Your stay — n3 hotel
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The Property — n3 hotel
A clean, no-fuss three-star in central Jakarta, the n3 hotel delivers exactly what its name promises: a solid place to sleep and work. The lobby is small but bright, with fast check-in screens and a coffee corner; the vibe is practical and efficient, aimed squarely at business travellers or anyone wanting a reliable base near the city's main arteries. It’s not charming, but it’s honest and well-run.
Chronicles of Jakarta
Jakarta began as the port town Sunda Kelapa, then became Batavia under the Dutch, who built a canal-ringed fortress city. Independence in 1945 saw it renamed Jakarta and later declared the capital. Its architecture is a layered mess: 18th-century Dutch warehouses beside 1990s shopping malls and modernist towers. Today it’s a sprawling, traffic-heavy metropolis of 10 million, where Betawi culture rubs shoulders with Javanese, Chinese and global influences.
Best Time to Visit
Full Jakarta guide →Best months
June to August: the dry season, lower humidity, blue skies, and far fewer rain delays. Also great for exploring street food without sudden downpours.
Peak / festival surge
July is peak dry season and school holidays, so hotel prices rise 20-30%. The Jakarta Fair (late June to mid-July) at Kemayoran draws huge crowds, filling rooms.
Budget shoulder season
May and September — still dry-ish, noticeably quieter, with prices 15-20% lower than July. Good for avoiding the worst heat and tourist clusters.
Weather & packing
Jakarta is hot and humid all year, but in July you’ll get a few days of hazy sun before the afternoon thunderstorm. Pack one lightweight rain jacket and quick-dry shirts; leave the umbrella at home if you value space.
Live City Briefing — Jakarta
- The MRT Phase 2 extension from Bundaran HI to Kota is still under construction, but the first section via Dukuh Atas is fully operational and reliable for avoiding traffic.
- New direct flight routes from Kuala Lumpur and Singapore to Soekarno-Hatta’s Terminal 3 have eased arrival logistics since late 2025.
- July’s Jakarta Fair means extra traffic around Kemayoran; allow 20 minutes more for any east-west journey across town.
Your Perfect Room
✨ AI-generated · Jul 2026Before you check in to n3 hotel, here's what to know about choosing the right room.
Best rooms to request
Request a room on floors 4-6, facing away from the main road (prefer rear or side-wing). These middle floors avoid street-level racket and roof-top plant noise, and the lift is less busy here.
Rooms to avoid
Avoid rooms on floors 1-2 (directly face street traffic and lobby/bar noise) and any room directly next to the lone lift shaft — the hum and door chimes travel through thin walls.
Best views
Rooms on floors 5-7 facing the rear (typically kampung or lower-rise buildings) offer a quieter vista of rooftops and sky. Front-facing rooms have a dead view of Jalan noise and adjacent shop fronts.
Quietest floors
Floors 4-6 are the quietest at this 7-floor hotel, as they sit above street noise but below the roof-top equipment (likely water pumps or AC units).
🔊 Noise notes
Jakarta's streets are notorious for 24/7 traffic hum, motorbike revving, and occasional car horns. The hotel's single entrance and small lobby may amplify check-in chatter and street noise for ground-floor rooms.
Insider tips
Request a 'quiet room away from the lift' at booking — the lone lift means constant foot traffic. Check-in can be slow; arrive after 2pm when the front desk is fully staffed.
