Glasgow is one of the cheapest UK city breaks for accommodation. A clean hostel dorm bed costs from £18 a night, a private room from £40, and central budget hotel rooms from £55 — half what you’d pay in Edinburgh, less than a third of London.
This is an honest 2026 guide to the best budget accommodation in Glasgow — the best hostels, the cheapest decent hotels, university summer-rental rooms and the best Airbnb neighbourhoods, with realistic prices and what to expect at each.

Quick recommendations
Cheapest dorm bed: SYHA Glasgow Youth Hostel from £18.
Best central hostel: Euro Hostel Glasgow.
Cheapest private room: Revolver Hostel from £40.
Cheapest decent hotel double: Z Hotel Glasgow from £55.
Cheapest week-plus stay: Glasgow University summer rooms (June–Aug) from £35.
Best hostels in Glasgow
1. SYHA Glasgow Youth Hostel (West End)
The flagship Hostelling Scotland property in a Victorian townhouse on Park Terrace, overlooking Kelvingrove Park. 4-star VisitScotland accredited, 24-hour reception, ensuite dorms (4–6 beds) and private rooms, free WiFi, laundry, evening meals. Dorm beds from £18; private doubles from £55. Best for solo travellers and couples wanting the West End atmosphere with hostel prices. 5-minute walk to the Subway (Kelvinbridge); 10 minutes to Byres Road.
2. Euro Hostel Glasgow (City Centre)
The biggest hostel in Glasgow, on Clyde Street near Glasgow Central. 365 beds, including 4–10-bed dorms, ensuite private rooms and family rooms. Bar/restaurant on site (cheap pints), free WiFi, walking distance to everything. Dorms from £20; doubles from £50. Best central location for short stays, party-friendly weekend atmosphere.

3. Revolver Hostel (Sauchiehall Lane)
The party hostel of Glasgow — clean, secure, friendly, with a basement bar/club, shared kitchen and chill-out lounge. Dorms from £20, private doubles from £40. Best for solo backpackers and groups looking for nightlife within the hostel itself. Light sleepers should pick another hostel.
4. Hostelling Scotland Tartan Lodge (Dennistoun)
Smaller, quieter SYHA property in the East End. Family-run feel, good for longer stays. Dorms from £19; private doubles from £50. Closer to The Barras and Glasgow Cathedral, slightly less central — but the East End has its own charm.
5. The Hostel of Glasgow (Charing Cross)
A budget hostel in a converted Victorian building near Charing Cross. Mixed dorms, private rooms, free breakfast, kitchen. Dorms from £18; doubles from £45.
Glasgow’s hostels are a genuine bargain and cluster conveniently around the city centre and the West End, putting you on the Subway and within walking distance of the nightlife. Expect a dorm bed from around £20–£35 a night depending on season, with private twin rooms in many hostels for travellers who want their own space at well under hotel prices. Look for ones with a good kitchen and common room if you’re staying a few nights — cooking a few meals is the single biggest saving a budget traveller can make.
Best budget hotels in Glasgow
6. Z Hotel Glasgow (City Centre)
Compact-by-design hotel with immaculate small rooms, free wine in the evening, rainfall showers. Doubles from £55–£80 — exceptional value for a city-centre boutique stay. Best for couples on a budget. Read more in our boutique hotels guide.
7. Premier Inn Glasgow (multiple)
Six Premier Inn locations in Glasgow including Glasgow Central, Glasgow Pacific Quay and Glasgow City Centre George Square. Reliable budget hotel chain — clean, comfortable, predictable. Doubles from £49 in shoulder season; £80–£120 peak. Free hot breakfast on most rates.

