Your stay — Titumir Hall
Live forecast for your dates · what's on · air quality & pollen📅 Pick your check-in & check-out above to unlock your day-by-day forecast, what's on during your stay, and live air quality & pollen for Dhaka.
The Property — Titumir Hall
Titumir Hall is a no-frills university dormitory turned guesthouse inside Dhaka University campus — think linoleum floors, swirling ceiling fans and a canteen serving thali meals at student prices. It suits budget backpackers, researchers and families who want a safe, central base with zero pretence. The lobby smells of chalk and cha, and the staff are more like hostel wardens than hotel concierges: helpful if you ask, but they won't hover.
Chronicles of Dhaka
Dhaka grew from a Mughal river port into the jute and textile capital of Bengal, then became the capital of independent Bangladesh in 1971 after the Liberation War. Its Old City still wears the 17th-century scars: narrow lanes, Lalbagh Fort, a crumbling Armenian church. Modern Dhaka punches out six lanes of traffic, rickshaws and garment factories — a megacity of 20 million that never sleeps. Culturally, it’s a raucous mix of Bengali poetry, street food and political graffiti.
Best Time to Visit
Full Dhaka guide →Best months
November to February: temperatures drop to 15-25°C, low humidity, clear skies. Perfect for Old City walking tours and rickshaw rides without drenching your shirt.
Peak / festival surge
December and January are peak tourist months (cool weather) plus Eid-ul-Fitr (dates shift, but typically March-April) when Bangladeshi families travel, pushing hotel prices up 30-50%. Budget hotels fill fast; book three months ahead.
Budget shoulder season
October and March offer decent weather (25-30°C, less rain) with thinner crowds and 20-30% lower rates. You dodge both the monsoon and the peak-season rush.
Weather & packing
June is deep into monsoon — expect daily downpours and 90% humidity. Pack a small umbrella and quick-dry walking shoes; leave denim at home (it never dries).
Live City Briefing — Dhaka
- Metro Rail Line 6 (Agargaon-Motijheel) is fully operational since late 2024 — use it to dodge traffic on the key east-west corridor. Station 'Shahbag' is a 10-minute rickshaw ride from Titumir Hall.
- The government is banning old two-stroke three-wheelers (baby taxis) from major roads from June 2026 — expect more CNG auto-rickshaws and slightly higher fares.
- Chittagong Road renovation near Kamalapur means heavy diversions. To reach the hotel, enter via Nilkhet market side, not the direct road from the station.
Your Perfect Room
✨ AI-generated · Jun 2026Before you check in to Titumir Hall, here's what to know about choosing the right room.
Best rooms to request
Ask for a room on the building's rear side (away from the main road) or at the end of a corridor to reduce street noise and foot traffic.
Rooms to avoid
Avoid rooms directly next to the lift shaft or service stairwell — they pick up clatter and mechanical hum at all hours.
Best views
In a city like Dhaka, there is rarely a dependable 'best view'. Rooms facing away from the main road or overlooking a quieter side street generally offer less dust and traffic noise.
Quietest floors
Mid- to upper floors tend to be quieter because they are further from lobby, restaurant and street-level bustle.
🔊 Noise notes
Expect some street noise during the day in most Dhaka 3-star hotels. Air-conditioner units on the roof or adjacent buildings can hum at night — ask about A/C noise when booking.
Insider tips
1. Call the hotel directly an hour before arrival to request a quiet room on a high floor — front desk staff can often be more flexible with assignment than an online booking system. 2. Bring earplugs, even in a 'quiet' room; construction and traffic in this city are often unpredictable.
- Call the hotel directly 24–48 hours before arrival and ask for a specific room type
- Add a note in your booking comments field
- Ask at check-in — front desk staff can often accommodate if a room is available
Hotel Facilities — Titumir Hall
Free at 2 Mbps (download/upload) – reliable for messaging and email but not for video streaming. No login – connects directly.
One passenger lift serves all four floors; no stairs-only sections.
Complimentary physical newspaper (The Daily Star) at reception each morning; no digital newsstand.
Check-in from 12:00 (noon); early bag drop always free if room not ready. Check-out 12:00; late check-out until 18:00 for 50% of nightly rate, subject to availability.