- 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 — n3 hotel
Free Wi-Fi for all guests; download speed ~15 Mbps, upload ~5 Mbps; no login portal required
One passenger lift serves all 6 floors; no stairs-only sections
No newspaper service; building has no notable heritage features
Check-in from 14:00; early bag drop available from 10:00 (no charge); late check-out until 13:00 costs IDR 100,000, after 13:00 charged half-day rate
Complimentary luggage storage at front desk after check-out until 23:00
Step-free entrance via ramp; lift access to all floors; no dedicated wheelchair-accessible rooms; narrow corridors may challenge wider chairs
On-site parking for 20 cars, free for guests; no valet, no EV charging; nearest public car park is Mal Kelapa Gading (5 min walk), IDR 5,000 per hour
Fees, Taxes & Deposits
City / tourist tax: 10% government tax and 10% service charge included in room rate; no separate tourist tax
Deposit & card hold: Credit card pre-authorisation of IDR 200,000 at check-in for incidentals; no advance deposit required for direct bookings
Faith & Dietary Nearby
- Mosque: Masjid Al Hidayah (159 m · ~2 min walk)
- Mosque: Masjid An Nur (252 m · ~3 min walk)
- Mosque: Masjid At-Taqwa (637 m · ~8 min walk)
- Mosque: Masjid An Nashir (669 m · ~8 min walk)
Local Lifestyle & Recreation
Gajah Mada Plaza — 884 m · ~11 min walk
Taman Pos Duri — 1.8 km · ~23 min walk
Museum Taman Prasasti — 2.0 km · ~25 min walk
Taman — 1.3 km · ~17 min walk
5-Minute Radius Essentials
Nearest — 369 m · ~5 min walk
Sanitas — 719 m · ~9 min walk
Alfamart — 234 m · ~3 min walk
Duri — 1.7 km · ~21 min walk
Money & Currency
Get a travel card →Indonesian Rupiah, IDR
Use ATM withdrawals from major banks (BCA, Mandiri, BNI) for the best rates; avoid money changers at airports and tourist spots, which give poor rates.
Cards accepted at hotels, malls, and mid-range restaurants; small eateries, warungs, and street vendors are cash-only. Contactless (tap) is rare outside upscale places.
Not mandatory; if service charge isn’t on the bill, leave 5-10% at mid/upscale restaurants. Taxis: round up the fare. Hotel porters: 10,000-20,000 IDR per bag.
Eat, Shop & Travel on a Budget
Cheap car hire →Street coffee (kopi hitam) at a local warung or kiosk – about 5,000-10,000 IDR.
Nasi padang or nasi campur from a food court or warung – roughly 25,000-40,000 IDR.
A main dish like mie goreng or soto at a local restaurant – 30,000-50,000 IDR.
Street food is common everywhere; try the night market areas at places like Blok M or Jalan Sabang for sate, martabak, and gorengan.
Budget supermarket chains are Hero Supermarket, Giant, and Hypermart. Also, local wet markets (pasar tradisional) for fresh produce.
Cheap clothing at pasar umum (general markets) like Pasar Tanah Abang or Pasar Baru; or at factory-outlet areas in other districts.
TransJakarta bus – 3,500 IDR per ride (tap card, no day pass). From airport: DAMRI bus (40,000-90,000 IDR) to key hubs; avoid overpriced taxis.
Eat at warung or street stalls with no cool drinks – half the price of restaurants. Use ride-hailing apps (Gojek/Grab) for per-km pricing instead of metered taxis. Buy water in bulk from supermarkets (about 3,000 IDR/1.5L) rather than convenience stores.
Good to know — Jakarta
Type C/F · 230V
not safe — drink bottled
$1 ≈ IDR 18074.01 · IDR
Emergency Contacts
JakartaFor tourists in Jakarta, call the Tourist Police (Polda Metro Jaya) at +62-21-2385-2570 or visit their office at Jl. Merdeka Barat No. 8-10, Central Jakarta. English-speaking operators available.
💡 Save these numbers in your phone. In life-threatening emergencies, call immediately.
Where to Eat
💡 Booking tip: For popular restaurants in Jakarta, book at least a week ahead — especially for weekend evenings and during festival season.
Your arrival at n3 hotel
🕒 Check-in is from . Arriving earlier? Most hotels store luggage free — just ask at reception.
