Hotel MOTTO

Hotel · Mariahilf

Hotel MOTTO

Hotel · Mariahilf

3

Mariahilfer Straße 71A, Schadekgasse 20, 1060 Wien, Austria

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Hotel MOTTO by null
Hotel MOTTO by Hotel Motto
Hotel MOTTO by Hotel Motto
Hotel MOTTO by Hotel Motto
Hotel MOTTO by Hotel Motto
Hotel MOTTO by Hotel Motto
Hotel MOTTO by Hotel Motto
Hotel MOTTO by Hotel Motto
Hotel MOTTO by Hotel Motto
Hotel MOTTO by Hotel Motto
Hotel MOTTO by Hotel Motto
Hotel MOTTO by null
Hotel MOTTO by null
Hotel MOTTO by null
Hotel MOTTO by null
Hotel MOTTO by null
Hotel MOTTO by null
Hotel MOTTO by null
Hotel MOTTO by null
Hotel MOTTO by null
Hotel MOTTO by null
Hotel MOTTO by null
Hotel MOTTO by null
Hotel MOTTO by null
Hotel MOTTO by null
Hotel MOTTO by null
Hotel MOTTO by null
Hotel MOTTO by null
Hotel MOTTO by null
Hotel MOTTO by null

Highlights

Chic rooms, rooftop bar, acclaimed bakery, wellness area, central location  

Featured in Conde Nast Traveler
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Mariahilfer Straße 71A, Schadekgasse 20, 1060 Wien, Austria Get directions

hotelmotto.at
@hotelmottovienna

Information

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Mariahilfer Straße 71A, Schadekgasse 20, 1060 Wien, Austria Get directions

+43 1 5814500
hotelmotto.at
@hotelmottovienna

Features

crowd lgbtq friendly

Last updated

Aug 11, 2025

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@cntraveler

The Best Hotels in Vienna for Old World Glamour and Avant-Garde Design

"Best for: a feel of authentic Vienna Address: Mariahilfer Straße 71A, Schadekgasse 20, 1060 Vienna, Austria Nearby: Mariahilfer Straße shopping area Price: Double from $404 Lovingly designed, fully homegrown, and very reasonably priced, Hotel Motto Vienna gives guests a vivid insight into contemporary Viennese life with a touch of 1920s Paris. Head past the fanciful, picture-book mural by Chez Dede of pink-suited bellhops and leopards in the lobby to the quiet guest rooms, filled with lush fabrics and Deco curves. The top-floor Chez Bernard, draped in cascading foliage, has become something of a hub for locals, from crêpes and activated-charcoal lattes in the morning to gin cocktails and bistro classics at night. Up on the seventh floor, the small wellness space has a spa and a mixed sauna big enough for four. —R.J."

https://www.cntraveler.com/gallery/best-hotels-in-vienna-austria
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@travelleisure

The Best Affordable Hotels in Europe, According to Travel Experts

"When Hotel Motto opened in Vienna in 2021, its whimsical maximalism offered an exciting foil to the classic style of the capital’s grande dames. Motto’s 91 rooms, in a 17th-century building in the city center, are layered with visual intrigue: velvet chairs, opulent chandeliers, and burlesque-inspired lamps draped in foot-long fringe. But it’s not just playful interiors that set it apart. Everyone wants to be seen at Chez Bernd, the top-floor restaurant run by renowned host Bernd Schlacher, while Motto Brot, the ground-floor bakery, brought my Viennese-pastry fantasies to life. Doubles from $184." - Travel + Leisure Editors

https://www.travelandleisure.com/best-affordable-hotels-europe-7551398
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@cntraveler

