If you’ve spent any time trying to book a decent hotel in Barcelona without spending a fortune, you already know how quickly the options narrow. The city isn’t cheap, and the affordable places tend to put you somewhere noisy, generic, or so far from anything interesting that you end up adding €30 a day in taxis just to compensate. But I was lucky enough to discover the Hotel Via Augusta, on my last summer trip to Barcelona and found that it sidesteps almost all of that!
Hotel Via Augusta sits on Via Augusta, one of the long arterial streets that runs through Gràcia, which is my favourite neighbourhood in the city and one I’ve written about at length. Gràcia has a character that the more tourist-heavy parts of Barcelona don’t really have anymore. It feels like people actually live there. The streets are quieter, the plazas fill up with locals in the evenings, and you’re not constantly stepping around tour groups outside every other building. The hotel fits that setting well. It doesn’t feel like it landed there from somewhere else. And I felt that the staff reflected the vibes of the neighbourhood, warm and helpful in a way that felt truly genuine.
The building has history behind it, and the hotel has been careful about what to update and what to leave alone. The result is a place that feels lived-in without feeling tired. There are two types of rooms at the Hotel Via Augusta, and it’s worth knowing the difference before you book. The renovated rooms have wooden floors, warm earthy tones, and a clean modern finish. Everything feels considered and put together. They’re small, but small in the way that a lot of good European hotel rooms are: everything is where it should be, nothing feels cramped or begrudging, and the light has a softness that makes the space feel more comfortable than the square footage might suggest.
The older, unrenovated rooms are a different story aesthetically. They’re dated, no question, but they are genuinely clean and well-kept. If you’re the kind of traveller who spends most of the day out and just needs somewhere comfortable and tidy to sleep, they do the job without complaint, and they’ll save you a few euros in the process. Either way, all rooms feature excellent AC, which I mention specifically because we were there in August and the heat in Barcelona at that time of year is relentless. Good air conditioning is not something you can take for granted in European hotels, especially at this price point.
The hotel offers a small but fresh buffet breakfast that was better than expected. It’s a solid spread, everything fresh, nothing stale or sitting out too long. And on those days when you first arrive, and the jetlag is intense, sometimes not having to think about where that first meal will be is just the ticket. Even if you don’t want to opt for the full breakfast, downstairs there’s a free coffee machine and a chilled water dispenser where you can get a caffeine hit or a cold glass of water before heading out for the day. Outside of breakfast hours, the room stays open as a lounge, and I ended up working from it more than once. A good option if you need a change of scene from the room.
Truthfully, one of the reasons I chose this hotel was for the rooftop. Roof tops in Barcelona are a precious commodity. From here, you can sit out and enjoy the sweeping views of neighbourhood rooftops stretching out around you, with the city skyline in the distance and Tibidabo visible up on its hill to the northwest. It’s not the most dramatic view in Barcelona, but there’s something quietly satisfying about standing up there in the early evening, watching the city cool down around you, with a glass of something cold and nowhere in particular to be.
Gràcia is my favourite neighbourhood, or barrio, in Barcelona, as it’s the most authentic place in the city. One of the real advantages of staying in Gràcia is how much you can reach without the metro. Passeig de Gràcia is about a 15-minute walk south, and once you’re on it, the Modernisme buildings come at you fast. La Pedrera is the closest major Gaudí landmark and probably the most satisfying to go inside, particularly the rooftop with its warrior chimney sculptures and panoramic views across the city. A five-minute walk further brings you to Casa Batlló and Casa Amatller, sitting next to each other on what locals call the Manzana de la Discordia, or Block of Discord, where three rival Modernisme architects built competing masterpieces on the same stretch. From the hotel, Park Güell is a short ride on the Bus 24, which drops you close to the main entrance and saves you a long uphill walk in the heat. Remember, advance booking only, and summer slots sell out weeks ahead, so plan that one early. If you want more on Gràcia itself, including where to eat, drink, and spend an afternoon without a plan, I’ve covered it properly here.
As a base, Hotel Via Augusta works well. It’s comfortable, well-priced, and it puts you in the right part of the city. Gràcia gives you breathing room that the more tourist-heavy neighbourhoods don’t, and having that to come back to at the end of a long day makes a real difference. For the price, under €100- €150 a night in summer in Barcelona, it’s genuinely hard to argue with!
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