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Side-by-side

Rosewood Beijing vs The Chancery Rosewood London

Rosewood Beijing and The Chancery Rosewood London land neck-and-neck at 16.5/20 — Rosewood Beijing leans stronger on service, The Chancery Rosewood London on location.

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

Scoreboard

DimensionRosewood BeijingThe Chancery Rosewood London
TierFat ApprovedFat Approved
Overall Fat Score
16.5/20
16.5/20
Service
17.0
15.0
Design
17.5
18.5
Location
15.5
18.0
Dining
16.0
17.0
Wellness
17.0
17.5

The Verdicts

Rosewood Beijing

Rosewood Beijing delivers the brand's signature residential luxury in China's capital, with thoughtfully curated rooms that feel more like a sophisticated private library than a hotel. The property excels in the details that matter—spacious suites with genuine art and books, exceptional concierge service that handles complex requests, and what many consider Beijing's finest hotel pool. While the CBD location lacks the cultural immersion of newer hutong properties, it compensates with easy access to business districts and reliable Western-standard service that particularly appeals to first-time China visitors.

The Chancery Rosewood London

The Chancery Rosewood took the old US Embassy on Grosvenor Square — a hulking Portland stone brutalist block — and turned it into Mayfair's most architecturally confident new arrival, with Joseph Dirand's walnut-and-brass interiors, a dug-out 18-meter basement wellness floor, and that salvaged B52-bomber eagle now perched above two new penthouse floors. The all-suite format means even entry rooms feel genuinely spacious by London standards, and the wellness offering — a rare 25m pool, full Asaya spa — is a legitimate differentiator in a city where most luxury hotels can't spare the square footage. The problem is consistency: for every guest who calls this the best hotel they've ever stayed in, another describes reactive service, mishandled afternoon tea, or a front desk that doesn't know how to recover from a hiccup. This tracks with a hotel still finding its rhythm less than a year after opening — the design and the F&B stars (the Japanese omakase, Serra, Eagle Bar) are already there, but the intuitive, anticipatory service that separates a Claridge's or Connaught from a very good newcomer isn't fully baked yet. Book it for the design, the suites, and the spa; go in knowing service can swing from genuinely spectacular to oddly clumsy depending on the day and the staff member you draw.

Strengths & trade-offs

Rosewood Beijing

Strengths

  • Exceptional concierge handling complex requests
  • Beijing's most beautiful hotel pool
  • Spacious rooms with curated art and books
  • Manor Club lounge experience
  • Consistent luxury service standards

Trade-offs

  • CBD location lacks cultural authenticity
  • Some rooms overlook industrial buildings
  • Breakfast service inconsistencies
  • Dated design after 10+ years

The Chancery Rosewood London

Strengths

  • Joseph Dirand's residential-feeling suites with walnut, brass, and rare green marble baths
  • Rare 25m pool and expansive underground Asaya spa for central Mayfair
  • Standout F&B lineup including a Ginza-style Michelin omakase and the destination Eagle Bar
  • Dramatic brutalist-to-warm transformation of the former US Embassy building
  • All-suite format delivers genuine space even in entry-level categories

Trade-offs

  • Service consistency wavers — reactive recovery rather than proactive anticipation
  • Concierge recommendations and tour pricing have drawn specific complaints
  • Afternoon tea and some F&B execution described as hit-or-miss
  • AC and plumbing noise issues reported in some suites