Parklife is the UK's biggest metropolitan festival, held each June in Heaton Park — Europe's largest municipal park — on the outskirts of Manchester with over 80,000 attendees per day across two days. Featuring an eclectic mix of electronic music, indie, hip-hop, and pop acts, it perfectly captures Manchester's position as one of Britain's most musically innovative cities. Manchester hotels are at high demand during Parklife weekend, and staying centrally offers easy access to both the festival and the city's famous nightlife.
This grand 1914 Edwardian landmark on Peter Street delivers palatial rooms with soaring ceilings, a celebrated spa, and four restaurants overseen by top chefs. Its position beside the Midland Hotel district puts Manchester's cultural corridor on your doorstep.
Built in 1903 as the railway hotel for Manchester's historic Central Station, The Midland remains one of the city's most storied addresses with opulent Edwardian interiors and impeccable service. Its Wyvern restaurant has earned a loyal following for classic British cooking.
A Georgian townhouse conversion on Manchester's most elegant street, this 40-room boutique hotel features an infinity rooftop pool with cathedral views — a genuine rarity in the city. Rooms blend original period detailing with a warm, residential feel.
Sleek, dark, and unapologetically cool, Dakota's Manchester outpost brings its signature dramatic aesthetic to the heart of the city with deep-toned rooms, leather banquettes, and a bar that rivals anything in London. The brand's focus on quality materials and meticulous service sets it apart.
A converted Victorian schoolhouse in the heritage Castlefield area, Great John Street offers only 30 rooms each with unique character, plus a rooftop hot tub and a Members' Club feel. The intimate scale and individual décor make it one of Manchester's most memorable stays.
Marco Pierre White's glamorous reimagining of the Grade II listed Stock Exchange building delivers 40 rooms with extraordinary architectural detail, a vast trading-floor restaurant, and a cocktail bar inside the original dome. One of Manchester's most talked-about new openings.