Best Luxury Hotels in Tokyo, Japan 2026
City Guides

Best Luxury Hotels in Tokyo, Japan 2026

LuxStay Editorial Team·April 11, 2026·12 min read

Tokyo's luxury hotel scene is among the world's finest — Aman Tokyo, Palace Hotel Tokyo, and a wave of new international arrivals compete to deliver the definitive Japanese luxury experience. Our guide for 2026.

Tokyo is one of the world's great cities for luxury travel — a place where ancient Japanese aesthetics, Michelin-star dining density (more Michelin stars than any other city), and impeccable service culture combine to create hotel experiences that are difficult to replicate anywhere else. The city's luxury hotel scene has expanded significantly in recent years, with Aman, Four Seasons (multiple properties), Park Hyatt, and Bulgari all operating here. This guide covers the finest options for 2026.


Why Tokyo for Luxury Travel?

  • Michelin stars: Tokyo has more Michelin-starred restaurants than any city on Earth — Michelin Guide Tokyo 2026 lists over 200 starred establishments
  • Service culture: Japanese omotenashi (hospitality philosophy) elevates service at every level — the hotel staff-to-guest ratio and attention to detail is unmatched globally
  • Culture: Temples, shrines, museums, neighborhoods (Shibuya, Shinjuku, Asakusa, Yanaka) offer inexhaustible exploration
  • Food: Beyond Michelin — ramen, sushi counters, izakayas, depachika (department store basement food halls)
  • Safety: Consistently ranked among the world's safest major cities by Numbeo

Best Luxury Hotels in Tokyo

1. Aman Tokyo

Location: Otemachi, central Tokyo | Price: From $1,500/night

Aman's Tokyo property — on the upper six floors of a 38-story tower — delivers a singular experience: vast rooms (averaging 79 m²) with floor-to-ceiling windows facing either the Imperial Palace gardens or the Tokyo skyline, a 30-metre indoor pool on the 38th floor, and an Aman Spa delivering Japanese wellness therapies. The lobby's soaring atrium with washi paper lanterns is one of the most dramatic hotel entrances in Asia.

Best for: Guests for whom cost is no object; the definitive Japanese luxury hotel experience

Room size: At 79 m² average, the largest standard rooms of any Tokyo luxury hotel


2. Palace Hotel Tokyo

Location: Marunouchi, adjacent to the Imperial Palace | Price: From $700/night

Positioned directly facing the Imperial Palace's East Gardens, Palace Hotel Tokyo delivers a uniquely Japanese luxury experience without Aman's price point. Six restaurants and bars (including Wadakura, serving refined kaiseki cuisine), a 20-metre outdoor pool with palace garden views, and rooms facing either the palace moat or the Tokyo skyline.

Best for: Guests wanting Japanese-owned luxury with palace garden views at a more accessible price

Kaiseki: Wadakura's seasonal kaiseki menu is among Tokyo's best hotel restaurant experiences


3. Four Seasons Hotel Tokyo at Marunouchi

Location: Pacific Century Place, Marunouchi | Price: From $600/night

A boutique Four Seasons — just 57 rooms, each at least 50 m². Located in the Pacific Century Place tower above Tokyo Station. The intimate scale allows highly personalised service; the concierge team's knowledge of Tokyo's restaurant scene is exceptional. Motif restaurant serves contemporary French-Japanese cuisine.

Best for: Couples and business travellers who want Four Seasons service with boutique intimacy

Location: Tokyo Station access makes day trips to Kyoto, Nikko, and Kamakura effortless


4. Park Hyatt Tokyo

Location: Shinjuku | Price: From $500/night

Immortalised by Sofia Coppola's "Lost in Translation" — the Park Hyatt occupies floors 39–52 of the Shinjuku Park Tower. The New York Bar (41st floor, live jazz nightly) and New York Grill (52nd floor) with Mount Fuji views on clear days remain two of Tokyo's most atmospheric hotel venues. Rooms have aged gracefully; the library lounge and indoor pool are highlights.

Best for: Film enthusiasts, guests wanting the iconic Lost in Translation experience, Shinjuku neighbourhood explorers


5. Bulgari Hotel Tokyo

Location: Yaesu, central Tokyo | Price: From $1,200/night

Opened in 2023 on the upper floors of Tokyo Midtown Yaesu — Bulgari's newest Asian property brings Italian jewellery-house opulence to Japan. Gold leaf ceilings, Murano glass, and Japanese lacquerware create a distinctive visual identity. Il Ristorante-Niko Romito serves award-winning Italian cuisine in a Tokyo context.

Best for: Guests seeking contemporary ultra-luxury with strong design identity; fashion and design enthusiasts


6. The Prince Gallery Tokyo Kioicho

Location: Kioicho, near Akasaka Palace | Price: From $450/night

A Luxury Collection property in a quieter diplomatic quarter — 25 floors above Kioicho with views toward the National Garden and surrounding hills. The Japanese Garden adjoining the hotel is a traditional strolling garden. Less well-known internationally than the other hotels here — a good insider choice.

Best for: Guests wanting luxury without the most high-profile properties; neighbourhood exploring in Akasaka


Neighborhoods: Where to Stay

AreaCharacterProximity
Marunouchi/OtemachiBusiness, Imperial PalacePerfect for day trips (Tokyo Stn)
ShinjukuNeon, nightlife, KabukichoEntertainment, shopping
GinzaLuxury shopping, galleriesTsukiji Market nearby
AsakusaTraditional Tokyo, Senso-jiOld town feel
Minami-Aoyama/OmotesandoDesign, fashion, cafesArt museums

Dining: Tokyo's Michelin Landscape

Michelin Guide Tokyo awards make Tokyo the world's most Michelin-starred city. For luxury hotel guests, concierge teams at the top properties maintain relationships with the hardest-to-book restaurants — essential for securing seats at 3-star establishments like Sukiyabashi Jiro, Saito, and RyuGin.

Essential experiences:

  • Omakase sushi counter (chef's selection, traditionally 10–20 courses)
  • Kaiseki (seasonal multi-course Japanese cuisine)
  • Ramen at 07:00 at Tsuta (first ramen restaurant to earn a Michelin star)
  • Depachika (Isetan Shinjuku B2 and Mitsukoshi Ginza B1 are the finest food halls)

Getting There

Narita International Airport (NRT): 60 km from Tokyo. Narita Express train (N'EX) reaches Shinjuku in 90 minutes. Japan Airlines and ANA are the flagship carriers.

Haneda Airport (HND): 20 km from central Tokyo — Tokyo Monorail to Hamamatsucho in 20 minutes. More convenient for central Tokyo hotels. Increasing international service since expansion.


Best Time to Visit

SeasonMonthsHighlights
SpringMar–MayCherry blossom (late Mar–early Apr) — peak demand, book far ahead
SummerJun–AugHot, humid, typhoon risk; festivals
AutumnSep–NovBest weather, autumn foliage (Nov)
WinterDec–FebCold but clear; Christmas illuminations

Japan Meteorological Agency provides national forecasts.

Best months: Late March–early April (cherry blossom — book hotels 6 months ahead) or October–November (foliage, stable weather, fewer crowds than spring).


*Explore Japan's luxury destinations:* Best luxury resorts Okinawa | Best luxury hotels Taipei | Best luxury hotels Singapore

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