- I stayed in a Yotelair hotel inside the Istanbul Airport for about $230 during my 15-hour layover.
- The hotel was located among the airport terminal's luxury stores, restaurants, and gift shops.
- Take a look inside the windowless 140-square-foot hotel room.
Waking up before sunrise to wait an hour in an airport security screening line and even longer at the gate is a miserable modern human experience, at least for me (a big complainer).
So when I had the opportunity to book a room in the airside Yotelair hotel during my 15-hour overnight layover in Istanbul, I figured it would be a worthwhile time saver. I would pay anything — in this case $230 — to skip the boring wait inside airports. Plus, a sleepover inside an airport terminal sounded fun (in a "Night at the Museum" kind of way).
But it came at a non-monetary cost: My 140-square-foot hotel room might have been one of the smallest and most expensive cost-per-square-foot rooms I've stayed in.
Let's take a look around my accommodations for the night.
This was no typical Yotel hotel you might have seen in various major cities.
Instead, it's located inside the Istanbul International Airport by the gates for international flights.
And you can't book a room unless you have a boarding pass for said flight, according to the hotel.
Source: Yotel
So if you're staying for a layover, there's no need to go out and back through airport security just to check into the hotel.
And the morning after, all you have to do is walk out of the hotel and head straight to your gate.
It's a convenient way to spend a long layover inside one of the world's flashiest airports with rows of stores like Hermes, Cartier, and Saint Laurent.
But don't expect a hotel as glamorous as the surrounding stores.
The Yotelair is perched at the end of a wide hallway that branches off from all of these airside luxury shops, dining venues, and gift stores.
And the hotel itself was pretty bare bones despite being located off of a robust shopping center.
Inside, the small lobby had a convenient flight information display system, vending machines, and a separate lounge available to guests for almost $50 or to travelers who aren't staying at the hotel for $71.
My room, located on the second floor, was about as naked as the lobby for travelers who didn't want to dish out this extra cash.
My "premium queen" room — the smallest 140-square-foot option — was bleakly modern with white walls and decor reminiscent of a Japanese capsule hotel.
Source: Yotel