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Side-by-side

The Emory vs The Berkeley

A direct comparison across five dimensions: Service, Design, Location, Dining, and Wellness. Scored from signals across luxury travel communities, editorial publications, and verified guests.

Scoreboard

DimensionThe EmoryThe Berkeley
TierFat FavoriteFat Favorite
Overall Fat Score
17.0/20
17.0/20Wins
Service
16.5
17.5
Design
18.5
17.0
Location
17.5
18.5
Dining
16.5
16.5
Wellness
18.0
18.0

The Verdicts

The Emory

The Emory is Maybourne's answer to the question of what London luxury looks like when you strip away the chintz and history: Richard Rogers' glass-and-steel box overlooking Hyde Park is deliberately, almost defiantly modern, a sharp contrast to the tapestries-and-tradition register of stablemates Claridge's and The Connaught. Different floors handled by Andre Fu, Patricia Urquiola, Pierre-Yves Rochon, and Alexandra Champalimaud give it a hotel-within-a-hotel quality, and the consensus favors the Fu floors up top, where you finally clear the treeline for park views. The Surrenne spa, with its Tracy Anderson studio, snow shower, and 22m pool, is repeatedly singled out as one of the best wellness offerings in the city, and the all-suite, all-inclusive minibar model (plus a shared house car with The Berkeley) makes the steep rates feel less punitive. Service is the more contested variable — long-term and repeat guests rave about butlers who learn names within a day and WhatsApp-based requests answered in minutes, while a meaningful minority of short-stay guests report cold check-ins, unfulfilled promised amenities, and unresolved complaints with no manager in sight. The honest read: this is an exceptional hotel for guests who stay multiple nights and lean into the residential, low-key format, and a slightly riskier bet for a single night when any hiccup gets outsized weight.

The Berkeley

The Berkeley trades on a rare combination for London: heritage bones with genuinely contemporary polish, anchored by a rooftop pool and Surrenne spa that outclass most competitors in Knightsbridge. Doormen and bellmen — Mohamed, David, Danny, Waleed, Sergio — come up by name so consistently across reviews that the warmth clearly isn't scripted; guests repeatedly describe being remembered, upgraded, and fussed over in ways that feel personal rather than performative. The Cedric Grolet patisserie and ABC Kitchens breakfast are treated as near-mandatory experiences, and the connection to The Emory's rooftop bar adds a genuine skyline moment the Berkeley itself lacks. That said, the hotel is showing some strain at the seams: multiple recent complaints about room maintenance, a housekeeping miss involving cannabis odor near young children, an inconsistent GM-era service dip cited by a longtime regular, and a chorus of family travelers frustrated that the celebrated rooftop pool is often inaccessible due to overcrowding or age restrictions. It is also emphatically not a value play — at four figures a night without breakfast included, expectations run high, and a vocal minority feels the hotel doesn't consistently clear that bar. Still, the preponderance of detailed, recent accounts — including a glowing Condé Nast assessment — puts this comfortably among London's top heritage hotels, just below Claridge's and The Connaught in ultimate polish but ahead of most everything else in the neighborhood.

Strengths & trade-offs

The Emory

Strengths

  • Richard Rogers architecture with genuinely spacious, all-suite rooms rare for London
  • Surrenne spa and Tracy Anderson studio rank among the best wellness facilities in the city
  • Butler service via WhatsApp delivers fast, personalized responses for long-stay guests
  • Rooftop bar and cigar lounge offer some of the best 360-degree views in London
  • Discreet, residential feel that stands apart from the traditional British luxury template

Trade-offs

  • Service consistency swings sharply between glowing and dismissive depending on length of stay and occupancy
  • Entry-level rooms can face a neighboring building with poor natural light and no park view
  • Website oversells amenities like unpacking, welcome champagne, and car service that aren't always delivered
  • No dedicated on-site concierge for basic external bookings, per some guests

The Berkeley

Strengths

  • Doormen and butler team consistently named and praised for personalized care
  • Rooftop pool and Surrenne spa rank among London's best wellness offerings
  • Cedric Grolet patisserie and ABC Kitchens breakfast are standout dining draws
  • Knightsbridge location puts Hyde Park, Harrods, and the King's Road within walking distance
  • Thoughtful family touches — baby amenities, crib setups, personalized gestures — repeatedly cited

Trade-offs

  • Rooftop pool frequently overcrowded or inaccessible to families despite marketing it as a highlight
  • Occasional lapses in room readiness, cleanliness, and maintenance reported
  • Some recent reviews note inconsistent service quality compared to the hotel's historic reputation
  • High tea and à la carte dining seen by some as overpriced relative to quality
The Emory vs The Berkeley | Fat Voyage