Free during your stay; after check-out, 100 BDT per bag per day.
Step-free entrance via a side ramp. Lift can accommodate a wheelchair, but corridors and bathroom doors are narrow – wheelchair users would find movement difficult. No adapted bathrooms.
No on-site or valet parking. Nearest public car park is a 5-minute walk (opposite New Market): 200 BDT overnight. No EV charging.
Fees, Taxes & Deposits
City / tourist tax: None
Deposit & card hold: Full advance deposit via bank transfer or cash required to confirm booking; no incidental hold at check-in (pay-as-you-go for extras).
Faith & Dietary Nearby
- Mosque: Dr. M. A. Rashid Hall Masjid, Dr. M.A. Rashid Hall, BUET, Dhaka (207 m · ~3 min walk)
- Mosque: বুয়েট কেন্দ্রীয় জামে মসজিদ (256 m · ~3 min walk)
- Mosque: Palashi Bazar Masjid, Palashi Bazar, BUET Market, Dhaka (300 m · ~4 min walk)
- Mosque: Dr. Fazle Rabbi Hall Mosque (515 m · ~6 min walk)
Local Lifestyle & Recreation
Noor Mansion — 1.5 km · ~19 min walk
Omayer hossain chowdhury Gurden — 692 m · ~9 min walk
Language Martyr Abul Barakat Memory Museum and Library, Museum, Polashi Mor, Zahir Raihan Rd, Dhaka — 390 m · ~5 min walk
Nazrul Mancha — 1.1 km · ~14 min walk
BUET Central Playground — 418 m · ~5 min walk
5-Minute Radius Essentials
সোনালী ব্যাংক এটিএম বুথ — 319 m · ~4 min walk
Nafisa Pharmacy — 608 m · ~8 min walk
Cooperative Store — 566 m · ~7 min walk
ঢাকা বিশ্ববিদ্যালয় — 1.1 km · ~14 min walk
Money & Currency
Get a travel card →Bangladeshi Taka, BDT
Use authorized money changers or bank ATMs in the city; avoid the airport and tourist bureaux for poor rates.
Cards are accepted in upscale restaurants and hotels, but cash is king for street stalls, small shops, and rickshaws.
Not expected but appreciated: 5-10% in restaurants, round up taxi/rickshaw fares, and 50-100 BDT for hotel porters.
Eat, Shop & Travel on a Budget
Cheap car hire →Instant coffee from roadside tea stalls (10-20 BDT) or filter coffee from local cafes (50-80 BDT).
A thali (rice, dal, veg curry) from a local diner: 100-150 BDT.
A main dish of biryani or kebab at a modest eatery: 150-250 BDT.
Common in Old Dhaka (eg near Chawk Bazar) for phuchka, singara, and kati rolls; avoid if hygiene is a concern.
Chain shops like Agora and Meena Bazar are widespread; local bazaars (eg New Market) are cheaper for fresh produce.
New Market and Bashundhara City Shopping Mall for affordable, conventional fashion; bargaining is expected.
CNG auto-rickshaws (shared or short ride: 30-100 BDT) and rickshaws (20-50 BDT); from airport, take a pre-paid taxi or app ride (Uber/Pathao) for around 500-800 BDT.
1. Eat at local biryani/dal-bhat joints rather than tourist spots. 2. Haggle at markets and for rickshaws. 3. Use Pathao or Uber for rides rather than hailing taxis on the street.
Emergency Contacts
Dhaka999 is the main emergency number for police, fire, and ambulance in Dhaka. For police, you can also call 01713-373378 (Dhaka Metropolitan Police control room). The tourist police helpline is 01320-120007. Save your embassy’s number too. Triage to use the 999 system: try a local SIM if your foreign one doesn’t route calls properly.
💡 Save these numbers in your phone. In life-threatening emergencies, call immediately.
Where to Eat
💡 Booking tip: For popular restaurants in Dhaka, book at least a week ahead — especially for weekend evenings and during festival season.
Your arrival at Titumir Hall
🕒 Check-in is from . Arriving earlier? Most hotels store luggage free — just ask at reception.
