🇵🇹 Lisboa, Portugal
Ohmm.
📍 20, Largo do Terreiro de Trigo, Lisboa
Photo: official website
Your stay — Ohmm.
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 Lisboa.
The Property — Ohmm.
Ohmm is a compact, design-forward 3-star in Baixa, all clean lines and bold pineapple-yellow accents against concrete walls. The lobby feels like a co-working lounge crossed with a photography gallery — pastel sofas, a self-check-in kiosk, and a coffee machine that runs 24/7. It’s for the urban minimalist who values location and a good night’s sleep over doormen and turndown chocolates. Ideal for solo travellers or couples who plan to spend most of their time on foot exploring the grid streets outside.
Chronicles of Lisboa
Lisbon was founded by Phoenicians and later fortified by the Romans, but its golden age arrived during the Age of Discovery, when ships loaded with spices and gold returned from Africa, Asia and Brazil. The 1755 earthquake levelled most of the lower city, and the Marquis of Pombal rebuilt it on a revolutionary orthogonal grid — the world’s first seismically engineered, Enlightenment-era neighbourhood. That district, Baixa, remains the city’s geometric heart, while the hillsides still bear medieval, Moorish-influenced alleys. Today, Lisbon is a sun-bleached capital of tile-covered buildings, melancholic fado music, and a tech-startup scene that has globalised its cafés and co-working spaces.
Best Time to Visit
Full Lisboa guide →Best months
May, June and September: warm sun (23-28°C), long evenings, and fewer crowds than July and August. Most outdoor terraces and miradouros are at their best without the peak-season crush.
Peak / festival surge
July and August: coastal resorts and city hotels sell out 6-8 weeks ahead. Festa de Santo António (12-13 June) and Santo António festivities attract street-party crowds; Lisbon’s Festas dos Santos Populares run through all of June. Expect hotel prices at 180-250% of shoulder-season rates.
Budget shoulder season
March-April and October: mild 15-20°C, low humidity, big discounts (30-50% off peak). Fewer tourists, no queue at the Belém tower, and you can still comfortably sit outside for a pastel de nata.
Weather & packing
Lisbon in July is hot and dry, but the Atlantic breeze can drop temperatures 8-10°C after sunset. Pack layers: a linen shirt, a light cotton cardigan, and always a solid pair of walking shoes — the city’s cobbles, hills and tram tracks ruin flimsy soles.
Live City Briefing — Lisboa
- Lisbon’s Metro is expanding the Red Line to Estrela (2026 target: planned but likely delayed); check for station closures near Baixa-Chiado this July as construction continues.
- The new Rua Augusta pedestrianisation trial is in place until October — expect more street performers and restaurant spill-out seating, but also occasional blocked access for deliveries until mid-morning.
- Lisbon City Council has banned new short-term rental licences in 13 parishes (including Santa Maria Maior, which covers Ohmm’s location) — a growing number of illegal flats may push demand onto hotels like Ohmm this summer.
Your Perfect Room
✨ AI-generated · Jul 2026Before you check in to Ohmm., here's what to know about choosing the right room.
Best rooms to request
Request a room on the 3rd or 4th floor at the back of the building (facing away from Largo do Terreiro de Trigo) to minimise street noise from the square. These floors are high enough to avoid ground-level bustle but still within the reach of the lift (if one exists; typical for a 3-star Lisbon hotel).
Rooms to avoid
Avoid ground-floor rooms or those on the 1st floor facing the street. They will catch direct noise from the largo (a small square often used by delivery vans and pedestrians). Also avoid rooms next to the lift shaft — older buildings can transmit motor sounds to adjacent rooms.
Best views
Rooms at the front on floors 3 or 4 offer a view over Largo do Terreiro de Trigo, a small square with a church and trees — charming but with some street activity. Rear rooms look onto inner courtyard or adjacent rooftops (quieter, less scenic).
Quietest floors
Floors 3 and 4 are likely the quietest, given the typical 4-5 storey Lisbon building stock of this era (often without lifts above the 4th floor). Rooms at the rear of these floors will be most peaceful.
🔊 Noise notes
Largo do Terreiro de Trigo is a small square near the Alfama district — expect morning delivery trucks, cafe chatter on the terrace (if any), and pedestrian footfall until late. The hotel sits on a narrow street; no major nightlife crowds, but the square acts as a local hub.
