The Top 28 Hotels Near Mimosa
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A sleek luxury hotel in the middle of Roppongi, connected directly to the Roppongi Hills complex, which means the Mori Art Museum, serious shopping, and a 52nd-floor city panorama are basically on your doorstep. Rooms lean into warm wood and clean lines, and the fifth-floor spa is legitimately large, with a full hydrotherapy setup worth blocking an afternoon for. The crowd is well-dressed and international, here to see Tokyo properly.
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A Forbes Five Star hotel-within-a-hotel tucked onto the 11th and 12th floors of the New Otani, Executive House Zen is where you go when you want the quiet of a ryokan but still need a city address. The Chiyoda location puts you near the Imperial Palace gardens, and you get full run of the main hotel's spa, vast grounds, and dozens of restaurants, while your floor stays genuinely serene.
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Tucked beside the ancient Hie Shrine in Akasaka, this Forbes Five Star hotel is the kind of place where dignitaries and international power players go when they want to disappear quietly into Tokyo. The greenery surrounding it makes the city feel genuinely far away. Service is attentive without being fussy, and the whole place leans into a calm, authentic Japanese aesthetic that most luxury hotels only gesture at.
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Floating above Tokyo on the top floors of a skyscraper, this Forbes Five Star luxury hotel pulls off something genuinely rare: rooms and restaurants where the city views do most of the work. The design leans into that, with floor-to-ceiling windows and Japanese art that keeps things warm rather than cold and corporate. The crowd is business travelers who've upgraded their expectations and couples who dress for dinner. A serious place to stay.
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This Forbes Five Star hotel in Toranomon is the kind of place that makes you feel like a diplomat who's made a few good decisions. The lobby is a loving replica of the 1960s original, down to the carpet, and it still works. Guests lean quieter, older, and impeccably dressed. There's a rooftop bar, a serious spa, and enough greenery outside that the city noise feels genuinely far away, even though it isn't.
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A luxury hotel inside a 38-story tower in Toranomon that skips the marble-and-chandelier playbook entirely, going for moody lighting, warm wood, and rooms that actually feel livable. The bars are the kind you sink into and lose an hour without noticing. Views of Tokyo Tower are everywhere, which never gets old. The crowd tends toward well-dressed people who know the difference between luxury and just expensive.
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Tucked forty floors above Tokyo in a Midtown Yaesu skyscraper, this Forbes Five Star luxury hotel is where Italian glamour meets Japanese precision, and somehow neither one blinks. The lobby alone feels like wandering into a very tasteful jewelry heist. You've got an omakase restaurant, an Italian dining room overseen by celebrity chef Niko Romito, a rooftop bar, and a spa, so leaving the building starts to feel like a personal failing.
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Aman hotels are usually tucked away somewhere remote, so it's funny that their first city property sits atop a 40-story office tower in Tokyo's business district. The rooms are all clean lines and calm, the spa is genuinely serene, and the lobby library has chess sets and books on Japanese art, which gives the whole place a quiet, members-club feel. It's a luxury hotel that actually delivers on the peace its name promises.
- 50 Best #25 · The World's 50 Best Hotels
- Forbes Travel Guide Forbes Four Star
- 50 Best #74 · The World's 50 Best Hotels
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If you want to feel like Tokyo is bowing slightly in your direction, this is the hotel. The Heritage Wing is the quieter, more intimate corner of the landmark Okura Tokyo, a low-rise retreat that leans fully into Japanese hospitality while sitting in the middle of Toranomon's business buzz. The guests here tend to be the kind of people who already know where they're going before they arrive. Spa, club lounge, French fine dining, all included.
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Perched on the top floors of one of Tokyo's tallest towers, the Andaz Tokyo is a Forbes Four Star hotel where the lobby is actually a lounge and the staff wear all the hats at once, greeting you, checking you in, and playing local guide before you've even found your room. The city stretches out in every direction from up here, with Tokyo Tower glowing to the south. A genuinely slick place to land if you want the modern Tokyo experience without the stiff formality.
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A Forbes Five Star ryokan tucked inside a larger hotel, Hanakohro is a 16-suite traditional inn where the rooms are named after garden flowers and the staff wear kimono and can talk Japanese art and culture all day. The grounds sit on land once used by the imperial family, and the whole place leans hard into that heritage, with sake tastings, origami, and a quiet that makes the rest of Tokyo feel very far away.
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A Forbes Five Star hotel that actually looks the part, the Peninsula Tokyo is a freestanding tower designed to glow like a traditional lantern at night, which sounds gimmicky until you see it. It sits across from the Imperial Palace with Ginza a short walk away, so the location does a lot of heavy lifting. Inside you get kaiseki dining, a serious spa, and the quiet confidence of a place where the house cars are Rolls-Royces.
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If you're going to splurge on a hotel in Tokyo, this is a strong case. The Palace Hotel sits right on the Imperial Palace moat in Marunouchi, so your view is ancient waterways, manicured trees, and glassy towers all at once. It's a Forbes Five Star property, genuinely grand without feeling stuffy, and the kind of place where the staff remembers your name by checkout. Worth every yen if you want the city to feel like an occasion.