🧭 First things nearby: cash · সোনালী ব্যাংক এটিএম বুথ — 319 m · ~4 min walk — pharmacy · Nafisa Pharmacy — 608 m · ~8 min walk
🚐 Pre-book an airport transfer →Getting Around
Hotel Nice Look International (Moghbazar) → Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport
💡 Ask reception at booking—the hotel's driver is reliable and knows the back routes. Pay in cash just before departure; they often quote 1200 BDT but haggle to 1000.
Airport Terminal 2 → Moghbazar Bus Stop (near Hotel Nice Look)
💡 Crowded and no luggage racks—fine if you have a backpack. Get off at 'Moghbazar' stop, then walk 5 minutes north on Mouchak Road. The hotel is across from the police box.
Hotel Nice Look International (Moghbazar) → Farmgate (local transit hub)
💡 For short hops within Moghbazar, use a shared CNG—less bumpy than cycle rickshaws. From Farmgate, catch a bus to Gulistan or Motijheel. Negotiate fare before boarding; 50 BDT max for this distance.
Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport → Hotel Nice Look International (Moghbazar)
💡 Skip airport taxis with fixed rates—book Pathao or Uber from the arrivals area. Drivers often call for directions in Bengali, so share the hotel's Bengali name or map pin. Cash is preferred.
About Dhaka
Wikipedia ↗Dhaka ( DAH-kə or DAK-ə; Bengali: ঢাকা, romanized: Ḍhākā, pronounced [ˈɖʱaka] ), formerly known as Dacca, is the capital and largest city of Bangladesh. With an estimated population of 36.6 million, Dhaka is the second largest city by population in the world, and is widely considered to be the most...
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the best rooms at Titumir Hall?
Ask for a room on the building's rear side (away from the main road) or at the end of a corridor to reduce street noise and foot traffic.
Which rooms should I avoid at Titumir Hall?
Avoid rooms directly next to the lift shaft or service stairwell — they pick up clatter and mechanical hum at all hours.
Is Titumir Hall noisy?
Expect some street noise during the day in most Dhaka 3-star hotels. Air-conditioner units on the roof or adjacent buildings can hum at night — ask about A/C noise when booking.
Which rooms have the best views at Titumir Hall?
In a city like Dhaka, there is rarely a dependable 'best view'. Rooms facing away from the main road or overlooking a quieter side street generally offer less dust and traffic noise.
What are insider tips for staying at Titumir Hall?
1. Call the hotel directly an hour before arrival to request a quiet room on a high floor — front desk staff can often be more flexible with assignment than an online booking system. 2. Bring earplugs, even in a 'quiet' room; construction and traffic in this city are often unpredictable.
What time is check-in at Titumir Hall?
Check-in at Titumir Hall is from null. Check-out is by null.
Does Titumir Hall have Wi-Fi?
Free at 2 Mbps (download/upload) – reliable for messaging and email but not for video streaming. No login – connects directly.
Is there a city or tourist tax at Titumir Hall?
None
Where can I eat cheaply near Titumir Hall?
A thali (rice, dal, veg curry) from a local diner: 100-150 BDT.
What is the cheapest way to get around from Titumir Hall?
CNG auto-rickshaws (shared or short ride: 30-100 BDT) and rickshaws (20-50 BDT); from airport, take a pre-paid taxi or app ride (Uber/Pathao) for around 500-800 BDT.
When is the best time to visit Dhaka?
November to February: temperatures drop to 15-25°C, low humidity, clear skies. Perfect for Old City walking tours and rickshaw rides without drenching your shirt.
Top Attractions in Dhaka
💡 Best visited at dawn to see the gazebo and monument in quiet light. Avoid after dark as it gets rowdy.
💡 Pop into the nearby TSC (Teacher-Student Centre) canteen for cheap chai and snacks. Watch your step—potholes are common.
💡 Bring cash—no cards accepted. The top-floor balcony has a great view of the Buriganga River, but check tide times for best photos.
💡 Visit early morning to avoid crowds and heat. The on-site museum is included in the ticket and worth a quick look.
💡 Go on a weekday for near solitude. The orchid collection is impressive for such a tiny space.