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A calm retreat unfolds within the Cosy Room, shaped by refined Japanese design. Natural materials and modern accents create a balanced and gentle atmosphere. The
Within the design, the Superior Room reflects beauty and quiet elegance. Inspiration comes from the charm of the surrounding neighborhood. The layout uses clever planning
The Deluxe Balcony Room provides a calm and refined city retreat. It combines elegant design with a private outdoor space for quiet moments. Large glass
The Junior Suite offers a comfortable, stylish room with clear separation. A living area sits apart from the bedroom for calm daily use. The design
A stay in the Family Deluxe Balcony Room offers calm space and comfort. The room presents a private balcony with views over Portman Square and
The 1 Bedroom Suite presents a calm setting in central Marylebone. This suite offers a separate living room with a 65-inch 4K television. A queen
The Zen Suite presents a calm setting for special occasions and quiet city retreats. This spacious suite offers 54 sqm of well-planned interior space. A
A refined stay begins within the Saijoukai Suite, set above Marylebone. This top-floor setting creates a calm sense of height and quiet. Only a few
Introducing the 2 Bedroom Family Suite, a calm space for shared stays. This suite combines a 1 Bedroom Suite with a Deluxe Room. A generous
A refined retreat, the 2 Bedroom Nobu Penthouse spans over 115 square meters. This top-floor suite offers a calm space with clear structure and balance.
Nobu Hotel London Portman Square gives the Nobu brand a polished West End base in Marylebone. Oxford Street, Hyde Park, Mayfair, and quieter residential streets are all close. That mix makes this part of London feel calmer than the main shopping corridors. The hotel has 249 rooms and suites, a Nobu restaurant and bar, meeting and event spaces, wellness facilities, and a dedicated Nobu Pilates studio. It suits travelers who want London with strong food, a refined social mood, and a location that works for both leisure and business.
The hotel replaced a more conventional business-hotel address and now feels sharper, warmer, and more design-led. Portman Square gives it breathing space. Marylebone gives guests access to independent shops, galleries, cafes, and useful central transport links. Selfridges, Bond Street, Marble Arch, Hyde Park, and Mayfair are close, but the immediate setting does not feel as hectic as Piccadilly or Leicester Square.
This is not the most traditional London grand hotel, and that is part of the point. Nobu London Portman Square is modern, restaurant-led, and quietly theatrical without becoming flashy. It works for guests who want a luxury hotel that feels current, but still need practical rooms, good service, meeting space, and easy movement around central London.
The 249 rooms and suites are spread across several categories, from compact city rooms to larger suites and the Nobu Penthouse. The design uses clean lines, soft neutrals, Japanese-inspired details, natural textures, and tailored lighting. It feels calm rather than ornate. Some rooms and suites have terraces or views over Portman Square, which are worth considering because they make the stay feel less enclosed.
Entry-level rooms can be compact by resort standards, but that is normal in central London. They work well for short stays, solo travelers, and guests who will spend most of the day out in the city. Couples staying longer should consider a larger room or suite. The one-bedroom suites and higher categories add proper living space and better entertaining potential. They also make the return after a busy London day feel calmer.
The Nobu Penthouse is the strongest choice for guests who want privacy, views, and a more residential feel. It also captures the hotel's mix of restaurant glamour and hotel comfort. For most travelers, the sweet spot is a terrace room or suite that adds outdoor space without losing the convenience of a central address.
Marylebone is one of the hotel's biggest strengths. Guests can walk to Oxford Street and Mayfair, but they can also move into a quieter neighborhood of bookshops, boutiques, bakeries, galleries, and restaurants. This gives the hotel a more local feel than many West End properties. It is central without feeling trapped in the tourist flow.
Portman Square also makes sense for business travelers. The West End, Mayfair, Paddington, Marylebone, and the Elizabeth line connections are all practical by car or Underground. Guests flying into Heathrow can reach central London without the journey feeling complicated, while those arriving by train can move easily from Paddington, Marylebone, Euston, or King's Cross depending on the route.
For leisure guests, the location is just as useful. Hyde Park is close for morning walks, Mayfair is nearby for shopping and galleries, and Soho or Covent Garden are short rides away for theatre and late dinners. The hotel is not trying to disappear into a village-like corner of London. It is a polished base for using the city well.
Dining is central to the hotel's identity. Nobu Portman Square brings the brand's Japanese-Peruvian cooking to Marylebone, with the familiar signatures, sushi, black cod, omakase options, and a room that works for both hotel guests and London locals. The restaurant gives the hotel a strong evening pull, which many London hotels lack. Guests do not need to leave the building for a proper night out.
Breakfast can also carry the Nobu style, with Japanese-influenced dishes alongside more familiar morning choices. The bar adds the after-work and pre-dinner layer. It is useful for business meetings, cocktails, and late returns, and it helps the hotel feel less like a simple room base. The food and drink program is a major reason to book here rather than a more anonymous Marylebone hotel.
The restaurant can be busy, so guests who care about dining should plan ahead. This is especially true on weekends and during major London periods. The advantage is that the hotel has a real London audience, not just transient hotel guests. That gives the public spaces more life.
Nobu London Portman Square has a wellness side that fits its city setting. The fitness center and treatment options are useful, but Nobu Pilates is the standout. The dedicated reformer Pilates studio gives the hotel a more local feel. It attracts both hotel guests and Londoners, so wellness here feels connected to the neighborhood rather than tucked away as a token amenity.
The hotel also has event and meeting spaces, including a ballroom and private rooms. That makes it more versatile than many boutique-feeling lifestyle hotels. A guest can come for a leisure weekend, a board meeting, a private dinner, or a London work trip, and the building still makes sense. The balance between lifestyle hotel and serious event venue is one of its quiet advantages.
Compared with The London Edition, Nobu Hotel London Portman Square is less nightlife-driven and more restaurant-and-wellness focused. The Edition has a stronger Fitzrovia social scene and a more dramatic lobby culture. Nobu feels calmer, more Marylebone, and more useful for guests who want style without a full scene every night.
Compared with Chiltern Firehouse, Nobu is easier to book as a full-service hotel and more practical for meetings, shopping, and West End access. Chiltern is more intimate and celebrity-coded, while Nobu is larger and more structured. Compared with Claridge's or The Connaught, Nobu is far less traditional. Those hotels offer grand London heritage. Nobu offers a contemporary Marylebone stay with a stronger restaurant-brand identity.
Book Nobu Hotel London Portman Square if you want a central London hotel with strong food, modern rooms, a Marylebone address, and a polished social mood. It is a good fit for couples, business travelers, solo guests, and repeat London visitors who do not need a formal grand hotel but still want comfort and service.
Think twice if you want heavy classic decor, a large spa with pool, or a hotel that feels like a private country house in the city. Nobu is more urban and more brand-led than that. Its best guests want London to be easy: Marylebone outside, Nobu downstairs, Pilates in the building, Mayfair nearby, and a room that makes the day feel organized rather than overcomplicated.
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