Skip to Main Content
Luxury Urban Hotel Blending Ottoman And Asian Influences
← Collection
Istanbul, Turkey

Shangri-La Bosphorus, Istanbul

Size186 rooms
GroupShangri-La Hotels and Resorts
NoiseQuiet
CapacityLarge
Michelin
Virtuoso
Travel + Leisure
Conde Nast
La Liste
Forbes

A 186-room property occupying a historic 1930s building on the European shore of the Bosphorus, between Dolmabahçe Palace and the Maritime Museum in Beşiktaş. Ranked #5 in Condé Nast's Best Hotels (2025) and awarded 94 points by La Liste Top Hotels (2026), it combines some of Istanbul's most spacious guest rooms with Cantonese dining, a CHI spa, and three hammams.

Pearl is the En Primeur Club membership app — saves, bookings, and concierge access live there. Same editors, same standards.

Shangri-La Bosphorus, Istanbul hotel in Istanbul, Turkey
About

A Historic Building on the Strait's Edge

On the European shore of the Bosphorus, the 30-kilometre stretch of water that has defined Istanbul's identity for millennia, a 1930s building sits between two of the city's most significant landmarks: Dolmabahçe Palace to one side, the Maritime Museum to the other. The building's history shapes everything about what the Bosphorus has become: six of its twelve storeys are built underground specifically to preserve the historic façade, and the hotel ranks as the second-tallest structure on this stretch of coastline, after the palace itself. When opened this property on May 11, 2013, it marked the Hong Kong-based group's first entry into Turkey, and the choice of location was not incidental. The Beşiktaş district, a dense transit and commercial hub, places the hotel within walking distance of Istanbul's financial quarter and the Istanbul Convention and Exhibition Centre, a positioning that balances Bosphorus access with functional urban connectivity.

That context matters because the Bosphorus-front hotel tier in Istanbul is genuinely competitive. Properties like the Çırağan Palace Kempinski (itself a former Ottoman palace), the Four Seasons at the Bosphorus, and the Fairmont Quasar all occupy the same premium waterfront bracket. What separates them is often the combination of architecture, room scale, and the specific character of their dining and cultural programming. The 's answer to that question begins with a building that carries its own historical weight, and a design approach that treats it accordingly.

What the Building Holds

The three-storey domed atrium is the architectural pivot of the interior. At its centre hangs a 59-foot-tall silk painting, The Garden of Peach Blossoms, commissioned specifically for this property. The work is not decorative afterthought: it anchors a collection of more than 1,000 European and Asian artworks distributed across the hotel, a scope that places the building closer to a private museum than a conventional hospitality interior. High ceilings, marble floors, and chandeliers form the backdrop, while the curatorial logic runs across Turkish, European, and Asian reference points — a deliberate reflection of Istanbul's position at the intersection of those traditions.

Every arriving guest receives a welcome tea service in their room, a small detail that signals something about the operational philosophy. On the bedside table, a copy of James Hilton's Lost Horizon — the novel that introduced the word into common use , is available in both English and Turkish editions, a gesture that connects the property to the wider mythology of the brand while grounding it in its specific location.

Rooms Positioned Against Istanbul's Waterfront Tier

The 186 rooms divide into 169 guest rooms, each a minimum of 42 square metres (453 square feet), and 17 suites ranging from approximately 80 square metres to 366 square metres. The guest room floor area is among the largest in Istanbul's luxury tier, a claim that has practical meaning in a city where premium properties sometimes compress room sizes to maximise waterfront unit counts. Bathrooms average 10 square metres, with separate tubs across all accommodations. Suite bathrooms are stocked with Bulgari products and feature marble finishes; most suites include private terraces with Bosphorus-facing orientation.

The Suite, at nearly 4,000 square feet, is the only multi-bedroom accommodation in the building, with two bedrooms and three terraces. For guests prioritising water views, the majority of rooms carry at least a partial Bosphorus sightline, with suites positioned to maximise the strait's expanse. Those preferring the city's skyline will find the cityscape-facing rooms quieter and visually dense with Istanbul's European-shore rooftops. The property received recognition in Condé Nast's Leading Hotels ranking at number five for 2025, and La Liste awarded it 94 points in their 2026 Leading Hotels list , external calibrations that place it within a defined peer set of Istanbul's waterfront properties.