Insider tips
1. Park elsewhere: this address is in the historic centre (Alfama) with limited parking. Use the nearby Campo das Cebolas car park (5 mins walk). 2. Request a room on the 4th floor for best light and least noise — but confirm if the lift stops there; if not, be ready for stairs.
- 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 — Ohmm.
Free high-speed WiFi throughout (no login or time limit, peak speed ~50 Mbps)
Single lift serves all 4 floors; no stairs-only sections—ground-floor entrance and reception accessible via lift
No digital newsstand; local Portuguese daily newspapers available at front desk on request; building is a converted 19th-century warehouse, retains original stone walls and high ceilings in common areas
Standard check-in 14:00–22:00; late arrivals by prior arrangement; early bag-drop free; late check-out until 13:00 for €20 (subject to availability)
Free luggage storage at reception before check-in and after check-out (on request)
Step-free entrance from street level; lift wide enough for standard wheelchair; no adapted bathrooms in standard rooms—ground-floor accessible room available on request (confirm at booking); narrow corridors may limit turning space
No on-site parking; nearest public car park is Parking Cinema São Jorge (50 m walk, Rua da Oliveira ao Castelo), ~€20 per 24 hours; no EV charging on property
Fees, Taxes & Deposits
City / tourist tax: €2 per person per night (up to 7 nights), charged at check-in; children under 13 exempt
Deposit & card hold: Full prepayment required at booking; €100 incidental card hold at check-in (released on departure)
Faith & Dietary Nearby
- Church: Igreja do Menino Deus (365 m · ~5 min walk)
- Church: Panteão Nacional (427 m · ~5 min walk)
- Church: Igreja de São Brás e de Santa Luzia (432 m · ~5 min walk)
- Church: Paróquia de Todos os Santos (436 m · ~5 min walk)
Local Lifestyle & Recreation
Centro Comercial Martim Moniz — 991 m · ~12 min walk
Jardim do Torel — 1.6 km · ~20 min walk
Museu de São Vicente de Fora — 78 m · ~1 min walk
Black Cat Cinema — 453 m · ~6 min walk
Santo Estêvão — 327 m · ~4 min walk
5-Minute Radius Essentials
Nearest — 108 m · ~1 min walk
Farmácia Mourão — 383 m · ~5 min walk
Alfama Viertel — 68 m · ~1 min walk
Graça - Miradouro — 453 m · ~6 min walk
Money & Currency
Get a travel card →Euro, EUR
Use ATMs for the best rates; avoid currency exchange bureaux at the airport or tourist spots – they charge poor rates and high fees.
Visa and Mastercard are widely accepted; contactless and mobile pay (Apple/Google Pay) work in most shops and restaurants. Small cafes and markets may be cash-only.
Not expected but appreciated: round up the bill in restaurants (5-10% for good service), leave small change for taxis, and no tipping required for hotel staff.
Eat, Shop & Travel on a Budget
Cheap car hire →Espresso (bica) at a local pastelaria: around €0.70–€1.00.
Prato do dia (daily plate) at a tasca: €8–€12.
Main dish at a casual restaurant: €12–€16.
Limited around Largo do Terreiro de Trigo itself; head to the Time Out Market (about 10 mins walk) for diverse cheap-eats stalls, or the Mercado de Campo de Ourique for local options.
Pingo Doce and Continente are the main budget chains; Mini Preço also common.
High-street chains like Zara, Mango, and H&M on Rua Augusta and Baixa district, about 15 mins walk.
Zapping card on the metro/bus/ferry (€1.35 per trip) or a 24h public transport pass (€6.60 for all modes). From the airport: metro (line vermelha) direct to Baixa–Chiado station for €1.35.
Eat lunch at a tasca for the prato do dia (cheaper than dinner). Use the metro or walk – taxis/Uber add up. Avoid drinks at touristy spots on Rua Augusta; buy water/bottled drinks from a supermarket.
Good to know — Lisboa
Type C/F · 230V
safe
$1 ≈ €0.88 · EUR
Emergency Contacts
LisboaWhere to Eat
💡 Booking tip: For popular restaurants in Lisboa, book at least a week ahead — especially for weekend evenings and during festival season.
Your arrival at Ohmm.
🕒 Check-in is from . Arriving earlier? Most hotels store luggage free — just ask at reception.
