St. Regis London opened its reservation system last week for an October 2026 debut, three years behind the property's original 2023 target. The 194-room hotel occupies a paired Victorian façade on the Reeves Mews corner of Mayfair, a block from Mount Street's Audley Square. Marriott International has not disclosed room rates or specific opening-week inventory, but the property's booking engine now accepts dates from 1 October 2026 forward.
The delay sequence matters. The project first surfaced in 2019 as a conversion of two adjoining Grade II-listed buildings. Construction permits arrived in early 2021. By mid-2022, Marriott was guiding toward a 2023 launch. That slipped to 2024, then 2025, with no public explanation beyond "construction complexity." The reservation-system activation suggests Marriott now has contractor line-of-sight to a firm completion date, a threshold luxury operators typically require twelve months before opening to lock group bookings and secure opening-season press.
The timing carries weight. London's luxury room supply tightened through 2024, with the Chancery Rosewood and Peninsula both opening to sustained ADR above £950. Claridge's announced a £100 million refurbishment in January 2025, pulling inventory off-market through Q3 2026. St. Regis London enters a window where Mayfair occupancy models assume 92% fill rates among five-star product, per STR's Q4 2024 London luxury segment report. Marriott is effectively pre-selling into a seller's market, a reversal from the 2023 guidance period when London luxury demand was still recovering post-COVID baseline.
What allocators should watch: whether Marriott indexes room rates to Peninsula London's £1,100 opening benchmark or undercuts to drive fill during the ramp. The property's spa and restaurant anchor tenants have not been announced; those partnerships typically close six months before opening and signal whether Marriott is positioning the asset as a local social hub or a pure rooms play. The October timing also places opening ahead of London's 2027 hotel development wave, when 1,400 luxury rooms are scheduled to enter Mayfair and Belgravia, per Lodging Econometrics.
The reservation activation without a formal rate release is the tell. Marriott is banking on Bonvoy member demand and corporate travel desk bookings to establish a baseline before publishing BAR. If the property holds that posture through Q2 2025, it signals confidence in forward UK luxury demand and removes pricing risk from the equation.