
The Zetter Townhouse
Clerkenwell (St John’s Square)
The Zetter Townhouse is a 13-room Georgian townhouse that feels like you’ve stumbled into someone’s wildly well-styled London home. Think Lily Allen’s AD house tour (if you know, you know). Filled with curious details and a cocktail parlour that’s daring you to have one too many, it’s intimate, eccentric in the best way, and very good at making even a low-key girls’ weekend feel like everything she wanted and more.
WHY IT WORKS: The magic is in the size. No soulless lobby, no conference-hotel energy, just her favourite people, a lounge that does the heavy lifting, and pre-dinner martinis that turn into a final nightcap. Bedrooms are all different, absolutely wild, and breakfast is just enough to get everyone moving.
INSIDER TIP: The vibe is deliciously low-lit, but that can mean bathroom lighting that’s more moody than make-up, so bring an extra mirror. And because it’s small and popular, book your Parlour table ahead if you want seats rather than standing-room cocktails.
Visit THEZETTER.COM

Ember Locke
Cromwell Road, Kensington
Ember Locke is more ‘friend with the incredible apartment’ than a five-star hotel, which might be exactly what the weekend calls for. It’s a reimagined Victorian townhouse with personality — pattern, plants, and punky decor — and a social set-up that feels more bar than hotel. There are all the practical bits that make group weekends easier: a kitchenette for snacks and iced coffees, a courtyard for regrouping, and enough space to reset between plans without everyone perched on the bed. You get the vibe and flexibility of an Airbnb, but with the ease of a front desk and a lobby that’s actually worth coming down to. You’re in that sweet spot where London feels doable. Kensington, Earl’s Court and South Ken are right there, so you can do dinner and cocktails properly, but still get home easily.

WHY IT WORKS: For hens, the aparthotel format is an easy win. Kitchenettes mean you can do snacks and “we need a minute” moments without room service, and the on-site pizza spot, Eve, saves you from first-night indecision. You can keep it cute and contained, then head out once everyone’s arrived. Location-wise, it’s a strong West base with easy Tube access, and none of the full Soho chaos outside your door.
INSIDER TIP: It’s not daily serviced like a classic hotel. Housekeeping is lighter, so plan ahead if your group needs fresh towels on demand. There are steps at the entrance, so if you’re arriving with big cases, be ready for a mini workout before you check in.



Henrietta Hotel
Covent Garden
Henrietta is Paris, but with a London postcode. A small, perfectly-formed boutique hotel just off Covent Garden’s main swirl, with Dorothée Meilichzon interiors: pattern, colour, personality everywhere. The downstairs bar-restaurant is made for a pre-theatre spritz, and that one extra you don’t need to justify. Intimate, central, and with that West End magic where you step outside and everything’s suddenly walkable.
WHY IT WORKS: This is the dream for a hen built around dinner reservations, theatre tickets, and late-night wandering. The bar downstairs is good, and breakfast is worth getting up for. Henrietta is more ‘done well’ than ‘done loud’. It’s the kind of place that makes London feel easy: out the door, straight into the plan.
INSIDER TIP: Covent Garden is iconic, but it’s also Covent Garden. If you’re a light sleeper, ask for an upper-floor room and bring earplugs just in case. Room sizes are part of the charm (and sometimes charmingly far too small), so if you want the best getting-ready setup, upgrade.
Visit HENRIETTAHOTEL.com
One Hundred Shoreditch
Shoreditch (bang on the High Street)
One Hundred Shoreditch is the cool-girl base for a hen that’s more rooftop drinks than theatre curtains. Clean-lined rooms, big-window views, and a building full of ‘we’ll just have one’ spaces that turn into half the night. It’s design-led, not frilly, with that East London confidence. Pre-drinks happen without anyone leaving the hotel, and the afters don’t feel like an awkward pivot.
WHY IT WORKS: It’s actually built for groups, so a hen doesn’t feel like you’re taking over. Kaso Rooftop is for sunset drinks and skyline views. Seed Library downstairs is a vinyl-led cocktail bar with proper late-night energy. Add filtered and sparkling water stations on every floor, free coffee, tea and hot chocolate in-room, and it’s one of those stays that quietly make the weekend easier.
INSIDER TIP: Shoreditch comes with background noise. If you’re street-facing, the location can mean late-night sound, so request a higher floor or quieter room position if sleep matters. Book Kaso (and Seed Library if you want seats) before you arrive; they go quickly.
Visit ONEHUNDREDSHOREDITCH.COM


The London EDITION
Berners Street, Fitzrovia
The London EDITION is the full London production but still feels cool. Candlelit lobby, fireplaces, and that quietly expensive minimalism upstairs. Pre-drinks happen without leaving the building, dinner is a quick step into Fitzrovia or Soho, and you’re back in robes before you’ve even thought about a taxi. No drama, just A to B, easy.
WHY IT WORKS: Two plans, already sorted. Berners Tavern for a dressed-up dinner in one of London’s best rooms, and the Punch Room for cocktails that feel like a proper ritual. Clubby, intimate, the kind of place where you order with intention. Rooms are cocooning, beds are great, and bathrooms feel spa-level. It’s a splurge, but the postcode makes it make sense.
INSIDER TIP: Be smart with rooms. Some are compact, especially the ones with a brick wall for a view, so upgrade one for the bride and keep the rest close. And don’t wing the bar — Punch Room is worth booking ahead.
Visit EDITIONHOTELS.COM
The Princess Royal
Notting Hill (leafy side street)
The Princess Royal is Notting Hill in a Mary-Kate and Ashley movie. Technically a pub with rooms, but ‘rooms’ undersells it. There are only four, and they’re designed within an inch of their lives. More boutique townhouse stay than upstairs-from-the-bar. Think bold wallpaper, proper antiques, and bathrooms that look like they were picked by someone who actually owns a linen press. The pub? Ten out of ten.
WHY IT WORKS: For a hen, this is the ultimate inner-circle move. Book all four rooms, and it’s your own little West London HQ, with a genuinely great pub and restaurant downstairs. The first-night meet-up, the ‘one quick drink’, and the morning-after brunch are all sorted. There are private dining rooms if you want a bride dinner without fighting for a table, plus terraces for that ‘we’re being good’ daytime glass of something.
INSIDER TIP: The hotel bits are charmingly secret. Bedrooms are up a dodgy-looking door and a narrow staircase, but trust, it gets better. Book well in advance. It’s a hidden gem in high demand.
Visit CUBITTHOUSE.CO.UK





