Radisson is running a summer hotel sale with up to 35% off stays, and the best bit is the timing: it covers July, August, and early September, when decent hotel discounts are usually harder to find.
The offer is worth a look if you’re planning a summer city break, especially for London, Europe, or one of Radisson’s resort-style hotels. It isn’t a blind-book bargain, though. The discount depends on the hotel, dates, and room type, and the cancellation policy follows the prepaid terms of each hotel.
That makes this a useful sale for fixed plans, not a great one if you’re still moving dates around. If you know where and when you want to go, it could knock a meaningful chunk off a summer hotel bill.
What you get
- Up to 35% off participating Radisson hotels
- Book by 28 May
- Stays from 1 July to 10 September, where available
- London hotels are valid from 24 July to 10 September
- Room-only and breakfast-inclusive rates are included
- Radisson Rewards members earn 3,000 bonus points per stay when booking direct
Is it worth it?
For a summer hotel sale, up to 35% is strong enough to check. It is especially useful for school-holiday-adjacent dates, London weekends, and European city breaks where prices can climb quickly.
The catch is flexibility. Radisson says the cancellation policy follows the prepaid terms of each hotel, so you need to check the rate rules before paying. If your plans are firm, that may be fine. If not, compare the sale rate with a cancellable option before booking.
Prices and availability change by hotel and date. When we checked on 13 May 2026, the official sale terms were live, with the booking deadline, stay window, and exclusions above.
How to book
Use the Book Now button below to open Radisson’s summer sale page. Search your destination and dates, then compare the sale rate against the normal flexible rate before you pay.
Before booking, check whether breakfast is included, whether the rate is prepaid, and what cancellation terms apply to that hotel. The sale does not include Park Plaza Cardiff, and blackout dates may apply.


Kate Acaster is Chief Editor at Flight Tribe. She writes about practical travel planning, budget airlines, baggage rules, city breaks, beach holidays and good hotels that do not cost daft money.
Kate has travelled through Europe, South America and beyond, usually with a notebook, a half-formed plan and a strong opinion on airport snacks. At Flight Tribe, her work focuses on helping UK travellers understand what is included, what costs extra, and whether a trip is worth booking at the price shown.
How Kate works
Kate checks the details that can change the value of a trip, including cabin-bag rules, airline fees, hotel location, seasonality, travel dates and booking conditions. She is especially interested in offers that look useful on the surface but need a proper reader-first check before they are worth recommending.
Editorial standards
Flight Tribe covers deals and travel advice for readers first. Affiliate links do not decide whether an offer is worth writing about.
For more about how the site works, read:
