The Tokyo Station Hotel
The Rooms
The hotel is designed in the classic European style and focused on providing Japanese hospitality, also known as omotenashi. In a city notorious for small living spaces, the Tokyo Station Hotel rooms start at 23 square meters. The 150 different guest rooms come in 15 different shapes and sizes from classic all the way up to the 173 square meter Imperial Suite, which overlooks the Imperial Palace.
Dining Options at the Tokyo Station Hotel
There are a total of ten restaurants, cafes, and bars inside the hotel. In addition to Japanese restaurants, you can also find Chinese, French, and Italian fare without leaving the premises. Breakfast is available every day in the high-ceiling, 94-seat, Atrium dining space from 6:30-10:30. While it’s called breakfast, it’s more like an elaborate brunch. The 3,900 yen, 4th-floor buffet offers an impressive spread which is not limited to the standard western breakfast buffet items. There’s a traditional Japanese breakfast station, which offers much healthier options than you typically see in the west. You can also get sashimi as well as cooked fish. All dishes are written out in English and Japanese. Coffee, tea, and hot chocolate are all you can drink, but you have to order individually from your well-dressed, English-speaking server. There’s a self-serve juice bar next to the yogurt and cheese station.
If you prefer to eat with the locals, there are hundreds of dining options in and around Tokyo Station. Walk under the elevated train tracks, and you’ll see countless ramen shops, sushi bars, and other Japanese restaurants. The same is true of the few blocks between Tokyo Station and the Imperial Palace. Keep in mind that while smoking is frowned upon outdoors, it’s still acceptable inside many restaurants. In higher-end hotels, like the Tokyo Station, smoking is not allowed in restaurants.
Fitness & Spa at the Tokyo Station Hotel
The 816 square meter Fitness & Spa facilities are located on floor B1F. Entrance for guests is just 1,000 yen per day. The Spa Tokione has six rooms and gets its name from an amalgamation of the French word for Tokyo and Japanese word for sleep. It opens daily at 10:00 and has artificially carbonated hot springs as well as a man-made hot spring, dry and steam saunas, cold baths, and showers. The Jexer Tokyo Fitness Lounge opens daily at 7:00 and has a mix of free weights, strength machines as well as cardio equipment.
Tokyo Station
The hotel opened in 1915, the year after Tokyo Station began operation as Japan’s national rail hub. In its 100-plus year existence, the hotel has survived an earthquake as well as air raids and has been reconstructed twice. The most recent grand reopening took place in 2012. Today, the hotel offers all the modern conveniences you’d expect from the country that invented the super toilets (washuretto in Japanese) and the walkman, while still maintaining its original old-world charm. The hotel really came to its current prominence during the 1964 Olympics and will likely be a highly sought after destination for those attending the 2020 Olympics.Â
Getting to and from the Tokyo Station Hotel
The fact that you can enter the hotel from Tokyo Station makes it the most conveniently-located hotel in Japan for most travelers. Tokyo Station is the city’s main stop for the world-famous shinkansen (or bullet) trains, and it doesn’t end there. Compared to most world capitals, Tokyo is far from its main international airport (Narita). 500 USD cab rides to the city are not uncommon. Although the Airport Limousine stops at many hotels, it can easily take 90 minutes or more with similar intervals between journeys. Fortunately, the Narita Express trains run every 30 minutes and will get you to and from the airport is just under 60 minutes. The cost is just under 3,000 yen. The nearest ticket booth is inside Tokyo Station, next to the hotel entrance. It’s best to allow at least 15 minutes to buy the ticket. The train stops at multiple terminals, so you’ll need to provide your flight details to the ticketing agent.
In addition to the Narita Express, 23 other shinkansen, JR and metro lines stop at the station. There’s also a cab stand and bus stop outside the hotel’s street entrance. If you’re flying in and out of Haneda, the hotel is even more convenient. Just take the Tokyo Monorail Hamamatsu-cho, which will get you to and from Tokyo Station in roughly 30 minutes.
Tokyo Station Hotel
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This post was sponsored by the Tokyo Station Hotel. Learn more and check rates here. Check out TripAdvisor to see how they rank among luxury hotels in Tokyo.
All pictures were shot with a Panasonic Lumix ZS100 4K Point and Shoot Camera with the exception of any Instagram pics.
Have you been to Tokyo? If so, where did you stay? Leave a comment below!
Looks like a really cool stay to experience when in Tokyo! So slick and hard to guess it’s been around for a hundred years. Japan seems like such a one-of-a-kind experience. Hope to visit someday!
Hi Namita. If you have a week or so, I recommend changing hotels every 2-3 nights so you can experience different parts of the city.
Looks beautiful. I hope to go to Japan with my partner in the future so I’ll certainly keep a look out.
Hopefully they’re reopen by the summer. They are being extra cautious.
Great post! It looks like a wonderful place to stay. The spa looks relaxing and the hotel room looks nice as well. Thanks for sharing!
Hi Candace. Yes, i regret not having time to do the spa or go to the gym.
I am kicking myself that I have not been to Japan yet. Hopefully next year. If and when I do, this looks like the hotel I would love to stay at. A day in that spa after a long flight from the UK would be the first order of business for me. In addition to checking out the 10 restaurants on site. The makings of a perfect stay.
Hi Bianca. Personally, I can’t wait for them to reopen already!
Japan is my dream destination, so I read your post with great interest. Tokyo Station Hotel looks like a great choice, and in an ideal location too. I quite like the look of the room and don’t get me started on the food!!
Hi Lisa. It’s also a great first Asian country to visit if your budget allows!
It looks and sounds like a beautiful hotel, somewhere that I could happily sleep, eat and absolutely, have a spa treatment. I love the location as well.
Yes, so quiet that you’d never think you were in a city of 30 million!
wow, with 10 different styles of restaurants, it would be hard to not leave the Tokyo Station Hotel to find something to eat outside the station. The rooms look great too. Was it noisy with the trains coming & going so close to the hotel?
Hi Eric. It was not noisy like many New York hotels.
I am really impressed with the historical anecdotes that you have shared in your post. A 100 plus year hotel that will be a hub of tourist attraction in the upcoming games is actually an exciting prospect. You have added another destination to my bucket list!
Hope you get to stay here. Such a spacious room in a notoriously crowded city!