Arlo NoMad — From $48/Night, a Neighborhood That Punches Above Its Price
There is a category of hotel that looks too cheap to be worth it on paper and then surprises you the moment you arrive. Arlo NoMad sits firmly in that category — from $48 per night, it holds a Booking.com score of 8.1/10 across 2,548 reviews, and it sits in NoMad (North of Madison Square Park), one of Manhattan's most underrated neighborhoods for food and atmosphere. The Flatiron Building is a three-minute walk. The N/R/W subway at 28th Street is five minutes on foot. Penn Station — your gateway to NJ Transit and MetLife Stadium for the World Cup 2026 — is about ten minutes away. If your goal is to spend as little as possible on the room so you can spend properly on everything else in New York, this is where that logic leads.
A $48-per-night hotel in Manhattan that holds an 8.1 on Booking.com from 2,548 real guest reviews is not something you encounter often. Arlo NoMad manages it by being clear about what it is: a small, design-forward property in a great location, where the room is intentionally compact and the neighborhood is where the value actually lives. NoMad — short for North of Madison Square Park — is not the tourist corridor. It is the stretch of lower Midtown where New Yorkers actually eat, drink, and walk. The Flatiron Building, one of the most photographed structures in the city, is three minutes away on foot. Madison Square Park, with its Shake Shack and farmers market on Saturdays, is the same. The N/R/W subway at 28th Street connects you to Midtown and Downtown in minutes.
"Never expected to get a neighborhood this good at this price. Walked to Flatiron at 7am before the crowds, came back and slept well. Subway is right there. If I come back to New York I would book here again."
The rooms are small — that is not a surprise at this price point in Manhattan, and Arlo is transparent about it. The Arlo Bunk Room starts at $48–90 per night: 150 square feet, two bunk beds, designed for travelers who treat the room as a place to sleep and store luggage, not a place to spend the day. The Queen Room runs $75–140 per night and is a better fit for couples or anyone who wants more floor space. The design runs Arlo's consistent industrial-chic aesthetic — clean lines, thoughtful storage, large windows that make small rooms feel less claustrophobic. Multiple guests mention that the rooms feel cleaner and more put-together than the price would suggest, which is the right kind of surprise.
The address — 11 E 31st Street — places you about midway between Times Square and the financial district, close to everything without being in the middle of the noise. For World Cup 2026 visitors headed to MetLife Stadium in New Jersey, this location has a practical advantage: Penn Station is roughly a ten-minute walk, and NJ Transit runs direct to Secaucus Junction, where you transfer to the MetLife Stadium shuttle train. On match days, that journey takes 45–60 minutes total; plan to leave two hours early because the trains and platforms fill quickly. Penn Station also connects to the Long Island Rail Road and Amtrak if you are arriving from elsewhere in the Northeast.
The neighborhood around Arlo NoMad is one of the less obvious things it has going for it. The Korean restaurant corridor along 32nd Street is a few blocks north. Eataly New York, one of the better food-hall options in Manhattan, is close. The stretch of Madison Avenue and Fifth Avenue around 30th–35th Street has independent restaurants, coffee shops and bars that serve a local crowd — not the inflated tourist pricing of Times Square or Rockefeller Center. Several guests specifically mention discovering restaurants near the hotel that became the best meal of their trip.
A few things to be honest about. The Bunk Room at 150 square feet is genuinely small — for one person traveling light, perfectly workable; for two people with large suitcases, it gets tight fast. Some reviews note rooms showing their age: paint scuffs, fixtures that are functional but worn, the accumulated wear of a mid-budget property that does not receive constant renovation cycles. It is not a new hotel, and the room is not going to feel like one. The NoMad neighborhood is quiet after dark on weekdays — if you are looking for a hotel surrounded by nightlife options, this is not the right street; you will need to take the subway for that.
The honest summary is this: Arlo NoMad is the smartest value in the NYC budget hotel category when neighborhood quality matters. Booking 8.1 from 2,548 reviews at $48 a night is a genuine accomplishment in Manhattan. The Flatiron Building walk, the Madison Square Park proximity, the efficient subway connections — they all hold up. If you are here for the World Cup and plan to spend your days out in the city and your nights recovering for the next match day, the money you save on the room here goes directly toward experiences worth having. If you need space, brand-new finishes, or a hotel with amenity facilities — look elsewhere in our New York list.
Summary from Booking & Agoda
- ✓ From $48/night — lowest rate for a rated property in Midtown Manhattan
- ✓ NoMad neighborhood: restaurants and bars that locals use, not just tourists
- ✓ Flatiron Building a 3-minute walk — easy photography before the crowds arrive
- ✓ N/R/W subway at 28th St connects Midtown and Downtown efficiently
- ! Bunk Room at 150 sq ft is very small — not comfortable with large luggage for two people
- ! Some reviews note rooms showing their age with worn fixtures and paint
- ✓ NoMad/Flatiron location: central, multiple subway lines within walking distance
- ✓ Industrial-chic design looks better than the price paid
- ✓ Penn Station 10-min walk for NJ Transit to MetLife Stadium — World Cup 2026
- ! Compact rooms with limited storage — not suited to travelers with multiple large bags
- ! NoMad is quiet on weekday evenings; nightlife requires taking the subway
- 💡If you need a spacious room with ample storage · The Bunk Room is 150 sq ft — tight for two people with large luggage. Upgrade to Queen Room or look at Arlo Midtown or Pod 39 for more space
- 💡If you want a recently renovated, modern-feeling room · Some reviews note worn finishes consistent with an older property. Fix: see Moxy NYC Times Square or citizenM for newer rooms
- 💡If you want nightlife options walking distance from the hotel · NoMad is quiet after dark on weeknights. You will need to take the subway to Midtown West or Lower Manhattan for bars and clubs
Heading to New York for the World Cup?
New York is a 2026 host city — see our full World Cup guide (matches, where to stay, tickets, visa) plus how to reach MetLife Stadium on match day.