Hotel Motto Vienna

"Why book? For the elevators with old-fashioned arrows indicating the floors, the top-floor view down into a stairwell that unfolds like a paper concertina, and the wrought-iron-balcony, fin-de-siecle glimpses of Vienna. But mainly because this is a lovingly designed, fully homegrown, and very reasonably priced (from $245 per night) hotel that gives guests a vivid insight into contemporary Viennese life while being swooningly infatuated with 1920s Paris (if Midnight in Paris had a sequel here, Motto would have surely featured, Owen Wilson hobnobbing in the lobby with Klimt and Jung). Oh, and the hotel’s ensuite bakery does the softest, flakiest sourdough croissants in town. Set the scene Many people come to Vienna looking for the clichés. You know, the powdered-wig operatics, the dirndl-stretching apfelstrudel, Freudian slips in high-arched coffeehouses, the Harry Lime noir of The Third Man, and the prancing ballet hooves of Lipizzaner. And Vienna does them very well, waltzing visitors around on a grand tour of 18th- and 19th-century neoclassical grandeur. But there’s a living, breathing culture here too; a fresh dynamism sparked by well-connected creatives and restaurateurs keen to move the city forward. So while the Motto will satisfy those looking for nostalgia, it’s also drawing a youthful crowd of locals who head past the fanciful, picture-book mural of pink-suited bellhops and leopards in the lobby to the top-floor restaurant and bar, which sits like the bridge of an Art Deco ship with criss-cross floor-to-ceiling windows and a menu of activated-charcoal latte, natural wine, and rum cocktails. The backstory Those familiar with Vienna’s Donaukanal area will have spotted the sleek Motto am Fluss restaurant, moored like a double-decked ocean liner on the south bank. It was launched in 2010 by Bernd Schlacher—who had already made a name for himself with Motto bar (home, for a time, to a young bartender called Helmut Lang)—with an all-day menu of comfort-food favorites and boisterous summer evenings when the canal side becomes one of the buzziest parts of town. While Fluss riffs on Fifties Venetian design, for his first hotel Schlacher turned to his love of Art Deco-era Paris, partly inspired by a favorite Lacroix-designed hotel in the Marais called Petit Moulin. He bought old chandeliers from the Ritz Paris at auction, using them as templates for new designs, while bedrooms are soft-focus, powder-pink boudoirs. The wedge-shaped building itself has a history going back to the 17th century, with appearances by the Strauss family and 19th-century bohemians, and as Hotel Kummer appeared in John Irving’s Hotel New Hampshire, based on the American author’s time in the city. That playful bellhop-and-cheetah mural in the lobby is the work of Chez Dede studio (also behind the interiors at Rome’s Hotel de' Ricci), while Viennese-based fashion designer Lena Hoschek, who draws on Fifties rock ‘n’ roll and traditional cuts, took the vintage floral-bird fabric print in the bedrooms as inspiration for her staff uniforms. The rooms Set on both sides (one can get confused) of the showpiece staircase, its railings and steps restored, bedrooms have parquet floors, Deco curves and black metalwork, with pendant glass lamps, and rugs and chairs in soft pinks and two-tone blues. Many have commode sinks and brass faucets, standalone tubs and showers set within an industrial-chic frame. Some are a little small (perhaps another nod towards Paris), others have perhaps a little too much furniture (mine had a bottom-of-the bed couch, fine, but with two extra chairs behind that). But all are quiet and peaceful. Little details included Viennese craft ale in the fridge. Fabric with a beautifully lush chinoiserie print of long-tailed birds and blossom is used throughout on bedheads and wardrobe doors. Aim for a room on the sixth floor, which all have balconies or terraces depending on category; though 307 has a grand crescent-shaped balcony in the bow of the hotel, watched over by a long-haired Art Nouveau visage carved on an ornate column. Food and drink The top-floor Chez Bernard, draped in cascading foliage, has become something of a hub for locals from the moment breakfast starts (when it gets busy at weekends, guests may have to wait their turn). The morning menu of crepes, salmon on buckwheat blinis, super smoothies, and acai bowls flips to French-Austrian bistro classics later on, including crispy artichoke, coq au vin with spaetzle, and a showpiece bouillabaisse—plus desserts such as a baked apple and a baba with orange sorbet. Twirly-moustached Ivo behind the bar mixes classic cocktails with a few new inventions, such as The Scream (gin, Campari, passionfruit, creme de cacao), and curates a wine menu that understandably gathers up some of Austria’s finest organic and natural labels. Vienna has always had a thing for bread, but the baking here is a notch above thanks to the hotel’s ensuite bakery downstairs, which has cafe tables on the street and a daytime menu of croissants, baguettes, and pudgy sourdough loaves (ask nicely and they’ll bag one up for you when you leave). The spa Up on the seventh floor, the small wellness space has a mixed sauna big enough for four (Austrians tend to dispense with modesty, so choose your moment carefully), with a relaxation space and a wooden-floored gym that seems almost too elegant to work up a sweat in. The neighborhood/area Like Paris, Vienna’s divided into numeric districts wrapped tightly around the 1st, which contains most of the big-hitting sights such as the state opera, Hofburg Palace, and the Albertina Museum. The Motto’s in the 6th near Neubaugasse metro station, which is no bad thing: its vibe is a little West Village-y, albeit with more cobblestones and courtyards, but still a short walk to the Museumsplatz. It’s a neighborhood to wander around on foot, sniffing out small independent outfits such as Disco Volante for pizza, Dogs Run Free and Luster bars for cocktails, Phil bookstore/coffee shop, and traditional cafés such as Kafka, Sperl, and Jelinek—Cafe Ritter, right opposite, is a real local favorite. The main street outside the Motto, Mariahilfer Strasse, is Vienna’s main pedestrian-only shopping drag, and a little prosaic, but it’s easy to head down a side street and find something interesting. A short walk away is the Haus des Meeres, an aquarium built in a former WWII anti-aircraft battery (though it’s best to skip the fish and catch the elevator straight to the top to get your bearings). The local cinema, Top Kino, hosts a human-rights film festival every November. As for the city’s hotel scene, there are plenty of grand addresses and international names (Rosewood and Mandarin Oriental are both preparing to land), but not many well-conceived boutique hotels—an exception being the Conran-designed Guesthouse. The service The friendly front-desk staff can arrange local experiences such as boxing or yoga classes nearby, or tickets to the Leopold Museum. This isn’t a “full service” hotel; the only bell hops are the ones painted on the lobby walls, and there’s no room service or phones in the room. Instead, guests are encouraged to pick up something from the bakery below, while the front desk can arrange ice for in-room cocktail mixing (each room has a side table with spirit, shaker and lemons). For families It's better suited for those with much younger children than older, perhaps, though some adjoining rooms can be booked—607 and 608, for example, both of which have terraces. Accessibility It’s a listed building, so limited, but two rooms are fully accessible, as is the restaurant. Anything left to mention? A salon space for private events and meetings aims at bringing a little Soho House-style coolness to corporate events, something Vienna is relatively unfamiliar with. The wraparound rooftop bar is opening in spring 2022, with far-reaching city views." - Rick Jordan

