Thyme


Occupying a cluster of 17th-century stone buildings around Southrop Manor in the Cotswolds, Thyme is a 31-room boutique hotel that functions more like a self-contained hamlet than a conventional property. Scoring 92.5 points in La Liste's Top Hotels 2026 ranking, it combines a flagship barn restaurant, a village pub, a cookery school, and a spring-fed pool within walking distance of each other, with rates from around $558 per night.
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- Address
- Thyme, Southrop Manor, Southrop, Gloucestershire GL7 3NX
- Phone
- +44 1367 850174
- Website
- thyme.co.uk

A Manor Restored, Not Reinvented
The Cotswolds has long attracted a particular style of hospitality: old stone, low ceilings, open fires, and the expectation that luxury will wear its age well rather than disguise it. Within that tradition, the design-led rural retreat has split into two broad camps. One route takes a historic shell and fills it with high-contrast contemporary interiors. The other works with the grain of the original architecture, letting the patina of 17th-century stonework carry most of the atmosphere. Thyme, a 4-star hotel in Southrop, Gloucestershire, sits firmly in the second camp, and the restraint of that decision is what gives the property its particular quality of place.
The estate was restored building by building rather than in a single wholesale intervention. That phased approach shows in the texture of the result: a cookery school arrived first, then the hotel itself, and the various structures on the grounds (the old barn, the village pub known as The Swan, and the principal manor) were each adapted to a specific use rather than absorbed into a single homogeneous whole. The visual effect, approaching across the Gloucestershire fields, is less resort than village: a loose cluster of honey-coloured stone buildings around which 31 rooms are distributed, not stacked.
The Architecture Does the Work
What separates Thyme from country-house hotels that merely occupy old buildings is that the architecture is treated as a live argument rather than a backdrop. The old barn conversion that now houses the flagship Ox Barn restaurant is the clearest example: barn conversions are common enough in the Cotswolds, but the decision to make this the centrepiece dining space rather than a secondary function room signals a deliberate inversion of the usual hierarchy. The barn's bones, its scale and structure, set the terms for everything that happens inside it. The Swan, by contrast, operates as the village pub it has always been, with a lower register of formality that allows guests to move between the two dining settings without either feeling like a compromise.
The rooms themselves vary considerably in footprint, layout, and configuration, which is itself an architectural choice. Standardisation was declined in favour of specificity: rolltop baths appear in multiple rooms, and a small number of freestanding cottages sit at a remove from the main cluster, offering more floor area and a greater degree of separation from the rest of the estate. This variation means the 31 rooms do not occupy a single tier but instead represent a spread of formats, from manor-adjacent rooms with a closer connection to the main building's social rhythms, to the cottages that function more like private residences within the grounds.
What the Estate Offers Beyond the Rooms
Country-house hotels at this price point are increasingly expected to deliver a programme of activities and facilities that makes leaving the property optional. Thyme meets that expectation with a spread that covers most bases without overloading the grounds. The Meadow Spa handles wellness. The Orchid House, a spring-fed swimming pool, operates during the summer months, its seasonal restriction making it feel more like a feature of the estate's natural calendar than a standard amenity. A tennis court sits somewhere on the grounds. The Baa Bar adds a further social node beyond the two dining venues. The cookery school, the property's original public-facing offering, remains part of the estate's identity and positions Thyme among a small number of British rural hotels where food education is embedded in the experience rather than offered as an add-on excursion.
La Liste's 2026 ranking awarded Thyme 92.5 points, placing it in the recognised upper tier of boutique rural properties in the United Kingdom. Rates are positioned at about $619 per night. For comparison, readers looking at the broader UK hotel market in this tier might also consider Gleneagles in Auchterarder or, at the more urban end of the spectrum, Claridge's in London.
Getting There and Practical Notes
Thyme sits at Southrop Manor, Southrop, Gloucestershire GL7 3NX, in the eastern Cotswolds between Lechlade and Cirencester. Rooms at 31 keys fill across the estate's various buildings, and the distribution of those rooms across different formats and structures means booking early for the cottage options makes sense.
Burts Hotel in Melrose, Monachyle Mhor in Stirling, Langass Lodge in the Outer Hebrides, and Dun Aluinn in Aberfeldy. Those looking at city alternatives in the same quality bracket might consider Hope Street Hotel in Liverpool, King Street Townhouse in Manchester, or Glasgow Grosvenor Hotel. Further afield, Aman Venice and The Fifth Avenue Hotel in New York demonstrate how the same design-led, historically grounded approach translates to international contexts. Other UK coastal and regional properties in the same conversation include Hell Bay Hotel on Bryher, Lifeboat Inn in St Ives, Avon Gorge by Hotel du Vin in Bristol, and Drakes Hotel in Brighton.
Fast Comparison
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ThymeThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Cluster of honey-stone cottages, manor houses, barns, and pub in a serene Cotswolds village estate. | $$$$ | Michelin 2 Key | |
| Whatley Manor Hotel and Spa | Restored 19th-century Cotswold manor house with Arts and Crafts gardens | $$$$ | Michelin 2 Key | Easton Grey |
| Gravetye Manor | Historic English country house hotel combining 16th-century Elizabethan architecture with contemporary luxury and refined hospitality. | $$$$ | Michelin 2 Key | West Hoathly |
| Lime Wood | Contemporary country house hotel blending classical structure with modern twists inspired by the New Forest. | $$$$ | Michelin 2 Key | Lyndhurst |
| Saltmoore | Stylish Victorian-inspired luxury estate in secluded woodland. | $$$$ | Michelin 2 Key | Sandsend |
| Haymarket Hotel, Firmdale Hotels | Elegant design-forward boutique hotel blending classic London elegance with contemporary flair. | $$$$ | Michelin 2 Key | Charing Cross |
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