There is no hype. That is the offer. If you want a SoHo zip code without SoHo rates and you treat the hotel as a base for the city outside the door, the math works.
The rooftop terrace opens at 4pm for hotel guests and is almost never full on weekdays. Take a coffee up before 6pm for the best light on the Hudson with no crowd at all.
Most SoHo hotels now start at $450 a night. Soho 54 still clears $180 to $280 on standard room nights, and that is the entire point. You trade room size and design polish for a location that lets you walk to Canal, Little Italy, Tribeca and the Village in ten minutes.
The rooftop terrace runs for hotel guests with Hudson River and skyline views. It is not a scene bar, which means you can actually get a drink without a reservation. Sunset here in June is genuinely good and costs nothing extra.
For travelers using NYC as a launch point, the location hits everything. Two blocks to the 1 train at Canal, four blocks to the A/C/E at Canal, seven minutes to Tribeca, ten to NoLiTa. You do not need to love the hotel if you plan to be outside it 14 hours a day.
160 rooms in 2008 former Hampton Inn rebrand. Rooms small, dated, cleanliness inconsistency in reviews; Holland Tunnel-side traffic noise. 19th-floor rooftop has Hudson views without velvet rope.
No published Instagram signal. Value-priority SoHo-postcode travellers willing to skip SIXTY SoHo or Mercer rates. Less destination-hotel than working-base demographic.
160 rooms: king 17th-18th floor west (Hudson view, distance from tunnel noise, more recent refresh). Skip bottom six floors entirely.
At $$$ in SoHo, Soho 54 competes with Moxy NYC LES ($$$ Tao Group) and Walker Tribeca. Wins on $$$ SoHo postcode at sub-$200 Tuesday/Wednesday direct rate, not on design pedigree or food program.
Soho 54 opened in 2008 under the Hampton Inn flag and later rebranded as an independent. The 160 rooms are small, the rates are lower than the neighborhood average, and the 19th-floor rooftop gets you Hudson River views without the velvet rope of a hotel bar crowd.
It is not a destination property. It is a working hotel for people who want a SoHo postcode and do not want to spend what SIXTY SoHo or The Mercer charges for the privilege.
Late April–early May beats Met Gala. First two weeks of September beat UNGA. Anything Sep–Dec needs 60–90 days of lead time.
Signal stable — composite holding within ±2 points over 17 days (currently 39). No single dimension moved more than the rest.
File closes at MODERATE. Book direct one to two weeks out for September through December weekend peaks. Skip the bottom six floors entirely; the refresh thinned out as the floors dropped.