
The Godfrey Hotel Boston
Historic adaptive-reuse boutique hotel with mid-century-modern interiors. Energetic and design-forward without being precious about it. Collaboration-friendly lobby, strong F&B scene, and a notably tech-forward room setup.
Ask for a courtyard-facing room if you want quiet; the historically protected interior courtyard is a real buffer from street noise
Why It Matters
One of the few Downtown Boston hotels that genuinely earns its historic credentials — the Amory and Blake buildings went from near-ruin to National Register of Historic Places, and the 2016 conversion preserved the original lobby, elevator banks, and ornate cast-iron banisters. The addition of RUKA, a serious Peruvian-Japanese Nikkei restaurant, gives it a dining identity well above standard hotel fare.
The Godfrey Hotel Boston occupies two landmark early-1900s buildings in Downtown Crossing — the neo-classical Amory (1904) and the gothic revival Blake (1908) — both designed by architect Arthur Hunnewell Bowditch and both listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The interiors, by The Gettys Group, are decidedly modern: think 16-foot lobby ceilings, crisp neutrals with orange accents, and enough tech in each room to make you feel like you never left the office (in a good way). Out the front door is Freedom Trail (a few hundred feet away), Boston Common (3 minutes on foot), and a dense stretch of shops, theaters, and restaurants.
Where You'll Stay
10 room types available
The Property
Eat & Drink
4 venues on property
Restaurant
Spa & Wellness
Treatment Menu
On Property
How you'll actually spend your days.
On-site fitness center with cardio and weight equipment, available around the clock. Not a large facility, but well-equipped for a city hotel.
Bikes, helmets, and locks available to guests through the urban fee — good for exploring the Esplanade, Boston Common, or the Freedom Trail. Availability is seasonal and subject to stock.
The Freedom Trail's 2.5-mile route passes within 656 feet of the front door. No guide needed — just follow the red bricks.
Polaroid cameras available for guest use (subject to availability) as part of the urban fee — a nice touch for capturing the historic architecture and neighborhood.
Amenities & Practical Info
The details that matter for planning.
Meeting room and boardroom available for business guests, plus photocopier access. The lobby is also explicitly designed as a collaboration-friendly workspace.
Very fast Wi-Fi throughout the hotel and in all guest rooms.
$40.77/night mandatory urban fee (most rates) covers: bikes with helmets and locks (seasonal), Polaroid camera use, PressReader digital newspapers, pet-friendly policy, daily in-room snack replenishment, $25 Exhale Spa credit, weekend surprises, and 10% discount at Cafe Bonjour.
On-site gym with cardio and strength equipment, open around the clock.
All rooms receive daily snack replenishment, covered by the urban fee. A genuinely appreciated perk guests mention repeatedly in reviews.
$60/night with in-and-out privileges, available 7am–11pm. Paid separately from the urban fee.
Pets allowed, covered by the daily urban fee (no separate pet charge).
There is no swimming pool at this property.
Staffed around the clock.
Full concierge available for reservations, transportation, and local recommendations.
Same-day valet laundry and dry-cleaning services available.
Smartphone-based room key with interactive hotel services app.
Stream personal content from your mobile device directly to the 55" in-room Samsung TV. Boston's first hotel to offer this technology at launch.
BUILD YOUR THE GODFREY HOTEL BOSTON PLAN
Rooms, dining, spa, and resort experiences — organized into one trip plan.
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