Vanbrugh House Hotel vs Old Parsonage Hotel
Both Old Parsonage Hotel and Vanbrugh House Hotel are rated very highly by those who travel for a living. On balance, Old Parsonage Hotel is the choice of most reviewers compared to Vanbrugh House Hotel. Old Parsonage Hotel is ranked #4 in Oxford with accolades from 9 reviews like Oyster, The Telegraph and Condé Nast Traveler.
Vanbrugh House Hotel
20 - 24 St Michael's Street, Oxford OX1 2EB
From $135 /night
- Bar/Lounge
- Free Internet
- Room Service
- Restaurant
- Multilingual
- Business Center
Oyster
Upper-middle-range
"The 22-room, upper-middle-range Vanbrugh House Hotel is an exceptionally well-located boutique hotel in the heart of historic Oxford."
Full review
The Telegraph
8.0
"A stylishly decorated boutique hotel in an 18th-century house opposite the Oxford Union buildings with smart, well-equipped rooms and friendly staff."
Full review
Condé Nast Traveler
"It's all about location here which is a central as it gets in Oxford, but the best thing is the that despite that the hotel is surprisingly quiet."
Full review
Independent
"The style is a deliciously modern update of “traditional”, with wood-panelled walls painted in shades of cream and dove...location-wise, you couldn’t get more central."
Old Parsonage Hotel
Show All Reviews
1 Banbury Road, Oxford OX2 6NN
From $190 /night
- Pet Friendly
- Bar/Lounge
- Free Internet
- Room Service
- Laundry Service
- Concierge
Fodor's
"A 17th-century gabled stone house in a small garden next to St. Giles Church, the Old Parsonage is a dignified retreat."
Full review
Frommer's
"This intimate old hotel is filled with hidden charms such as tiny gardens in its courtyard and on its roof terrace."
Full review
Lonely Planet
Top Choice
"Wonderfully quirky, the Old Parsonage is a small boutique hotel in a 17th-century stone building covered with wisteria, with just the right blend of period charm and modern luxury."
Full review
DK Eyewitness
"Walls of Cotswold stone screen the Old Parsonage from Oxford’s passing hubbub, creating the pleasing illusion of a country retreat."
Star Service
"Privately owned and managed, this building dates from Shakespeare's day (1660) and was once a royalist fort and a haunt of Oscar Wilde.
"
Full review