bottle warmers and cots to colouring books and breakfast bags. Extra beds can be added to all Roomy and Biggy rooms.

Sustainability efforts

Known for their commitment to community and Green Key certifications, The Hoxton, Rome is no different to its Earth-kind counterparts. All bath products are natural and come in recyclable bottles, energy is sourced from renewable suppliers, LED lights are fitted with motion sensors to minimise consumption, and there’s no single-use plastic. Restaurant menus prioritise locally made produce, and most of the hotel’s furnishings were sourced from Rome’s vintage markets. You’ll also find house-made guides that spotlight independent businesses and like-minded brands to encourage ethical choices.

Food and Drink

Photos The Hoxton, Rome food and drink

Top Table

During the summer, tables spill onto the terrace for sun-paired plates.

Dress Code

Watch what the locals wear and match their MO — this is a Hoxton, after all.

Hotel restaurant

Unfurling across the ground floor in an inviting space designed for all-day dining, Elio’s seasonal menus showcase beloved Italian classics, with pecorino-topped pastas and sliced, prosciutto-paired veal as its comforting stand outs. Breakfasts are similarly Roman in style, and at weekends, leisurely brunches feature pancakes dosed in Nutella, waffles with wild berries and local takes on timeless sandwiches. If you’re ready and waiting to wander, laidback café Cugino has enough fuel-providing provisions and coffees to have you mounting the Spanish Steps with speed. 

Hotel bar

Come evening, Cugino transforms into a convivial space, where an adoring crowd of in-the-know locals flock for its cocktails, natural wines and house-made antipasti

Last orders

Elio serves breakfast from 8am–11am; lunch is noon to 3pm during the week (brunch is 11.30am–3pm on Saturday and Sunday), and dinner is 5pm–11pm, with last orders at 10.30pm. Cugino is open daily 7am till late.

Room service

Available from 7am until 11.30pm.

Location

Photos The Hoxton, Rome location
Address
The Hoxton, Rome
Largo Benedetto Marcello 220
Roma
00198
Italy

Northeast of the historic centre, The Hoxton, Rome sits in the city’s residential Salario district, on the edge of Parioli and within easy reach of the idyllic Villa Borghese Gardens.

Planes

Your nearest international airport is Rome Fiumicino, around an hour from The Hoxton by car. Private transfers aren’t typically offered, but there’ll be plenty of taxi ranks at the airport, should you require a ride. Rates are usually between €55 and €75 each way, depending on the time of day.

Trains

Roma Termini is a 25-minute walk (or 15-minute drive) from the hotel and has high-speed connections to major Italian hubs, including Florence, Milan, Naples, Venice and Bologna. For local routes, Castro Pretorio is a similar distance and sits on Metro Line B, which runs through the historic centre.

Automobiles

Rome is fairly walkable, with cycling and public transport eliminating the need for more than two wheels. This Hoxton doesn’t have on-site parking, but if you’re bringing your car, you’ll find overnight spots on nearby Via Tirso and staff can help with preferential rates.

Worth getting out of bed for

The Hoxton, Rome puts you a little northeast of the Unesco-protected Centro Storico in the lesser-known Salario district. You’re still within easy reach of the historic centre's iconic, open-air landmarks, but stick to your residential ‘hood and its bordering boroughs for a taste of how the locals do it.  

Start with a wander around the whimsical Coppedè Quarter, admiring Piazza Mincio’s architectural patchwork and ancient Roman motifs as you go. Galleries have fewer crowds around here, with the Museum of Contemporary Art (MACRO) and National Museum of 21st Century Art (MAXXI) as inspiration-striking starting points. And if it’s some solace you’re seeking, make for Pincian Hill, where Villa Borghese and its perfectly manicured gardens provide the perfect amount of peace. 

Local restaurants

Just off a quiet residential street in Parioli, Lideale Osteria has earnt a legendary status among locals for its refined Roman classics, featuring seasonal staples and hand-rolled pastas. Osteria Del Rione may be a touch more traditional, but its simple-yet-sapid menus are equally adored with cacio e pepe, amatriciana and carbonara as comforting staples. 

Local cafés

Salario’s setting may do most of the work, but nothing makes you feel like a local faster than sipping espressi in an idyllic Roman garden. With its serene setting, coffee-pairing pastries and light bites, Casina delle Muse is just the ticket. Set unassumingly on a street corner, standing-only Il Baretto’s expertly crafted coffees more than make up for its lack of frills and made-to-settle seating.  

Local bars

There’s an intimate, hole-in-the-wall feel to wine bar Enoteca Parioli, where you’ll find the neighbourhood’s trendy natives stopping in for vintage bottles and light bites between friends. If it's cocktails and a clubbier atmosphere you’re after, Duke’s has long been hailed part of Parioli’s fabric, tempting bon vivants to its renowned setting for decades. 

Reviews

Photos The Hoxton, Rome reviews

Anonymous review

Every hotel featured is visited personally by members of our team, given the Smith seal of approval, and then anonymously reviewed. As soon as our reviewers have returned from this locally loved hotel in Salario and unpacked their Hoxton boutique buys, a full account of their Italian city break will be with you. In the meantime, to whet your wanderlust, here's a quick peek inside The Hoxton, Rome… 

If La Dolce Vita’s protagonist Marcello Rubini had his time again, we think he’d like The Hoxton, Rome. Much like its globe-spanning siblings, this boutique base is characterised by its storied living spaces — crafted as much by community as visitors — and lively restaurant that hums with cheerful chatter into the night. 

The hospitality brand’s famed format may define the foundations of this Roman outpost, but look a little deeper and you’ll find flourishes that could have been created by the film’s director, Federico Fellini. Interiors draw inspiration from Sixties cinema, with parquet flooring, Murano-like lighting, statement headboards and vintage touches set behind a pink, timeworn façade. Should you associate more with Marcello’s earlier ambitions of being a writer, cosy nooks, leafy courtyards and made-for-two tables are ideal spots for penning prose.  

And for your very own Italian cinematic moment, the Trevi Foundation and its surrounding sights are a mere meander through Villa Borghese’s sun-graced gardens. 

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Price per night from $240.15