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Perched on the upper floors of a Nihonbashi skyscraper, this Forbes Five Star luxury hotel earns its reputation with floor-to-ceiling views that stretch all the way to Mount Fuji on a good day. The design is quietly dramatic, all dark stone and flickering fireplaces, with a spa and a lineup of serious restaurants keeping the well-heeled guests busy. It's a splurge, but the kind where you feel the money every time you look out the window.
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This boutique Four Seasons sits inside a Marunouchi office tower with fewer than 60 rooms, which means the staff actually knows your name by checkout. The lobby is little more than a quiet counter on the ground floor, so you won't be dodging tour groups with roller bags. It's understated for a luxury hotel, but the Four Seasons polish is all there once you're upstairs. Worth knowing: it's closed for renovations through early 2026.
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A 33-story tower hotel rising over Shiba Koen, with Tokyo Tower framed in your window like a postcard you actually get to live in. The rooms are sleek, the staff are the kind of efficient-but-warm that Japan does better than anyone, and the place has enough going on inside, from a boulangerie to a bowling alley, that you could skip the city entirely. You won't, but knowing it's there feels good.
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Perched high above Tokyo Bay, Conrad Tokyo is a luxury hotel that doubles as a serious art gallery, with contemporary Japanese pieces dotted throughout the floors. The views from the lobby bar are genuinely ridiculous, all glass and skyline and Rainbow Bridge stretching out below you. Guests tend to look like people who expense things without wincing. The rooms are polished, the art is worth lingering over, and the whole place carries itself with quiet confidence.
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Few hotels in Tokyo have been around forever and still feel relevant, but the Imperial pulls it off. It's a grande-dame city hotel in the heart of the capital, with the kind of service where staff actually anticipate what you need before you ask. Thirteen restaurants and bars means you barely have to leave, which is good because the location near the Imperial Palace already has you exactly where you want to be.
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A sleek hotel in the middle of Tokyo that somehow feels like a retreat, thanks to its five acres of former royal garden. The tower sits three minutes from Shinagawa station, so you're well connected, but the grounds make it easy to forget the city exists. The design blends contemporary and traditional Japanese sensibilities without being precious about it, and the service has that quietly attentive quality that makes you feel looked after without being fussed over.
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A luxury hotel perched on the top floors of a tower in Marunouchi, steps from Tokyo Station and the Imperial Palace. The art collection alone could fill a museum, and the city views are genuinely hard to beat. Staff in red suits will meet you right off the train and guide you through the station maze, which sounds excessive until you've actually tried navigating it yourself. The city's full of great hotels, and this one holds its own.
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A full-service Tokyo hotel that earns its keep with something most city hotels can't fake: an ancient Japanese garden right outside your door. Cherry blossoms in spring, fiery leaves in autumn, a shrine, a tea room, and about as much calm as you'll find anywhere in this city. The guests tend to be the kind of people who planned this trip six months out and absolutely did not overpack.
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A hotel-within-a-hotel tucked into the upper floors of an already solid Shinjuku tower, Premier Grand is for the kind of traveler who upgrades quietly and says nothing about it. Rooms run up to the 41st floor with sweeping city views, Japanese soaking baths, and bedding you'll want to ship home. The design is calm, neutral, and very grown-up. Shinjuku's chaos is right outside, which makes the stillness up here feel genuinely earned.
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Tokyo Bay has a luxury hotel where the staff are called "talent" and wear Yohji Yamamoto uniforms, which tells you everything about the vibe here. Mesm is a high-design Autograph Collection property built around the arts, with modern Japanese artwork throughout, theatrical fine dining, and nightly performances. The guests tend to look like they curate things for a living. It's a stay, not just a room.
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A boutique hotel tucked just off Ginza's main shopping drag, designed by two people who really knew what they were doing. The rooms are all clean whites and calm, the public spaces feel genuinely luxurious without trying too hard, and the bar is the kind of place you'd go to even if you weren't staying here. It draws a mix of well-dressed shoppers, business travelers, and couples who booked it as a treat. Quiet enough to actually decompress, stylish enough to brag about.
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Sleeping inside Tokyo Station sounds like a fever dream, but this grand old hotel pulls it off with real style. The red brick exterior is basically a historical landmark in a city that tears everything down and rebuilds it, and the restored interiors deliver on the promise: vaulted ceilings, chandeliers, the works. Restaurants range from casual to formal, and there's a spa with hot springs. The crowd skews business traveler who has done very well for themselves.
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A massive full-service hotel on Odaiba, the man-made island that juts into Tokyo Bay, Grand Nikko gives you that rare "are we still in the city?" feeling without actually leaving it. The rooms are generously sized by Tokyo standards, the service is impeccably Japanese, and between the pools, restaurants, bars, and in-house gallery, you could lose a whole day without meaning to.
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Hawaiian luxury landed in Yokohama and somehow it works. This sleek waterfront hotel blends aloha-resort energy with modern Japanese calm, and the harbor views from Minato Mirai are the real draw, with floor-to-ceiling windows making sure every room earns its keep. Expect fresh flowers, a quiet water garden, and the kind of polished geometry that makes the whole place feel like someone actually thought it through.