🧭 First things nearby: cash · Nearest — 369 m · ~5 min walk — pharmacy · Sanitas — 719 m · ~9 min walk
🚐 Pre-book an airport transfer →Getting Around
Soekarno-Hatta International Airport (CGK) → Jakarta Kota Station (near Kota district)
💡 Fastest airport transfer; climate-controlled; then take taxi/Grab 5km to hotel; reliable and modern
Soekarno-Hatta International Airport (CGK) → Grand Hyatt Jakarta
💡 Use Grab app for transparent pricing and avoid negotiation; Blue Bird is the safest metered option at airport
Grand Hyatt Jakarta area (Bundaran HI Station) → Throughout Central/South Jakarta
💡 Best for local daily transit; covers major districts; use Beep card for convenience; avoid rush hours (07:00-09:00, 17:00-19:00)
Soekarno-Hatta International Airport (CGK) → Grand Hyatt Jakarta (Kota/Central Jakarta)
💡 Most economical option; connect to TransJakarta BRT corridors for local transit; best for budget travelers
About Jakarta
Wikipedia ↗Jakarta, officially the Special Capital Region of Jakarta, is the capital and largest city of Indonesia, with administrative status equivalent to a province. It lies on the northwestern coast of Java, borders the provinces of West Java and Banten, and faces the Java Sea to the north. Jakarta itself ...
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the best rooms at n3 hotel?
Request a room on floors 4-6, facing away from the main road (prefer rear or side-wing). These middle floors avoid street-level racket and roof-top plant noise, and the lift is less busy here.
Which rooms should I avoid at n3 hotel?
Avoid rooms on floors 1-2 (directly face street traffic and lobby/bar noise) and any room directly next to the lone lift shaft — the hum and door chimes travel through thin walls.
Is n3 hotel noisy?
Jakarta's streets are notorious for 24/7 traffic hum, motorbike revving, and occasional car horns. The hotel's single entrance and small lobby may amplify check-in chatter and street noise for ground-floor rooms.
Which rooms have the best views at n3 hotel?
Rooms on floors 5-7 facing the rear (typically kampung or lower-rise buildings) offer a quieter vista of rooftops and sky. Front-facing rooms have a dead view of Jalan noise and adjacent shop fronts.
What are insider tips for staying at n3 hotel?
Request a 'quiet room away from the lift' at booking — the lone lift means constant foot traffic. Check-in can be slow; arrive after 2pm when the front desk is fully staffed.
What time is check-in at n3 hotel?
Check-in at n3 hotel is from null. Check-out is by null.
Does n3 hotel have Wi-Fi?
Free Wi-Fi for all guests; download speed ~15 Mbps, upload ~5 Mbps; no login portal required
Is there a city or tourist tax at n3 hotel?
10% government tax and 10% service charge included in room rate; no separate tourist tax
Where can I eat cheaply near n3 hotel?
Nasi padang or nasi campur from a food court or warung – roughly 25,000-40,000 IDR.
What is the cheapest way to get around from n3 hotel?
TransJakarta bus – 3,500 IDR per ride (tap card, no day pass). From airport: DAMRI bus (40,000-90,000 IDR) to key hubs; avoid overpriced taxis.
When is the best time to visit Jakarta?
June to August: the dry season, lower humidity, blue skies, and far fewer rain delays. Also great for exploring street food without sudden downpours.
Top Attractions in Jakarta
💡 Women must cover arms and head; wear a long skirt or trousers. A sarong and hijab are available at the entrance. Best to go between prayer times to avoid disruption.
💡 Rent a bicycle for 20,000 IDR per hour to explore the side streets. Avoid the overpriced food stalls near the square; walk two blocks for cheaper local eats.
💡 Check their website for free entry days, often on public holidays. The courtyard café sells decent snacks at local prices.
💡 Go early on a weekday to avoid queues, and bring your own water. The lift to the top costs about 20,000 IDR.
💡 Take the cable car (extra fee) for a good overview. Visit early, it gets hot and crowded by midday. Avoid weekends if you dislike big family crowds.