Five roofs, one heated all year, and a city where the skyline does most of the swimming.
The short version: New York is not Bangkok. Rooftop hotel pools here are short, mostly seasonal, and guarded by access rules. One runs heated all year. The table below is the honest map.
| Hotel | Neighborhood | The pool | Season | Who can swim |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gansevoort Meatpacking | Meatpacking District | 45 ft, heated, about 4 ft deep, underwater sound system | Year-round | Hotel guests and Seven24 members |
| The William Vale | Williamsburg, Brooklyn | 60 ft outdoor pool with Manhattan skyline views | Seasonal | Guests, plus day passes via ResortPass |
| 1 Hotel Brooklyn Bridge | Brooklyn Bridge Park | 10th-floor plunge pool facing lower Manhattan | Seasonal | Guests and Bamford Wellness members |
| The Standard, High Line | Meatpacking District | 12 m pool at Le Bain on the roof of the 18-storey building | Seasonal | Guests and Le Bain ticket holders |
| Equinox Hotel Hudson Yards | Hudson Yards | Outdoor leisure pool and sundeck, plus a 25 m indoor saltwater lap pool | Outdoor seasonal; indoor year-round | Guests and Equinox club members, 18+ |
How we chose: pools on a roof or upper-level outdoor deck of a hotel inside the five boroughs, with access a traveler can actually book, judged on the swim, the view and the access policy rather than the marketing photography. Criteria and scoring weights live on our methodology page.
1. Exactly one: the Gansevoort Meatpacking. Its 45-foot rooftop pool is heated and open every month, with swim hours of 7:00 am to 6:30 pm and panoramic downtown views toward the Hudson. Access is restricted to hotel guests and Seven24 members, and the hotel caps pool access by room type: standard queen and king rooms cover two swimmers, larger rooms and suites cover four. Under-18s swim only before noon.
The honest catch: it is about four feet deep from end to end. This is a soak-and-skyline pool with an underwater sound system, not a place to swim laps, and summer weekends get loud.
2. Across the river. The William Vale in Williamsburg runs a 60-foot outdoor pool along its deck, with the full midtown skyline stacked across the East River. It is the closest New York gets to a resort-scale rooftop swim, and it is also the most democratic on this list: the hotel sells day passes through ResortPass when capacity allows, so a swim does not strictly require a room.
The honest catch: that same openness is the drawback. Guests regularly report a packed deck in July and August with no loungers reserved for hotel residents, and the pool closes for the cold months. Book a weekday if the swim is the point.
3. 1 Hotel Brooklyn Bridge, and it is not close. The 10th-floor pool sits in Brooklyn Bridge Park with lower Manhattan and the bridge itself filling the horizon; the early-morning swim, 6 to 7 am, is the version worth setting an alarm for. Access is hotel guests and Bamford Wellness members, which keeps the deck calmer than the Manhattan party roofs.
The honest catch: it is a plunge pool. You come for the orientation, the reclaimed-timber deck and the skyline, not for distance. Seasonal only.
4. Yes, with adjusted expectations. The Standard, High Line keeps its 12-metre pool at Le Bain, on the roof of the 18-storey building, the venue that defined the 2010s hotel-pool scene. The crowd has mellowed with the building; early evening midweek is now a quiet swim with the Hudson and, on clear days, the Statue of Liberty downriver. Guests swim free; everyone else needs a Le Bain ticket.
The honest catch: weekends still bring the queue and the club programming, and 12 metres is modest. If you want morning laps, look at Equinox below.
5. The most actual swimming on this list, split across two pools. The outdoor leisure pool and sundeck sit on roughly 8,000 square feet of terrace above Hudson Yards; the serious work happens in the 25-metre indoor saltwater lap pool with hot and cold plunges alongside. Access comes with a room or an Equinox club membership, and club amenities including the pools are 18 and over.
The honest catch: the outdoor pool is the smaller, scene-light amenity here, and the whole experience is wellness-club rather than rooftop theatre. If you want a cocktail in the water at sunset, this is the wrong roof.
Honestly: it does not. The longest hotel rooftop pool in this city is 60 feet; Marina Bay Sands in Singapore runs 146 metres, and Bangkok city hotels routinely build 25 to 36 metres. New York's rooftop strength is bars, not pools, which is why only two NYC entries make our global Top 20 rooftop pool ranking. Treat the pool as a feature, choose the hotel on the room and the neighborhood, and see our New York where-to-stay guide for that decision. If the swim is the whole trip, our city cuts for Bangkok, Dubai and Singapore are where to point the plane.
Mostly no, with one fresh exception. Four of the five are independents that sit outside the big points currencies: the Gansevoort (Seven24 membership), The William Vale, 1 Hotel Brooklyn Bridge (Bamford Wellness members) and the Equinox Hotel (Equinox club) all run their own access schemes, not transferable hotel points, so a paid night earns you nothing portable. The exception is The Standard, High Line: after Hyatt acquired Standard International in 2024, The Standard's hotels began joining World of Hyatt in 2025, so this is now the one rooftop-pool address here where you can earn and redeem World of Hyatt points and put elite status to work. For the other four there are no chain points to chase, so the move is a rewards credit card that earns on the spend, plus a luxury booking program (Amex Fine Hotels + Resorts or Virtuoso) wherever the individual hotel participates, for breakfast, a credit and upgrades.
The Gansevoort Meatpacking is the only New York hotel on our list with a heated rooftop pool that operates all year. The 45-foot pool is open to hotel guests and Seven24 members, with swim hours of 7:00 am to 6:30 pm daily.
Sometimes. The William Vale in Williamsburg sells day passes through ResortPass when capacity allows, and Le Bain at The Standard, High Line admits ticket holders. The Gansevoort and 1 Hotel Brooklyn Bridge pools are limited to guests and their respective members.
1 Hotel Brooklyn Bridge. Its 10th-floor pool faces lower Manhattan and the Brooklyn Bridge across the East River, and the 6 to 7 am swim before the deck fills is the best version of it.
Mostly no. The William Vale's 60-foot pool is the longest rooftop option, and the Gansevoort's is about four feet deep throughout. For real laps, the Equinox Hotel Hudson Yards has a 25-metre indoor saltwater pool alongside its outdoor sundeck pool.