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Where to stay in New York City

Midtown suits walk-everywhere first-timers, the West Village rewards couples and the Lower East Side wins on value and nightlife, while a Times Square address mostly wastes money.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 10 Jun 2026
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In short

Where to stay in New York City

For a first New York trip of four or five nights, base yourself in Midtown Manhattan unless you have a clear reason not to. It puts Times Square, Rockefeller Center, the Empire State Building and Central Park within walking distance and every subway line under your feet, so you spend the trip sightseeing rather than commuting. Choose the West Village for a calmer, more walkable evening base, the Lower East Side for better value and the best late-night food, the Financial District for cheaper weekend rooms near the 9/11 Memorial, and Williamsburg in Brooklyn if you want skyline views and neighbourhood life over being in the thick of it.

The short version

  • Best all-rounder: Midtown Manhattan.
  • Best value: the Lower East Side / East Village.
  • Best atmosphere: the West Village.
  • Best for nightlife: the Lower East Side, with the bars and late food on your doorstep.
  • Avoid using Times Square itself as your hotel filter; it is a junction to walk through once, not a base.

Best areas to book

Midtown (Manhattan)

ยฃยฃยฃ premium

The cleanest first-timer choice: walk to Times Square, Rockefeller Center, the Empire State Building and the south end of Central Park, with every subway line and Penn Station and Grand Central within reach. It is loud, relentless and the dearest part of town, with small mid-range rooms running roughly ยฃ150-ยฃ260 a night, but it saves you transit time every single day. Aim for the quieter blocks east of Fifth Avenue or up around Bryant Park rather than the streets right on Times Square.

Best for: First-timers, short stays, walk-everywhere sightseeing

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West Village / Greenwich Village

ยฃยฃยฃ premium

Low-rise, leafy and the calmest evening base in Manhattan, full of proper restaurants and brownstone streets rather than tourist diners. It is a 10-15 minute subway hop to the Midtown sights, so you trade a little daytime convenience for a far nicer place to come home to. Prices match Midtown's premium and the prettiest streets book out early.

Best for: Couples, repeat visitors, food-led trips

Browse hotels 10-15 min by subway to Midtown

Lower East Side / East Village

ยฃยฃ mid-range

Better value than Midtown with the city's strongest bar and late-night food scene, from Katz's Delicatessen to the dumpling and taco spots off Orchard and St Marks. You trade some walking distance for character and lower nightly rates, and the F, J and L trains keep you connected. The flip side is genuine weekend noise, so ask for a room off the main bar streets.

Best for: Nightlife, value, younger trips

Browse hotels 15-20 min by subway to Midtown

Financial District / Lower Manhattan

ยฃยฃ mid-range

Often the best-value Manhattan rooms at weekends, because the area empties of office workers once Friday comes. You are next to the 9/11 Memorial, Wall Street, the Staten Island Ferry and the Brooklyn Bridge approach, and on the express lines uptown. The trade-off is a quiet, canyon-like feel after dark with fewer good dinner options, so plan to eat elsewhere.

Best for: Weekend value, Downtown sightseeing, 9/11 Memorial

Browse hotels 20-25 min by subway to Midtown

Williamsburg (Brooklyn)

ยฃยฃ mid-range

Across the East River with skyline views straight back at Manhattan, independent shops, a strong food scene and more room for your money. Cheaper rooms come at the cost of a 20-30 minute commute on the L train or the NYC Ferry for every day of central sightseeing, so it suits longer stays and second-timers more than a tight first trip.

Best for: Value, longer stays, Brooklyn-curious

Browse hotels 20-30 min by subway to Midtown

Upper West Side

ยฃยฃ mid-range

A residential, family-friendly base flanking Central Park and the American Museum of Natural History, calmer and often a touch cheaper than Midtown for the same proximity to the park. The 1, 2 and 3 trains run you straight down the West Side. It is a long way from Downtown nightlife, which is the point for travellers who want quiet evenings and good breakfast spots.

Best for: Families, Central Park mornings, quieter evenings

Browse hotels 15-20 min by subway to Midtown

The simple choice

If you are booking in a hurry, filter for Midtown first, then compare the Financial District at weekends if the Midtown rates look brutal. That single rule keeps most first-timers out of the two common traps: paying a premium for a room right on Times Square, or basing yourself in Brooklyn to save money and then losing an hour a day to the L train. New York rooms are small and dear wherever you stay, so prioritise location and a quiet line over square footage.

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Safety & noise

GOV.UK notes that violent crime in the US is concentrated in specific neighbourhoods rather than tourist areas, and central Manhattan is busy and policed late into the night. The real accommodation issue here is noise and value, not danger: a room directly above a Lower East Side bar strip or facing Eighth Avenue will cost you sleep, and 24-hour traffic means a high floor or a courtyard-facing room is worth asking for. Avoid booking purely on a Times Square address; the blocks one or two streets back are quieter and usually cheaper.

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Where to stay in New York City FAQs

Is Times Square a good place to stay?
Usually no. It is central and on every subway line, but it is the loudest, most crowded and most overpriced part of Manhattan, and the hotels lean towards big chains at peak prices. Stay a few blocks east in Midtown or in the West Village and walk through Times Square once, ideally after dark when the lights are the point.
Is Brooklyn too far out for a first New York trip?
For a tight first trip of three or four nights, Manhattan saves you real time; Williamsburg adds a 20-30 minute L-train or ferry commute to most sights. Brooklyn makes more sense on a longer stay or a second visit, when the better value, the food scene and the skyline views outweigh the daily journey in.
Where is the best value to stay in Manhattan?
The Lower East Side and East Village beat Midtown on nightly rates while keeping you a short subway ride from the centre, and the Financial District often has the cheapest Manhattan rooms at weekends once the office crowd has gone home. Both keep you in Manhattan rather than committing you to a river crossing every day.

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