Finding the best value hotels in New York City means weighing nightly rate against guest satisfaction scores, location, and, where possible, verified sustainability credentials. This list ranks five currently operating hotels from lowest to highest typical nightly rate, using Booking.com guest scores and confirmed amenity data to cut through the noise. Every property on it offers a private room, a workable subway connection, and a price that sits below the NYC average for its quality tier.
How we ranked these hotels
Hotels appear in order of lowest typical nightly rate first. Within a $20 price band, the property with the higher Booking.com guest score ranks above the other. Where scores are equal, hotels with verified sustainability credentials rank higher. Alphabetical order breaks any remaining ties.
Every hotel on this list was confirmed as open and operating under its listed name as of early 2026. Amenities were verified against each hotel's official website or a reliable third-party source. Any amenity that could not be confirmed was left off the list entirely. Sustainability credentials follow the same rule: if a certification or program could not be traced to a published source, the field reads 'None verified.'
NYC hotel prices in 2026: what to expect by budget
Budget travelers in NYC are working with a market where even a basic private room in Midtown Manhattan rarely drops below $100 per night outside of January and February. The five hotels on this list sit between $100 and $230 per night depending on season and day of week, which puts them in the bottom third of the NYC hotel market by price.
Midtown Manhattan properties command a location premium that outer-borough hotels do not. Long Island City and Williamsburg both offer subway access to central Manhattan in under 20 minutes, and hotels there price 20–35% below comparable Midtown options. If your trip centers on Times Square or the Theater District, that trade-off is worth calculating before you book.
Side-by-side comparison: NYC budget hotels at a glance
| Hotel | Typical Nightly Rate | Star Rating | Guest Score | Sustainability | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pod 51 Hotel | $100–$150 | 2-star | 7.8 / 10 | None verified | Solo budget travelers in Midtown |
| Pod Brooklyn | $130–$180 | 3-star | 8.1 / 10 | None verified | Travelers who want Williamsburg access |
| Boro Hotel | $140–$190 | 3-star | 8.4 / 10 | None verified | Value seekers wanting high guest scores |
| Cambria Hotel New York — Chelsea | $170–$220 | 3-star | 8.2 / 10 | None verified | Couples wanting Manhattan amenities |
| Fairfield Inn & Suites New York Manhattan / Central Park | $180–$230 | 3-star | 8.0 / 10 | Marriott Serve 360 program | Bonvoy members near Central Park |
How to find the best hotel deals in New York City
- Book Sunday through Thursday nights. Weekend rates in NYC run 20–40% above weekday rates at the same property.
- January and February are the cheapest months. Shifting a trip from October to February can cut your hotel bill by 30–50%.
- Compare the hotel's direct booking rate against Booking.com and Expedia before confirming. Many properties match OTA prices when you book direct and you avoid third-party cancellation complications.
- Neighborhoods outside Midtown, including Long Island City and Williamsburg, price 15–30% below Times Square-area hotels while still offering fast subway access.
- Free loyalty program enrollment at Marriott Bonvoy or Choice Privileges often unlocks member rates $10–$25 below the public price with no stay requirement.
- Use Google Hotels' price tracking to set alerts on specific properties. Rates shift daily, and a 48-hour window before check-in sometimes triggers last-minute drops.
Our Picks
Top Hotels

Boro Hotel
38-28 27th Street, Queens

Cambria Hotel New York - Chelsea
123 West 28th Street, New York

Fairfield Inn & Suites By Marriott New York Brooklyn
181 3rd Avenue, Brooklyn

Pod 51
230 East 51st Street, New York

Pod Brooklyn
247 Metropolitan Avenue, Brooklyn
FAQs
Common Questions
January and February consistently offer the lowest hotel rates in NYC, with many Midtown properties dropping below $150 per night on weekdays. The holiday surge ends after the first week of January, and demand stays low through mid-March.
Yes, and the gap is meaningful. Long Island City and Williamsburg hotels typically price 20–35% below comparable Manhattan properties. Both neighborhoods have direct subway lines to Midtown that run under 20 minutes, so the trade-off is mostly about preference rather than convenience.
Boro Hotel in Long Island City holds the highest guest score on this list at 8.4 out of 10 on Booking.com, which is strong for a hotel in its price range. It also offers larger rooms than most Manhattan options at a similar rate.
One does. Fairfield Inn & Suites New York Manhattan / Central Park participates in Marriott's Serve 360 program, which tracks energy and water reduction targets across the brand's portfolio. The other four hotels on this list have no independently verified sustainability credentials as of 2026.
It depends on the property. Direct booking often matches or beats OTA prices and avoids third-party cancellation complications. Loyalty program members at Marriott or Choice Hotels get additional discounts by booking direct. For properties without loyalty programs, Booking.com and Google Hotels are reliable for price comparison.
At the $100–$200 price point in NYC, expect a private room with a private bathroom, basic Wi-Fi, and proximity to subway access. Gyms, rooftop bars, and on-site restaurants appear at the higher end of this range, as with Cambria Chelsea and Fairfield Inn Central Park. Pod-style hotels at the lower end prioritize location and price over amenity depth.
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Hotels in New York
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