Where to Stay in Jakarta: Best Hotels by Area and Budget
Jakarta is one of Southeast Asia’s largest cities — 30+ million people across the greater metro area — and its hotel market reflects that scale. There are options from IDR 150,000 dormitory beds to five-star towers rivalling Singapore. The difficulty is choosing the right area: Jakarta’s traffic is some of the worst in the region, and a hotel in the wrong neighbourhood can cost you an extra two hours each day sitting in gridlock.
Understanding Jakarta’s Neighbourhoods
Sudirman / SCBD (South Central Business District) is the city’s financial and commercial spine. The MRT runs through it, major malls (Grand Indonesia, Pacific Place, Plaza Senayan) are walkable, and the main concentration of international restaurants sits within a few blocks of Jl. Sudirman. This is the most practical base for most visitors.
Menteng is Jakarta’s oldest planned neighbourhood — wide tree-lined streets, embassies, and mid-century Dutch colonial architecture. It is quieter than Sudirman, slightly cheaper, and has good independent cafes and restaurants on Jl. Wahid Hasyim and Jl. Sabang. The Monas national monument and National Museum are both walking distance.
Kemang (south Jakarta) caters mainly to the expat community: rooftop bars, boutique restaurants, and a relaxed weekend vibe. It is a long taxi ride from most tourist sites but suits visitors staying a week or more who want neighbourhood character over convenience.
Kota Tua (Old Town) is Jakarta’s historical quarter — Dutch colonial architecture, the Batavia Café, and the Museum Bank Indonesia. It is atmospheric but lacks mid-range hotel infrastructure; most accommodation here is budget or heritage boutique. It is easiest to visit as a day trip from Sudirman.
Glodok (Jakarta’s Chinatown) sits adjacent to Kota Tua and has some of the cheapest accommodation in the city, but the area is busy, noisy, and poorly served by the MRT.
Budget Hotels (IDR 150,000–450,000 / night, approx. USD 10–30)
Favehotel Zainul Arifin (Kota Tua) — one of the most reliable budget chains in Indonesia. Clean rooms, air conditioning, basic breakfast included. Approximately IDR 200,000–350,000/night as of 2026. Well-positioned for Kota Tua sightseeing.
RedDoorz Plus @ Jl. Wahid Hasyim (Menteng) — RedDoorz operates dozens of Jakarta properties; the Wahid Hasyim location puts you close to street food, the Sarinah mall, and MRT access. Rooms from approximately IDR 180,000–280,000/night. Wi-Fi is functional; rooms are small but clean.
OYO near Blok M (South Jakarta) — Blok M has some of the best budget eating in the city (the Blok M Square food basement is worth the trip alone). OYO properties in this corridor run from approximately IDR 150,000–300,000/night. Quality varies between properties; filter by review score above 7.5/10.
Mid-Range Hotels (IDR 500,000–1,500,000 / night, approx. USD 30–100)
Akmani Hotel (Sudirman) — consistently strong value for the Sudirman corridor. Compact but well-appointed rooms, rooftop pool, in-house restaurant. Approximately IDR 600,000–900,000/night. Staff English is good.
Hotel Morrissey (Menteng) — boutique property in a converted heritage building, 40 rooms, good breakfast, and a genuine neighbourhood feel. Approximately IDR 700,000–1,100,000/night. Attracts a mix of business travellers and couples. Book direct for the best rate — they actively offer 10–15% discounts over third-party platforms.
Swiss-Belhotel Mangga Besar (near Kota Tua / Glodok) — solid three-star option if your focus is Old Town and Chinatown sightseeing. Approximately IDR 500,000–800,000/night. Older property but well-maintained; pool is small.
Aloft Jakarta SCBD — part of the Marriott family, young and design-forward. The W XYZ bar is a legitimate social spot. Rooms from approximately IDR 900,000–1,400,000/night. Good transit access and walkable to Pacific Place mall.
Luxury Hotels (IDR 2,000,000+ / night, approx. USD 130+)
Mandarin Oriental Jakarta (Sudirman) — a long-established luxury benchmark in the city with an excellent poolside garden and one of Jakarta’s most reliable spa programmes. Rates from approximately IDR 2,800,000–5,000,000/night. Well-positioned for MRT access at Bundaran HI.
Kosenda Hotel (Wahid Hasyim corridor, Menteng) — a smaller, design-conscious boutique hotel popular with creative industry travellers and couples. The rooftop bar is one of the better Jakarta hotel view points. Approximately IDR 1,200,000–2,200,000/night.