8. Travelodge Glasgow (multiple)
Five Travelodge properties in Glasgow including the Glasgow Central, Glasgow Paisley Road and Glasgow Queen Street. Slightly cheaper than Premier Inn (from £39 advance) but no free breakfast. Reliably central, good for short stays.
9. Point A Glasgow (multiple)
Budget boutique chain with two Glasgow properties (one near Sauchiehall Street, one in the Merchant City). Tiny but stylish rooms, well-located, from £55 a night. Great for solo travellers.
10. Ibis Budget Glasgow
Glasgow’s cheapest reliable hotel chain (from £45 a night). Smaller rooms than Premier Inn, no free breakfast, but central enough for sightseeing.
If a dorm isn’t for you, the reliable budget chains — the likes of Premier Inn, Travelodge and the ibis family — have multiple Glasgow locations, and a city-centre double can be excellent value if you book early and avoid big-event dates. The trade-off is character for consistency: clean, warm and central, if not memorable. Book direct and watch the calendar, because the same room can triple in price during a major concert or the Commonwealth Games fortnight.
University summer rooms (June–August only)
11. Glasgow University residences
Glasgow University rents out single ensuite student rooms during the long summer holiday (mid-June to early September) at around £35–£50 per night. Locations include Murano Street and Wolfson Halls in the West End. Clean, basic, with kitchens you can use. Brilliant value for stays of 3+ nights — book via the University’s commercial accommodation pages.
12. Strathclyde and Caledonian University residences
Both also rent out summer rooms in central locations. Glasgow Caledonian’s Caledonian Court is on Cowcaddens Road (5 minutes from Buchanan Bus Station); Strathclyde rents rooms on Cathedral Street near the Cathedral. From £40.
Airbnb and apartment rentals
Glasgow Airbnb prices average £55–£100 a night for an entire one-bedroom flat in central neighbourhoods. Cheaper if you book outside school holidays. Best Airbnb neighbourhoods for budget:
- Charing Cross / Anderston — central, walkable, plenty of mid-budget Airbnbs.
- Dennistoun (East End) — gentrified, quieter, 15-min walk to centre.
- Govanhill / Pollokshields (Southside) — multicultural, lively, great food, slightly less central but Subway-connected.
- Partick — West End-adjacent, good Subway and rail links, popular with students so plenty of rentals.
Avoid Hyndland and Hillhead (more expensive) and East End edges (less safe at night) for budget purposes.
How to save more
- Travel off-peak — January, February, November have hotel rates 30–50% below summer peaks. See our best time to visit Glasgow guide.
- Book direct — most budget hotels match OTA prices direct and may add free breakfast or upgrades.
- Sunday-Monday-Tuesday nights — typically the cheapest of the week.
- Bank holidays and TRNSMT weekend (mid-June) — book early or skip; rates spike.
- 2-3 nights minimum — many Airbnbs charge a one-night cleaning fee that makes a single night uneconomic.
- Free walking tours, free museums — combine cheap accommodation with the city’s stack of free attractions. See our free things to do in Glasgow guide.
Stretch the budget further with a few simple moves:
- Stay a short Subway ride outside the centre, where rooms are cheaper, and travel in.
- Travel midweek — Sunday to Thursday nights are far cheaper than weekends.
- Consider university summer rooms (June to August), when Glasgow’s universities let out smart student accommodation cheaply.
- Book breakfast separately at a café rather than paying hotel rates.
- Avoid the big-event dates if you possibly can — the city’s busiest nights carry the highest prices.
What to expect at each price point
£18–£25 dorm: 6–10-bed mixed dorm, shared bathroom, basic but clean. WiFi included; lockers usually included.
£40–£55 private: Small ensuite hostel room or basic budget chain hotel. Clean, no frills, single or double.
£55–£80 hotel: Decent compact-style boutique (Z Hotel, Point A) or solid mid-budget chain. Comfortable.
£80–£120 hotel: Solid mid-range city-centre hotel with breakfast and a polished feel.
Where to stay for budget travellers (by trip type)
- Solo backpacker: SYHA Glasgow or Euro Hostel — both have brilliant common rooms for meeting fellow travellers.
- Couples on a tight budget: Z Hotel Glasgow or Point A — boutique-design rooms at hostel prices.
- Groups of friends (4+): Airbnb in Charing Cross or Dennistoun — usually £20–£35 per person per night.
- Long stays (week+): University summer residences if you’re visiting June–August; or a monthly Airbnb in Partick/Govanhill.
- Late arrivals/early flights: Premier Inn Glasgow Airport for the night before a 5am departure.
What to avoid
- Listings without verified reviews on the OTA platforms — Glasgow has a small number of grim “budget” properties especially around the Bus Station.
- Anywhere advertising “near Hampden Park” — far from the centre and only useful on football match days.
- Fly-by-night hostels charging more than £25 a dorm without ensuites.
- Booking the cheapest absolute price without reading recent reviews — the lower end of the budget market has more variability.
A couple of budget traps catch visitors out. Be wary of a room that looks cheap but sits a long, expensive taxi ride from the centre — factor transport into the real cost — and check whether a lively party hostel suits you if you actually want to sleep. Read recent reviews for cleanliness and noise, and make sure your booking is near a Subway stop or a frequent bus route. For the full picture of neighbourhoods, see our where to stay in Glasgow guide.
FAQs
What’s the cheapest place to stay in Glasgow?
SYHA Glasgow Youth Hostel and Revolver Hostel both offer dorm beds from £18. Glasgow University summer rooms from £35 in June–August.
Are Glasgow hostels safe?
Yes — the major hostels (SYHA, Euro Hostel, Revolver, Tartan Lodge) all have 24-hour reception, lockers in dorms, and clean shared facilities.
Where is the best area to stay on a budget?
Charing Cross, Anderston and Dennistoun for budget hotels and Airbnbs; Sauchiehall Street for nightlife-adjacent hostels; Park Terrace (West End) for the SYHA and a quieter setting.
Are there budget hotels near Glasgow Airport?
Yes — Premier Inn Glasgow Airport, Holiday Inn Express Glasgow Airport, ibis Glasgow Airport. From £45 a night. The shuttle to the terminal is free or £5.
Can I find a private room in Glasgow for under £50?
Yes — Revolver Hostel, SYHA Glasgow and Glasgow University summer rooms all have private rooms from £35–£50. Z Hotel and Point A occasionally drop to this price range outside peak.
What’s the average cost of accommodation in Glasgow?
Hostel dorm: £18–£25. Private hostel room: £40–£60. Mid-budget hotel double: £55–£90. Boutique hotel double: £100–£200. Luxury: £200+.
Plan the rest of your Glasgow stay
This article is part of our complete where to stay in Glasgow overview. Pair it with our Glasgow on a budget deep-dive for more cost-saving across the trip and our cheapest way to get to Glasgow guide for transport savings.