Warsaw Chopin Airport (WAW) is Poland's busiest airport and the primary hub for LOT Polish Airlines. Hotels in Warsaw offer access to the meticulously reconstructed Old Town, the Warsaw Rising Museum, outstanding pierogi, and a vibrant contemporary arts and nightlife scene.
Warsaw's most storied grande dame has graced the Royal Route since 1901, accumulating a guest register that reads like a catalogue of 20th-century history. The neo-Renaissance exterior, Marconi lounge with its Secession-style columns, and impeccably tailored Raffles service place it firmly among Europe's greatest city hotels. Rooms in the historic wing retain period finishes that no renovation should ever eliminate.
Reopened after a decade-long restoration in 2018, the Europejski is a neoclassical masterpiece returned to its original grandeur on Plac Piłsudskiego. The restoration was executed with exceptional care, preserving carved ceilings and marble staircases while installing a world-class spa in the basement and contemporary rooms finished to an impeccable standard. The rooftop terrace overlooks a sweep of Warsaw that no photograph can adequately capture.
Operating under the Raffles banner since its restoration, the Europejski delivers the brand's hallmark blend of colonial-era elegance and contemporary precision service on Warsaw's most prestigious address. The Polish Bar's legendary vodka selection and the Europejski Grill's modern Polish cuisine make this as compelling a dining destination as it is a hotel.
Nobu's Warsaw debut brought the brand's signature dark-wood aesthetic and Japanese-minimalist design to a dramatic tower in the Intraco complex. The in-house Nobu restaurant is Warsaw's most reliably excellent Japanese dining; rooms are sleek, generous, and equipped to the highest standard. A strong choice for those who find pleasure in the harmony of good design and extraordinary food in a single address.
The Westin occupies one of Warsaw's most prominent downtown positions adjacent to the Intraco towers, offering the brand's acclaimed Heavenly Beds, a large fitness centre, and sweeping city views from its upper floors. It remains one of the most reliable luxury choices in Warsaw for business travellers and those requiring a full-service hotel with extensive conference facilities.
Warsaw's most design-forward mid-luxury hotel occupies a landmark position near the Palace of Culture, its interiors a riot of locally commissioned Polish art and sustainable materials. The ground-floor café-bar has become a Warsaw institution for the creative class; rooms are efficiently designed with premium mattresses and Technogym fitness corners built in.