The Ritz-Carlton Pacific Place (SCBD) — the reference luxury hotel in Jakarta. Two towers, multiple restaurants, a large pool deck, and direct sky-bridge access to Pacific Place mall. Rates from approximately IDR 3,000,000–5,000,000/night (USD 190–320). Service standard is consistent with Ritz-Carlton globally.
Four Seasons Jakarta (Sudirman) — opened in 2016 and remains one of the top properties in the city. The Akira Back restaurant is one of Jakarta’s best hotel dining options. Rates from approximately IDR 3,500,000–7,000,000/night. Ideal for business travel — good meeting facilities and Sudirman MRT access.
The Mulia Jakarta (Senayan) — sprawling resort-style hotel next to Gelora Bung Karno stadium. Four distinct wings, seven restaurants, and a 100-metre pool. Better value than Ritz/Four Seasons for families. Rates from approximately IDR 2,200,000–4,000,000/night.
Raffles Jakarta (SCBD) — 173 suites, no standard rooms. Quieter and more intimate than the larger luxury properties; the Long Bar is a strong cocktail option. Rates from approximately IDR 4,000,000–8,000,000/night.
Transport Notes
The MRT Jakarta (North–South line) is the single most useful piece of infrastructure for visitors staying in Sudirman or Blok M. It is clean, air-conditioned, and largely on time. A single-trip ticket costs IDR 3,000–14,000 depending on distance.
The Railink Airport Express (known locally as KA Bandara) connects Sudirman station to Soekarno-Hatta Airport in approximately 55 minutes. Trains depart every 30–45 minutes from around 04:30 to 22:00. Cost: IDR 70,000 as of 2026. This is the only reliable way to guarantee an airport connection during peak-hour traffic.
For everything else, Gojek and Grab are the standard rideshare options. Both have fixed-price estimates before you accept the ride. During morning and evening rush hours (roughly 07:00–09:00 and 17:00–20:00), expect journey times to double or triple on any road without dedicated bus lanes.
Booking Tips
- Book at least two weeks ahead for the Sudirman/SCBD corridor during business travel periods (Monday to Thursday stays are consistently higher-priced than weekend stays in Jakarta — the reverse of most leisure destinations).
- Direct booking discounts are common at mid-range Jakarta hotels. Calling or WhatsApp-messaging the hotel directly and mentioning you saw the Booking.com rate often yields 10–20% off.
- Check pool access — many mid-range Jakarta hotels list a pool but access is shared with conference and day-pass guests, making it crowded on weekends.
- Serviced apartments are worth considering for stays of five nights or more. Areas like Kuningan and Gatot Subroto have furnished apartments with kitchenettes from approximately IDR 600,000–1,200,000/night that work out cheaper than hotels once breakfast costs are factored in.
- For day tours, Bogor botanical garden trips, and Thousand Islands excursions from Jakarta, browse Jakarta tours and activities and book ahead for weekends when the most popular departures sell out.
Ready to Plan Your Trip?
See our itineraries for inspiration:
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- 1 Week in Java — Borobudur, Bromo and Yogyakarta cultural circuit
- 10 Days in Indonesia — Bali, Java and Komodo combined
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Things to do while you're there
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Frequently Asked Questions
- What is the best area to stay in Jakarta for first-time visitors?
- Sudirman/SCBD is the most convenient base for first-time visitors: central, well-served by the MRT, close to major malls and restaurants, and well-lit at night. Menteng is a quieter alternative with more character but fewer budget options.
- Is it safe to walk around Jakarta at night?
- Walking after dark is generally fine in Sudirman, SCBD, Menteng, and Kemang — all well-lit commercial areas with regular foot traffic. Kota Tua becomes quieter at night; stay on the main square. Jakarta is vast, so plan around the MRT or use rideshare (Gojek/Grab) for distances over a few blocks.
- How far is Jakarta airport from the city centre?
- Soekarno-Hatta International Airport (CGK) is approximately 30–45 km northwest of Sudirman. Journey time varies from 45 minutes (off-peak via toll road) to 2 hours (peak-hour traffic). The Railink Airport Express connects Sudirman station in approximately 50–55 minutes and costs IDR 70,000 as of 2026 — by far the most reliable option.
- Which Jakarta hotels are good value for money?
- At mid-range, Akmani Hotel and Hotel Morrissey in Sudirman offer clean, well-located rooms from approximately IDR 600,000–900,000/night. For budget stays, Favehotel Zainul Arifin in Kota Tua and RedDoorz outlets across the city run from IDR 200,000–400,000/night. At luxury level, The Ritz-Carlton Pacific Place and Four Seasons Jakarta represent the top tier from approximately USD 300/night.
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