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Strasbourg, France
Strasbourg

Where to stay in Strasbourg

Base on the Grande Ile around the cathedral and everything is a flat walk; cross to Krutenau for better value, and treat Petite France as a walk-through, not a bed.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 10 Jun 2026
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In short

Where to stay in Strasbourg

For a first Strasbourg trip, base yourself on the Grande Ile around the cathedral unless price pushes you off the island. Everything you came for is then a flat walk away and you skip transport entirely. Choose Krutenau just across the water for better-value rooms and livelier evenings, Neustadt (the German quarter) for quiet wide-street value within walking distance, and the station quarter only if you are doing Colmar and Alsace day trips by train. Treat Petite France as the place to walk through, not the place to sleep.

The short version

  • Best all-rounder: Grande Ile around the cathedral.
  • Best value: Krutenau, just across the canal southeast of the island.
  • Best atmosphere: Petite France, but only if you accept day-tripper crowds and a premium for the canal view.
  • Best for the Christmas market: anywhere a 10-minute walk off the island, since on-island rooms double in December.
  • Avoid using Petite France as your default hotel filter; it is the prettiest five minutes of the city, not the smartest base.

Best areas to book

Grande Ile / Carre d'Or

ยฃยฃยฃ premium

The island core around the cathedral and Place Gutenberg: every major sight, the boat-tour pier and the best restaurants are within a few minutes on foot, and you never touch a tram. The trade-off is the highest room rates in the city and pedestrian streets that stay busy late, so light sleepers should ask for a courtyard-facing room.

Best for: First-timers, short stays, sightseeing-first

Browse hotels Old-city centre

Petite France

ยฃยฃยฃ premium

The half-timbered, canal-lined western tip of the island with the Ponts Couverts and the Barrage Vauban. Romantic for a couple, but it empties of locals, fills with day-trippers by midday and carries a clear view premium; the canal-front terraces are where you most often overpay for an average plat.

Best for: Couples, photography, atmosphere

Browse hotels 5-10 min walk to the cathedral

Krutenau

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The student and bar quarter just over the water southeast of the island, around Rue de Zurich and Place d'Austerlitz. It keeps the timbered old-town look but adds cheaper beds, proper neighbourhood winstubs and a later evening, so it is the pick if dinner and drinks matter more than a cathedral view from the window.

Best for: Value, nightlife, food-led trips

Browse hotels 5-15 min walk to the centre

Neustadt (the German imperial quarter)

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The grand wide-boulevard district north and east of the island, built under German rule and now UNESCO-listed alongside the Grande Ile, around Place de la Republique and the Palais du Rhin. Quieter and noticeably better value than the island, with handsome belle-epoque buildings; you trade a five-to-ten-minute walk for calmer nights and more room for your money.

Best for: Quiet sleep, value within walking distance, architecture

Browse hotels 5-12 min walk to the Grande Ile

Gare (around the station)

ยฃ value

Practical rather than pretty, built around the glass-domed Gare de Strasbourg. It is the right base if you arrive by train, are taking the 9-minute airport shuttle, or are spending days on TER trains to Colmar and the wine route. One tram stop or a 10-15 minute walk from the old town, and usually the cheapest beds in the centre.

Best for: Rail travellers, Alsace day-trippers, budget

Browse hotels 10-15 min walk to the Grande Ile

Orangerie / European quarter

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The leafy, residential northeast around Parc de l'Orangerie and the European Parliament. Calm, green and good value, with the canal and storks of the park, but you are a tram ride rather than a walk from the cathedral, so it suits longer or repeat stays over a first weekend.

Best for: Longer stays, families, peace and parks

Browse hotels Tram or 20-25 min walk to the centre

The simple choice

If you are booking quickly, filter for the Grande Ile first, then check Krutenau and Neustadt the moment island prices look steep. That one rule keeps most first-timers out of the two common traps: paying a Petite France view premium for a small room, or staying out by the Orangerie and then commuting in by tram for a two-night trip where everything is walkable anyway.

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Booking around the Christmas market

From late November to 24 December the Christkindelsmarik takes over the Grande Ile and the big tree goes up on Place Kleber, and on-island room rates roughly double while availability vanishes. If you are coming for the market, book months ahead and consider a Neustadt or station-quarter hotel: you walk in to the stalls in ten minutes and pay far less for the bed. If you want the same pretty old town without the price or the crush, come in May, June or September instead.

December rates on the Grande Ile can run 40-60% above shoulder-season prices; the same hotel is much cheaper in May or September.

Safety and noise

Strasbourg is generally safe, and GOV.UK's main day-to-day flag for France is pickpocketing in crowds and around stations rather than anything area-specific here. For accommodation that points two ways: keep an eye on your bag in the dense market crowds and around the Gare, and pick a courtyard or side-street room on the Grande Ile if you are a light sleeper, since the pedestrian core stays lively well into the evening.

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Where to stay in Strasbourg FAQs

Should I stay in Petite France?
Usually walk through it rather than sleep in it. It is the prettiest corner of Strasbourg, but it is small, packed with day-trippers by lunchtime and carries a clear view premium, and the canal-front restaurants are where you most often overpay. Stay on the wider Grande Ile or in Krutenau and stroll to Petite France early morning or after dinner, when it is at its best and quietest.
Where should I stay for the Christmas market?
Anywhere within a ten-minute walk of the Grande Ile, which is most of Neustadt and the station quarter. On-island hotels are closest to the stalls but their December rates roughly double and sell out months ahead. A Neustadt or Gare hotel lets you walk in to Place Kleber and the cathedral market easily while keeping the room cost sensible.
Is the station area a bad place to stay?
No, just less charming. The Gare quarter is one tram stop or a 10-15 minute walk from the cathedral, usually the cheapest central option, and it is the obvious base if you are taking the 9-minute airport shuttle or day-tripping to Colmar and the Alsace wine route by TER. For a first trip focused on the old town you will have a prettier walk home from the Grande Ile, but on value and rail convenience the Gare wins.

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