The Parkway, Baltic Triangle
SLEEPS 12+

Notably, not grey. In Liverpool, that alone is a win. This is a house with a bit more to it: six bedrooms, all kings, each one styled differently (and styled well). There’s a roll-top bath in front of a fireplace nobody will use, but everyone will comment on, a games room downstairs, and enough space that you won’t feel on top of each other. It’s just outside the centre, near the Baltic Triangle; easy for taxis, but perfect for the group that doesn’t want to spend an arm and a leg on accommodation. You won’t find a hot tub in the garden or a view worth putting on your Instagram story, but it does tick almost all of the boxes.
Good to know: If you’re after minimal, Scandi calm, this isn’t it. If you want something with more personality for a price that won’t leave you on read in the group chat, this is it.
From £1,000 per night
The EPIC Penthouse, Liverpool City Centre
SLEEPS 13

The first of many crushed velvet couches to come. But this one is surrounded by floor-to-ceiling windows, open-plan everything, and views that don’t let you forget where you are. Decor leans firmly into the Liverpool signature — grey, marble, velour — but it’s done well enough that it stops mattering. It’s big and sociable, with everything walkable from the front door. It’s an EPIC city apartment, which means you’ve got a reputable management company on the other end of the phone if anything does go wrong. With that being said, they will take a sneaky security deposit at check-in, and this isn’t always mentioned before. It’s fully refundable, but someone will need to stump up a credit card.
Good to know: You’re central, so you will hear the city; early morning bottle collections, seagulls who have decided they are the main event. Bring earplugs if anyone’s a light sleeper. Two bathrooms for thirteen people require a bit of coordination, but it’s manageable.
From £694 per night
The Coach House, Pilgrim Street, City Centre
SLEEPS 16

Tucked just off the Georgian Quarter and about as central as Liverpool gets. Bold Street is minutes away, Hope Street is on your doorstep, and walking home at the end of the night is a very real possibility. Inside, it’s bright, airy, and bigger than it looks on the outside. A few bedrooms have multiple doubles in one room, which works better than it sounds for a group this size, and the layout means sixteen people can move around without constantly being in each other’s way. There’s a pub next door, which brings a buzz to the street that’s very much part of the experience (and also the noise).
Good to know: Two en-suites are great, but one main bathroom for the remaining group requires a bit of organisation by morning two. But if location is the priority, this will do it.
From £954 per night
The Loft, City Centre
SLEEPS 8–10

Right on Bold Street, which means you’re seconds from Café Tabac (all-day breakfast since 1974, bacon at 9 pm is actively encouraged) and deep in Liverpool’s best coffee-wine-dinner corridor. The loft itself is grey-on-grey marble mixed with velour, lifted slightly by a really good exposed brick. It’s a mix, that’s for sure, but you’re booking this for what’s outside the door, not what’s inside it. Technically, it sleeps twelve, but realistically sleeps eight, maybe ten. Beyond that, you’re pulling out sofa beds and losing the living room.
Good to know: City-centre loud. No lift, pack light.
From £819 per night
The Catharine Street House, Georgian Quarter
SLEEPS 12

Set in the Georgian Quarter on a beautiful cobbled, lantern-lit street, this apartment manages to fit twelve without anyone drawing too short a straw. A six-bunk bedroom sounds like a hard sell, but it’s oddly the hero of the house: slightly reminiscent of the Year 6 leavers trip, but in a nostalgic, chaotic, post-night-out-debrief kind of way. The bride gets a king-size elsewhere, and there’s another double for anyone not keen on communal sleeping. Inside, it’s bright and warm: green velvet sofas, Warhol-style pop art prints, mid-century wood. It sleeps twelve if you sacrifice the living space to sofa beds, but it’s an open-plan kitchen-living-dining situation, so turning it into a bedroom gets messy fast. Stick to ten unless you’re very close friends.
Good to know: Strict no-party policy. Currently has scaffolding outside, not a dealbreaker, but don’t expect Instagrammable window shots. Two flights of stairs.
From £358 per night
The Flatzy Mansion, Georgian Quarter
SLEEPS 20

Still in the Quarter, this is one of the bigger houses: six bedrooms, five bathrooms, and a kitchen island that will host every pre-dinner drink, makeup crisis, and 2am debrief for the entire weekend. It’s a beautiful place designed to feel generous without being showy… almost as though someone thought about what twenty women with suitcases, curling wands, and too many bottles of Prosecco actually need. Exhibit A: a cinema room. Bridesmaids, on. You won’t find a bunk room here; the Flatzy Mansion is for groups willing to spend a little bit more to avoid playing rock, paper, scissors for a real bed.
Good to know: Quiet hours apply, and you’ll need to upload ID before check-in.
From £1,398 per night
The Georgian on Hope Street, City Centre
SLEEPS 15–29

