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My review of the Hilton Garden Inn hotel at Hatton Cross, Heathrow in London

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This is my review of the Hilton Garden Inn hotel at Hatton Cross, by London Heathrow Airport.

(EDIT: We reviewed this hotel again in September 2020 after it was refurbished.  I recommend you read that review instead.  Click here: Hilton Garden Inn London Heathrow hotel review 2020.)

The hotels at Heathrow Airport generally force you to make a choice.  You can stay at the Sofitel Terminal 5 or Hilton Terminal 4, be directly connected to the airport, and pay a premium.  Alternatively, you can waste your evening and your money on the slow and expensive Hoppa Bus (£4.50 one-way) between the terminals and a cheaper hotel.  Our preferred choice is currently the new ibis Styles which we reviewed last year and which can be as low as £25 via the Accor Happy Mondays promotion.

There is a third way – the Hilton Garden Inn at Heathrow.  This hotel, formerly a Jurys Inn, is just outside Hatton Cross underground station.  There are two advantages of staying here:

You get there a lot quicker if arriving by tube – you get out at Hatton Cross before the airport, rather than having to travel to the terminals, head to the bus station and take a Hoppa Bus.  You would save around 30 minutes.

In the morning, you walk back to the tube and take the one or two stops to Terminals 2/3/4 or Terminal 5.  There is no need to wait for a Hoppa Bus and the tube fare is less than the Hoppa fare.

Being a slightly sad person, I’d always wanted to give the Hilton Garden Inn at Heathrow a try and the opportunity came up last week.  At just £63, booked a week in advance, you can’t complain about the price.

What is a Hilton Garden Inn?

I had no idea before I arrived.  And after staying there, I still have no idea!  I have been in far worse ‘mainline’ Hilton properties.  It is interchangeable with the Doubletree by Hilton at Heathrow which I visited once, which is actually nowhere near Heathrow.  The toiletries (Peter Roth) are the same as a ‘normal’ Hilton. The chocolate chip cookies given out in reception remind you of a Doubletree.

Getting to Hilton Garden Inn Hatton Cross

(EDIT:  according to the comments below, I didn’t take the most efficient route.  If you leave the tube station by the other exit – ie NOT into the bus station – and then turn left it is shorter and avoids the bridge.)

It only really make sense to pick this hotel if you are arriving by tube, due to the time saving.  The route is not exactly glamorous.  It is also NOT signposted and if you didn’t know roughly where you were going you’d be in trouble.  Luckily I had driven past the hotel many times and knew which direction to follow.

You exit Hatton Cross tube into the bus station where you will see this bridge (which, according to a notice on it, is Heathrow Airport property!):

Hilton Garden Inn Heathrow Airport Hatton Cross review

Cross the bridge and follow the path around the industrial storage park, where amongst other things BA appears to store empty luggage holders:

Hilton Garden Inn Heathrow Airport Hatton Cross review

Once you have gone around the corner, you will see the grey mass of the hotel ahead of you.  For about 30 feet the pavement disappears and you are on gravel which could be annoying if pulling a heavy case.  Whilst the walk only takes 2-3 minutes I can imagine that it isn’t a lot of fun in darkness.

Hilton Garden Inn Heathrow Airport Hatton Cross review

There was a short but slow moving queue at reception but the welcome was warm.  As a Hilton Diamond I was told that I could take two bottle of water from the pantry (see later).  Chocolate chip cookies – just like at a Doubletree – newspapers and carbonated orange juice were on a table next to reception for anyone to help themselves.  The cookies were genuinely excellent, surprisingly.

As a Diamond I was offered 750 Hilton Honors points or a free breakfast.  As I was leaving very early I said I would take the points.  The clerk then said that he would give me free breakfast anyway on top, although I declined it.

There was little they could give me in terms of Diamond upgrades although I got a top floor room with a view over a green field beside the hotel.  This is presumably quieter than the other side which overlooks the road into the airport.

The hotel was refurbished a couple of years ago when it became a Hilton Garden Inn.  My room, whilst small, was smartly furnished:

Hilton Garden Inn Heathrow Airport Hatton Cross review

…. and had a decent desk.

Hilton Garden Inn Heathrow Airport Hatton Cross review

The bathroom was standard with the Peter Thomas Roth toiletries used in most UK Hilton properties:

Hilton Garden Inn Heathrow Airport Hatton Cross review

Where this hotel really shines is in the public areas.  There is nothing, literally nothing, within walking distance apart from the minimart in the bus station!  The hotel makes an effort to keep you occupied.

Here is some of the lounge seating on the ground floor.  There is a small Costa Coffee opposite this.

Hilton Garden Inn Heathrow Airport Hatton Cross review

This is the Garden Grille restaurant where you can take breakfast and dinner:

Hilton Garden Inn Heathrow Airport Hatton Cross review

This is the Pavilion Pantry.  Open 24 hours, you can buy drinks, snacks and toiletries.  Frankly, every hotel – whatever the star rating – should have something like this.

Hilton Garden Inn Heathrow Airport Hatton Cross review

The bar was being well used when I was there.  A separate bar menu is available if you don’t want a formal meal in the Garden Grille.

