Crystals of two strontium niobium oxyfluorides, Sr2Nb6O13F8·4H2O and Sr3Nb2O2F12·2H2O, have been grown in phase pure forms via hydrothermal reactions using SrCO3, Nb2O5, and an aqueous HF solution. Single-crystal X-ray diffraction suggests that Sr2Nb6O13F8·4H2O, crystallizing in the orthorhombic centrosymmetric space group, Pbam (No. 55), reveals a new variant of the three-dimensional tungsten bronze structure with three-, four-, and five-membered rings that are composed of corner-sharing NbO2(O/F)2F2, NbO4(O/F)F, NbO3(O/F)3, and SrO3F6 groups. Sr3Nb2O2F12·2H2O with the noncentrosymmetric polar space group, Cmc21 (No. 36), however, reveals a molecular structure consisting of Nb(O/F)2F5 pentagonal bipyramids and two unique Sr2+ cations interacting with F, O/F, and water molecules. Band gaps calculated by the Kubelka-Munk function based on the ultraviolet-visible diffuse-reflectance spectra of Sr2Nb6O13F8·4H2O and Sr3Nb2O2F12·2H2O are estimated to be ca. 3.22 and 4.11 eV, respectively, in which the values are related to the contents of electronegative F atoms and the Nb-O(F)-Nb bond angles influenced by structural distortion. An interesting phase transition reaction from Sr3Nb2O2F12·2H2O to thermodynamically more stable Sr2Nb6O13F8·4H2O occurs under a hydrothermal condition.