Featured Hotels
0.4 miles from Cruise Terminal
440 West 57th Street
New York, NY
Nestled in a quiet residential neighborhood, The Holiday Inn Midtown 57th Street is conveniently located to famous New York attractions. Just three blocks from Central Park and Carnegie Hall with Lincoln Center nearby. Situated within the Theater District, a Broadway show is a moment away along with fabulous shopping nearby...More
0.7 miles from Cruise Terminal
1605 Broadway
New York, NY
imes Square, always New York’s most exciting scene, seems all new now that the Crowne Plaza Times Square has reinvented itself. Come check out our $85 million re-invention, and see for yourself how modern design can provide a whole new kind of comfort. Enjoy one of our 770 well appointed guest rooms with Sleep Advantage beds...More
0.8 miles from Cruise Terminal

330 West 40th Street
New York, NY
The Fairfield Inn by Marriott New York Manhattan Times Square hotel features 244 rooms and suites in the heart of the New York City Times Square. This Midtown Manhattan hotel, located at the crossroads of the world, features affordable prices and is perfect for family vacations, business travelers, and other various small group meetings...More
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Below you'll find our interactive hotel map. At Cruise Terminal Hotels.com, we specialize in booking accommodations by map - creating the perfect blend of comfort and convenience. Using our interactive map can help you find a hotel near the cruise terminal of your choice. Once you know exactly where you're staying, simply click the hotel of your choice to view a description, hotel rating information, or make a fast, secure reservation online! try it now
About New York Cruise Terminal
The Manhattan Cruise Terminal had its start as the New York City Passenger Ship Terminal in the 1930s, when Mayor LaGuardia built long, modern finger piers out into the Hudson along Manhattan’s west side. For much of the early twentieth century, a half dozen of the world’s greatest passenger ships docked side by side from Piers 84 to 94—a stretch that became known as Luxury Liner Row—starting with the Normandie in 1935, followed by the Queen Mary the following year and the Queen Elizabeth after the outbreak of World War II. During the war, thousands of GI’s embarked on the latter two ships for the European theater of war—16,683 at once when the Queen Mary departed from Pier 90 in July 1943.
The Terminal was closed after the terror attack on September 11, and served for more than three months as an emergency management command center for city, state and federal agencies. In January 2002, the Queen Elizabeth 2 was the first cruise ship to return to the terminal, embarking from New York City on a 108-day world cruise.