Dining: Two Distinct Programs

Hotel runs two separate dining propositions rather than a single consolidated restaurant. IST TOO functions as the all-day dining room, with a format that spans breakfast, Sunday brunch, and a dedicated all-you-can-eat sushi service on Friday and Saturday evenings. The Bosphorus views from this space are central to the offer, and the Asian-Western combination reflects the group's standard approach to all-day programming , practical for business travellers, broad enough for leisure guests.

Shang Palace is the more focused proposition: a Cantonese restaurant with private dining room capacity, a main dining area, and intimate booth seating. Executive Chef Tony Sum leads the kitchen, producing dishes that include double-boiled quail soup with morel mushrooms, traditional Peking duck, and braised scallops with garlic. Cantonese cooking at this level in Istanbul occupies a narrow niche , the city's Chinese dining scene is limited, and a dedicated kitchen with credentialed Cantonese expertise addresses a gap that most Istanbul luxury hotels do not attempt to fill.

The Lobby Lounge stocks 101 varieties of tea, a number that functions as a programmatic statement for a brand whose identity is rooted in Asian hospitality traditions. Le Bar rounds out the beverage options, offering cocktails alongside evening entertainment in a format that sits closer to a sophisticated hotel lounge than a standalone bar concept. For broader dining context across the city, our full Istanbul restaurants guide covers the neighbourhood-level picture.

CHI, The Spa and Physical Infrastructure

CHI, The Spa is 's signature wellness brand, applied here with eight private treatment rooms and three hammams. The inclusion of hammam facilities is a direct response to Istanbul's deeply embedded bathhouse tradition , hammams have been central to the city's social and physical culture for centuries, and a luxury hotel on the Bosphorus that ignores that tradition is making an active choice to remain exterior to it. The CHI programme adds Chinese healing therapies alongside the hammam offer, a combination that parallels the hotel's broader East-West curatorial logic. The health club carries current fitness equipment, and an indoor heated pool is available year-round. A beauty salon and luxury retail boutique complete the spa floor's amenities.

Planning Your Stay

The hotel sits in Beşiktaş, one of Istanbul's most connected districts. The Beşiktaş Ferry Terminal is a short walk from the entrance, making the Bosphorus ferry system , one of the city's most practical and rewarding ways to cross between the European and Asian shores , immediately accessible. For arrivals requiring a particular entrance, the hotel offers a house Rolls-Royce transfer service from the airport, or for city touring. Beşiktaş connects well to the tram network and to key cultural sites on both the European and Asian sides of the strait.

Those comparing Istanbul's premium Bosphorus tier should consider the range of options across the city and beyond. On the European waterfront, properties like Address Istanbul and Ajia occupy different positions in the luxury spectrum. Design-led properties such as 10 Karakoy and Aliée Istanbul serve a different architectural sensibility, while AJWA Sultanahmet and Barcelo Hotel Istanbul position themselves closer to the Old City's heritage concentration. For stays elsewhere in Turkey, MACAKIZI BODRUM in Bodrum Muğla, Argos in Cappadocia in Nevşehir, Ajwa Cappadocia in Ürgüp, and Hillside Beach Club in Fethiye each represent distinct regional alternatives. Coastal options include Allium Bodrum Resort & Spa, D Maris Bay in Hisarönü, Ahãma in Göcek, and Alavya in Alaçatı. Further options include Bebek Hotel by The Stay, Akbıyık Cd., Renaissance Izmir Hotel, Hu of Cappadocia in Uçhisar, Kempinski Hotel The Dome Belek in Antalya, Crowne Plaza Ankara, and Casa Lavanda Boutique Hotel in Şile. For international reference points in the same upper-tier bracket, Aman New York, The Fifth Avenue Hotel, and Aman Venice offer useful calibration across different city contexts.

Frequently asked questions

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Elegant
  • Sophisticated
  • Opulent
Best For
  • Honeymoon
  • Romantic Getaway
  • Business Trip
Experience
  • Panoramic View
  • Rooftop Pool
  • Historic Building
Amenities
  • Wifi
  • Pool
  • Spa
  • Fitness Center
  • Room Service
  • Concierge
  • Business Center
  • Valet Parking
Views
  • Waterfront
  • Skyline
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelQuiet
CapacityLarge
Rooms186
Check-In15:00
Check-Out12:00
PetsAllowed

Gracefully calm interiors with soothing cool tones, chandelier-accented rooms inspired by Ottoman glamour and Asian design, creating a serene and elegant atmosphere.