0 Comment(s) 12/05/2008 +0100 GMT
by Ian Whiteling
A recent analysis of overnight prices in three-star hotels in the UK
undertaken by booking service hotel.info has shown, surprisingly, that
Birmingham is the most expensive city in the UK in which to book a
room, costing an average of £80 a night.
In comparison, Glasgow,
at just £61 a night, offers relatively good value, and is also on
average £15 a night cheaper than its Scottish neighbour Edinburgh.
The
survey monitored UK cities with more than 220,000 inhabitants, and
although Birmingham comes out the most expensive, it is still £45
cheaper than Moscow, the world’s most expensive city in which to book
hotel accommodation.
From the point of view of attractive
prices, England’s second largest city shows a poor comparison with
Edinburgh (£76), Leicester (£75), Liverpool (£73), Kingston upon Hull
and Leeds (£70 each).
London, which many would have expected
to be the most expensive in the UK by far, actually comes second to
Birmingham, with an average three-star room rate of £79.
The
hotel.info Price Index has been compiled from all bookings made in the
first quarter of 2008 by customers of hotel.de and TravelRes in the
three-star category. The statistical basis used is the price for one
overnight stay in a single room without breakfast. In order to remove
currency fluctuation, prices relate to the average exchange rate in the
first quarter of 2008 (£1 = €1.3).
hotel.info Top 15 most expensive cities to stay in Great Britain, with average price for a one-night stay:
1. Birmingham: £80
2. London: £79
3. Edinburgh: £76
4. Leicester: £74
5. Liverpool: £73
6. Kingston upon Hull: £70
7. Leeds: £70
8. Southhampton: £70
9. Sheffield: £68
10. Manchester: £67
11. Bristol: £63
12. Glasgow: £61
13. Coventry: £61
14. Wolverhampton: £60
15. Plymouth: £60





