From the outside, it’s beautiful: Georgian façade, mint green door, a Hope Street address that puts you within walking distance of my favourite pink pub in Liverpool. Inside, it’s, well, fine. It’s clean, it’s grey, it fits twenty-nine people without anyone sleeping on the floor. You won’t find yourself drawn to Pinterest after the weekend, but that’s the compromise when you’re booking for a small wedding’s worth of guests. The styling feels slightly dated, but the bones are undeniably gorgeous. High ceilings, original cornicing, big windows with great light. What it does well is absorb chaos. Enough bathrooms that getting ready doesn’t require a spreadsheet. Enough bedrooms that no one’s drawing straws. And those matter when you’ve got fifteen hangovers and three straighteners going at once.
Good to know: If someone in the group is very aesthetically driven, manage expectations early. But if the brief is fit everyone, don’t bankrupt us, keep us central, this is exactly that.
From £1,242 per night
The Cathedral Cottage, City Centre
SLEEPS 8–10

Set on a cobbled street just next to the Cathedral, this is quieter than most Liverpool city-centre stays. Four bedrooms, a big kitchen, and enough room for eight people without the weekend feeling cramped. Inside, it’s (shock) grey. Consistently, unapologetically grey. But it’s done well, fresh paint, nice (grey) pillows, nothing that makes you wince. The location is the real win here: you’re walking distance to everything, but the street itself feels residential and pretty rather than right in the thick of it. For a smaller hen that wants easy access without living above a bar, this is a perfect option.
Good to know: If you don’t mind feeling on top of each other, two more people can also fit on sofa-beds. Two bathrooms, but one is need of TLC, so it works best at eight rather than ten. But for location and zero hassle, it’s hard to argue with.
From £1,025 per person
The Newsham Villa, Newsham Park
SLEEPS 12

Just outside the city centre near Newsham Park, this Victorian villa is what you book when you want grandeur without paying central Liverpool prices. You’re a ten-minute Uber from the thick of it, but what you get in return is six bedrooms, all en-suite, and a hot tub in the garden? Sold. The house is generous in the way Victorian buildings tend to be: high ceilings, big rooms, no danger of anyone feeling cramped. The kitchen has a wine cooler, there’s outdoor space that earns its keep in summer, and the hot tub requires no further justification. The interiors have a slightly dated warmth to them — satin pillowcases galore — but the practicality is so good it stops mattering fairly quickly.
Good to know: No parties despite the setup suggesting otherwise, and quiet hours are enforced. Worth communicating to the group before arrival.
From £911 per night
The Sefton, Sefton Park
SLEEPS 14+
The weekend here centres around Lark Lane — Liverpool’s bohemian answer to the city centre, where you can lose an afternoon bar crawling from The Albert to Love & Rockets and back again. It’s independent cafes, quirky wine bars, and a completely different energy to Bold Street. The house itself sits just by Sefton Park: seven bedrooms, good bathrooms, open-plan living that makes celebrating easy. The top-floor rooms do get brutally warm in summer, so allocate those to anyone with poker-straight hair or a high tolerance for suffering.
Good to know: Not a party house on paper. Limited keys can cause minor logistical faff. But for space, a lovely location, and a slightly calmer base than the city centre options, it’s great.
From £1,608 per person
Lyndhurst Villa, Near Liverpool
SLEEPS 15

A swimming pool. In Liverpool. That alone is enough to make this the most talked-about booking in the group chat, and it delivers on the promise in the best possible way. Set just outside the city in a quiet residential pocket, Lyndhurst is traditional and a little cluttered in places — not polished, not especially Pinterest worthy — yet none of that matters the moment you see the garden. The pool is heated and genuinely usable, which is rarer than it should be for a UK hen weekend, and it has a way of becoming the whole day without anyone planning for it to. Roby station is a few minutes’ walk away and gets you into Liverpool quickly when the weekend calls for it, which means you get the best of both without having to choose.
Good to know: The house itself could use some TLC in places. The pool makes up for it entirely.
From £495 per night
The Oaks, Cheshire
SLEEPS 16–20

Half an hour outside Liverpool and a different kind of weekend, The Oaks is a barn conversion with a huge kitchen and a garden made for those long summer evenings when no one’s ready to call it. It technically sleeps twenty, but sixteen is the honest number if you care about comfort. The hot tub costs an extra £200, which the group chat will approve in under a minute, so just factor it in now. You’re private without being remote; there’s a Waitrose twenty minutes away for emergency Aperol runs, and a set-up begging for a private chef to be brought in (which, conveniently, the host can organise).
Good to know: Quiet hours are monitored, so it’s not a free-for-all — worth being clear about that with the group before arrival rather than after.
From £903 per night
The Stanley Street House, City Centre
SLEEPS 30
Thirty people is no longer a hen weekend — it’s a small event, and a logistical nightmare. This is one of the only houses in Liverpool that can hold it. Twelve bedrooms, two kitchens, multiple living spaces. You’re on Stanley Street, a ten-minute walk from what was once Alma de Cuba and close enough to everything that taxis feel optional (thank the lord, because 30 people require a bus). The house itself is simple, clean, and unfussy. Two bathrooms per floor. Enough fridge space. A layout that works when half the group is getting ready at 6 PM and the other half is still recovering from the night before. And, in our case, the hosts left prosecco on arrival, which means they understand exactly what kind of weekend this is.
Good to know: This is about scale and practicality rather than aesthetics, and it delivers on both. For a group this size, that really is enough.
From £1,988 per night


