Floor-to-ceiling views of the Imperial Palace Gardens and Mount Fuji (on clear days)
The 20-meter indoor pool with metallic mirror walls and mist chairs
Dead-silent rooms with motorized blackout shades that actually work
Quick Take: It’s a sterile but spectacular glass fortress where you pay a premium to look down on the rest of Tokyo.
Reviewed by @thezaisers: I spent my honeymoon here and it was pure magic. Waking up to the Imperial Palace gardens below felt surreal. The staff even hand-wrote a welcome message on our window! If you want the best bathtub view in Tokyo, this is it.
Guest Who Stayed Here Said
The hype
Reviewers are obsessed with the 'acute OCD heaven' cleanliness and the jaw-dropping views from the 39th-floor lobby.
Reality check
Service at breakfast often buckles under pressure, with staff described as 'overwhelmed' and 'rushed' during peak hours.
You crave a modern, hyper-clean sanctuary away from the grit of Shinjuku
You are a swimmer—the pool is a destination in itself
You need a seamless business base connected directly to 5 subway lines
Cleanliness & Maintenance
9.8
Housekeeping: Ninja-like. Twice daily service is standard and they organize your cords with velcro ties.
Bathroom hygiene: Surgical. Not a speck of mold in the grout. The stone surfaces are polished to a mirror finish.
Maintenance: Flawless. The hotel opened in 2020 and still feels brand new.
Linens & towels: Heavy, plush, and blindingly white. No fraying edges.
Odors & scents: Lobby smells of a custom seasonal fragrance (often citrus/wood); rooms are neutral/fresh.
Sleepability™
9.5SILENT
SILENT
0-4LOUD
4-7.5MODERATE
7.5-10SILENT
None in the rooms
Lobby chatter if your room is too close to the elevators (rare)
Before you book
Good to know
The hotel entrance is discreet (look for the orange torii-gate motif), not a grand driveway.
You don't need to book a spa treatment to use the 'ofuro' (Japanese bath) in the locker rooms—it's free for guests.
Direct underground access to Otemachi Station (C4/C5 exits) means you never have to walk in the rain.
What to pack
Swim cap (mandatory for the pool, though they lend them)
Gym gear (the fitness center view is arguably the best in Tokyo)
Smart casual clothes (the lobby bar Virtù is a fashion show at night)
Room Genie
Best picks
Imperial Garden View Room (West Facing) – The money shot. Looks directly over the palace moat.
Panoramic Suite – Corner unit offering both the Palace view and the Skytree city view.
Rooms to avoid
City View rooms on the 'lower' floors (34-35) if you care about seeing over the adjacent skyscrapers.
Room Request Genie – copy & paste
“I am celebrating a special occasion and would be incredibly grateful for a West-facing room with a view of the Imperial Palace Gardens. High floor preferred to clear the Otemachi One office tower.”
FAQ & Hidden tips
Everything you actually want to know before you book.
Is the breakfast worth the price?
Debatable. At ~5,000-8,000 JPY, the spread is high quality (great pastries), but the crowded room kills the zen vibe. Go early or order room service.
Can I see Mount Fuji?
Yes, but only from West-facing (Imperial Garden) rooms and only on clear, crisp days (usually winter mornings).
Is the pool free for guests?
Yes, the 20m indoor pool is free, but access is sometimes limited to 60-minute slots during busy weekends.
How far is it from Tokyo Station?
It's a 10-15 minute walk underground, or a $10 taxi ride. Very close.
Is it kid-friendly?
Surprisingly yes. They provide kid-sized robes, slippers, and a welcome toy, plus the pool allows kids (with supervision).
Does the hotel have a club lounge?
No. There is no executive club lounge at this property.
Insider Tips
✨
The 'mirror' pool walls are an optical illusion; swim carefully or you will bump your head.
✨
Use the underground passage to reach 'Otemachi Financial City' for cheaper, quick lunch options on weekdays.
✨
The lobby bar, Virtù, has a secret 'Seven Virtues' cocktail menu based on French folklore.
5 things to know before you go
💡The 'narrow' lobby layout creates a bottleneck during check-out and breakfast times.
💡The elevators are fast but your ears will pop every time you go up to the 39th floor.
💡You can hear the subway rumble very faintly in the basement spa reception, but not in the treatment rooms.
💡The in-room tablets for ordering service are actually responsive and useful.
💡The 'City View' rooms basically look at other office buildings unless you are on the top floors.
Local Playbook
Map
See where Four Seasons Hotel Tokyo At Otemachi is located and what's nearby.