https://www.cntraveler.com/hotels/vienna/hotel-motto
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steveienewyork

Google
Admittedly I am a hotel snob . I love to stay at 4 seasons , mandarin , ritz et al. I happened upon the Hotel Motto from a great shopping guide KUCIE. who i engaged to take my wife shopping while i carried the bags. This is a quirky hotel with a lot of character. The kids that work there are friendly and knowledgeable , the location is fantastic located a couple of yards from Vienna’s excellent subway. The secret sauce is Motto Brot a bakery breakfast spot owned by and connected to the hotel . Great breakfast spot with excellent coffee . Kudos to Barbara a friendly server who was a pleasure . Additionally the roof top bar restaurant was excellent. All in all a well placed clean interesting designed hotel that is not bookoo $$$$. Recommended

Cristina Oana

Google
Overall, a very pleasant stay. The rooms were clean, comfortable, and thoughtfully designed, and the service was excellent throughout. Everything felt high quality, which was truly appreciated. The on-site restaurant was fantastic for both breakfast and dinner—highly recommended. Rooftop drinks offered a great atmosphere and were definitely worth it. And don’t miss the bakery on the ground floor—it’s absolutely amazing!

Erin Noël

Google
I absolutely loved my stay at the Hotel Motto in Vienna! The location is fantastic , the metro station is right around the corner and plenty of spots to walk to locally. The room was beautifully decorated , clean and QUIET - you would never know you were in the middle of the city. Everything about my stay was wonderful, and I look forward to returning in the future.

Kevin Buckley

Google
This has to be one of the best hotels Ive stayed at. Lovely rooms, rooftop bar, restaurant and front desk staff. And all very reasonably priced. Great lively area and short walk/transport to the centre. Highly recommend

Elisabeth Buchwald

Google
Really lovely hotel with excellent service. It felt newly renovated while maintaining an older kind of charm. Location was also great just steps away from metro. Highly recommend this hotel. The only con, and this is truly fairly minor, is the toilet was not located in the same area as a sink to wash your hands

gojuryu512

Google
Loved the hotel - great location and very close to a Metro station on the U3. The staff were excellent and the facilities in the room were very good. Great furnishings and bedding provided high levels of comfort, and the showers gels, etc provided were extremely good quality - locally produced. There was a mini bar in the room which was well stocked with materials to make cocktails if that’s your thing. Overall, the hotel is a great choice for anyone visiting the beautiful city and perfect for getting around. Recommended

517clarissa

Google
This is a really lovely hotel with beautiful interior design, nice staff and a central location. Our deluxe room had a balcony with views along the pedestrian street which was very nice but also meant we did have random very late night shouting from the street each of the 4 nights we stayed. The location was good for getting to the historic centre and getting the subway to other sights but not great for the evenings with fewer restaurants than a more touristy area.

Sophie English

Google
Overall it was a lovely hotel! Great location with the shopping but a little bit of a walk to get to main attractions. Check in wasn’t the smoothest, we arrived early we weren’t offered anywhere to wait even though the restaurant was open, we were told to go across the road instead. The staff at 3pm were amazing though and we got upgraded when the sink in our room broke which was lovely.