Hilton Garden Inn Heathrow Airport Hatton Cross review

There is also, not pictured, a small business centre and a fitness room.

All in all, I was impressed by the Hilton Garden Inn at Heathrow.  It is classier than, say, a Holiday Inn Express.  Whilst there is nothing going on nearby, the bar, restaurant, Costa Coffee and Pavilion Pantry will keep you going.

If you are heading to Heathrow by tube, the Hilton Garden Inn is far more convenient than any of the hotels which require the Hoppa Bus.

If you are arriving by cab or Heathrow Express it is a different story because you will need to get the Hoppa (or take the tube to Hatton Cross) and the hotel is no more convenient than any other option – although you will have an easier trip back to the airport in the morning via tube if you stay here.

The hotel website is here if you want to book or find out more.


How to earn Hilton Honors points and status from UK credit cards

How to earn Hilton Honors points and status from UK credit cards (December 2021)

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Did you know that the Virgin Atlantic credit cards are a great way of earning Hilton Honors points? Two Virgin Points can be converted into three Hilton Honors points. The Virgin Atlantic cards are the only Visa or Mastercard products in the UK which can indirectly earn Hilton Honors points. You can apply here.

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Click here to read our detailed summary of all UK credit cards which can be used to earn Hilton Honors points

(Want to earn more hotel points?  Click here to see our complete list of promotions from the major hotel chains or use the ‘Hotel Offers’ link in the menu bar at the top of the page.)

Comments (104)

This article is closed to new posts. Discussion continues in the HfP Forums.

  • Andrew says:

    I stayed at the HGI overnight when doing some work for HEX. It’s a really good option arriving by car as they do special onsite parking rates for guests, and then simply jump on the underground into the airport. The breakfast offered is good too, with the less common addition of a waffle machine!

  • Jake says:

    This hotel is actually still owned and operated by Jurys Inn. They struck up some weird relationship with Hilton to re brand a few of their properties to appeal to the American market. Same thing at Jurys Inn Islington and, I think, Chelsea which are now branded as Doubletrees.

    • Oh! Matron! says:

      Good to know. Would explain the slightly ‘off plan’ feel about the hotel (meaning, I like it!)

  • Nigel says:

    Exiting the tube at Hatton Cross and then crossing the main road at the traffic lights, head on up Faggs Road for 10 mins very slow walk, 5 mins brisk pace, and you get to the Green Man pub which is right at the end of one of the LHR runways! For plane anoraks it is fantastic to sit outside and eat the very adequate pub grub and feel that you could almost touch the undercarriage wheels of an A380 as it screams overhead…..just!!!

    • Rob says:

      A Korean A380 went over the hotel as I was arriving – it seemed astonishingly low.

      • Kevin says:

        PremierInn Heald Green at MAN is directly under the flight path. I had a departing Emirates A380 go over at 500ft. HGI LHR is great for watching flights shortly before or after takeoff.

      • Talay says:

        Probably low on fuel 🙂

  • PAL says:

    Not a fan of the usual toiletries in Hiltons. I’d rather not smell of an orange! Best for Hilton is Curio hamburg – white company products.

    • Rob says:

      I like the Reichshof – I wrote a bad review but I knew they would sort it out and my wife has used it recently with no complaints.

  • @mkcol says:

    You don’t need to use the bridge, you can just stay at street level & cross at the lights where there is a pedestrian crossing – handy to know for those with some mobility issues.

    I’ve stayed at this hotel twice now. Despite being Honors diamond & being able to afford the “connected” hotels I would still choose this hotel over the others, which I’ve found somewhat lacking & overpriced for not just rooms but F&B.

    • Alex says:

      After reading this article this morning my partner and I decided to pay a familiarisation visit to this hotel as we were in the area anyway (saw off a friend at Heathrow) and it was good to combine with some plane spotting in Hatton Cross vicinity (rare A300s and B757s plus colourful Air Malta plane). The route and hotel were exactly as described. A couple of points:
      1) the gravel bit is easy to avoid if you cross the road just before it starts (there is a designated crossing) and you are safe with your wheelie bag.
      2) the Costa bar is slightly weird as it is not permanently manned and you have to order either at the restaurant or at the bar. But if you are lucky (like a group of youngsters who hanged around when I brought a member of staff to pour my drinks) you can order directly from Costa.

  • Sam says:

    My only LHR hotel, it’s great. But – if you have an early start Gold members get a breakfast box to munch on the tube, very useful.

  • Scott says:

    Last time i stayed there, i walked straight across the road next to the bridge. Ok, it wasn’t busy as before 6am but easy enough.
    Always use the petrol station side when heading to the hotel.

    I’ve never seen cookies, orange etc.

    Never had breakfast either. Another of these airport hotels that doesn’t start breakfast until later so you miss out with early flights.

    • Alex says:

      My partner and I went today on a ‘curiosity inspection’ visit today (see my comment above for more details) and the orange water and cookies were present but I had to take the last ones and they weren’t replaced for the next 30 minutes…

  • James A says:

    We like the HGI, and have stayed a number of times. There are great views of aircraft on short final to 27L if you are into that sort of thing.

    The breakfast offer happened me too when I took the points one time.

This article is closed to new posts. Discussion continues in the HfP Forums.