🧭 First things nearby: cash · Nearest — 108 m · ~1 min walk — pharmacy · Farmácia Mourão — 383 m · ~5 min walk
🚐 Pre-book an airport transfer →Getting Around
Find train tickets →Lisbon Airport (LIS) - Aeroporto station → Browns Boutique Hotel & Apartments (via Alameda, then Linha Verde to Rossio)
💡 Buy a Viva Viagem card (€0.50) at the station machine. Top up with a single journey. Change at Alameda to the green line—Rossio station is a 7-min walk to the hotel.
Martim Moniz (base of hill near hotel) → Graca & Alfama (scenic loop back to Martim Moniz)
💡 Not for airport transfers, but handy from the hotel. The hotel is 6 mins from Martim Moniz tram stop. Go early morning (before 9am) to skip queues. Buy your single ticket or use the Viva Viagem card.
Lisbon Airport (LIS) → Browns Boutique Hotel & Apartments
💡 Official taxis queue outside arrivals. Avoid touts—use the rank. Pre-booking with apps like Uber or Bolt often costs €10–€12.
Lisbon Airport (LIS) - Stop outside Terminal 1 → Browns Boutique Hotel & Apartments (closest stop: Restauradores)
💡 Aerobus stops right at Restauradores. From there, the hotel is a 5-min walk down Rua das Portas de Santo Antão. Avoid this for late arrivals.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the best rooms at Ohmm.?
Request a room on the 3rd or 4th floor at the back of the building (facing away from Largo do Terreiro de Trigo) to minimise street noise from the square. These floors are high enough to avoid ground-level bustle but still within the reach of the lift (if one exists; typical for a 3-star Lisbon hotel).
Which rooms should I avoid at Ohmm.?
Avoid ground-floor rooms or those on the 1st floor facing the street. They will catch direct noise from the largo (a small square often used by delivery vans and pedestrians). Also avoid rooms next to the lift shaft — older buildings can transmit motor sounds to adjacent rooms.
Is Ohmm. noisy?
Largo do Terreiro de Trigo is a small square near the Alfama district — expect morning delivery trucks, cafe chatter on the terrace (if any), and pedestrian footfall until late. The hotel sits on a narrow street; no major nightlife crowds, but the square acts as a local hub.
Which rooms have the best views at Ohmm.?
Rooms at the front on floors 3 or 4 offer a view over Largo do Terreiro de Trigo, a small square with a church and trees — charming but with some street activity. Rear rooms look onto inner courtyard or adjacent rooftops (quieter, less scenic).
What are insider tips for staying at Ohmm.?
1. Park elsewhere: this address is in the historic centre (Alfama) with limited parking. Use the nearby Campo das Cebolas car park (5 mins walk). 2. Request a room on the 4th floor for best light and least noise — but confirm if the lift stops there; if not, be ready for stairs.
What time is check-in at Ohmm.?
Check-in at Ohmm. is from null. Check-out is by null.
Does Ohmm. have Wi-Fi?
Free high-speed WiFi throughout (no login or time limit, peak speed ~50 Mbps)
Is there a city or tourist tax at Ohmm.?
€2 per person per night (up to 7 nights), charged at check-in; children under 13 exempt
Where can I eat cheaply near Ohmm.?
Prato do dia (daily plate) at a tasca: €8–€12.
What is the cheapest way to get around from Ohmm.?
Zapping card on the metro/bus/ferry (€1.35 per trip) or a 24h public transport pass (€6.60 for all modes). From the airport: metro (line vermelha) direct to Baixa–Chiado station for €1.35.
When is the best time to visit Lisboa?
May, June and September: warm sun (23-28°C), long evenings, and fewer crowds than July and August. Most outdoor terraces and miradouros are at their best without the peak-season crush.
Top Attractions in Lisboa
💡 The climb is free if you’re quick, but the official access fee is €3. Instead, go to the nearby rooftop of the Santa Justa Lift for a similar view at no cost (just queue).
💡 Go at sunset on a weekday to avoid crowds. Bring a bottle of wine from the nearby mini-mercado.
💡 Best for a cheap lunch: pick up a pastel de nata (€1.30) and a coffee from the corner bakery. Avoid the seafood counters if you’re on a tight budget.
💡 Entry is €2. Go on a dry weekday morning when it’s nearly empty. Watch for fallen fruit on the paths.
💡 Free entry on Sundays until 2pm, and for all under-12s. The cloister café is lovely but pricey; bring a snack.