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    Hotel in Tokyo, Japan

    Bvlgari Hotel Tokyo

    1,780pts

    Roman Glamour at Altitude

    Bvlgari Hotel Tokyo, Hotel in Tokyo

    About Bvlgari Hotel Tokyo

    Ranked #15 in the World's 50 Best Hotels 2025 and awarded three Michelin Keys, Bvlgari Hotel Tokyo occupies the upper floors of the Tokyo Midtown Yaesu tower in the Yaesu district, offering 98 rooms and suites from around $1,509 per night. With Michelin-starred Il Ristorante - Niko Romito, the 1,800-square-metre Bvlgari Spa, and direct sightlines to Mount Fuji and the Imperial Palace Gardens, it sits firmly in Tokyo's highest tier of Italian-branded luxury.

    Arrival at Altitude: The Yaesu Experience

    The approach to Bvlgari Hotel Tokyo is deliberately understated for a property at this level. You enter through a discreet corridor inside the Tokyo Midtown Yaesu tower — one of the city's tallest structures — and ascend before the city unfolds below you. This compression between anonymous entrance and dramatic reveal is a structural move Tokyo's luxury hotel sector has refined over decades: ground-level discretion rewarded by an refined world entirely separate from street noise. Once you reach the upper floors, the panorama resolves into something concrete: the Imperial Palace Gardens to one side, the Tokyo skyline in multiple directions, and on clear days, Mount Fuji framing the western horizon. The view is not incidental. It is load-bearing to the experience here.

    Opened in April 2023, Bvlgari Hotel Tokyo is the eighth property in the Bvlgari Hotels and Resorts collection, a portfolio that now places its Roman aesthetic in cities from Milan to Dubai to Shanghai. Tokyo, though, is where many European luxury brands find their most disciplined expression, and this property follows that pattern. Designers Patricia Viel and Antonio Citterio have produced interiors that read as contemporary Italian , clean geometries, rich materials, deliberate restraint , with a Japanese accent present in proportion and detail rather than as ornament.

    Where the Property Sits in Tokyo's Luxury Tier

    Tokyo's premium hotel market has stratified sharply in recent years. At the upper end, a small group of properties competes on design distinction, F&B; depth, and location precision rather than sheer size. Bvlgari Hotel Tokyo, with 98 rooms and suites and a starting rate around $1,509 per night, places itself squarely in that cohort. Its La Liste score of 95.5 points in the 2026 rankings and a #15 position in the World's 50 Best Hotels 2025 , up from #22 in 2024 , confirm year-on-year traction in the international critical conversation. A Michelin three-key designation in 2024 adds a third institutional signal from a different evaluative framework.

    The comparison set is instructive. Aman Tokyo, a few kilometres north in the Otemachi district, operates at similar price points with a larger footprint and a more residential sensibility. Four Seasons Hotel Tokyo at Otemachi occupies another Otemachi tower with a comparable altitude strategy. Palace Hotel Tokyo holds its own Imperial Palace Gardens position with a more traditional Japanese luxury register. Bvlgari differentiates through its Italian design identity and the coherence of its F&B; ecosystem, which is harder to replicate than views or room finishes. JANU Tokyo and Andaz Tokyo occupy adjacent but distinct positions, each with their own design language and programming priorities.

    The Dining Architecture

    The F&B; depth at Bvlgari Hotel Tokyo is unusual even for a property at this price point. The anchor is Il Ristorante - Niko Romito, the Michelin-starred Italian restaurant that runs through the Bvlgari portfolio internationally. Romito's three-Michelin-starred restaurant Reale in Castel di Sangro, Italy, provides the intellectual lineage, and the Tokyo outpost carries that program into a market with its own extraordinarily rigorous fine-dining standards. Getting a Michelin star in Tokyo, a city that evaluates Italian cooking with the same precision it applies to its own kaiseki tradition, is a meaningful credential rather than a brand extension formality.

    Beyond Il Ristorante, the property runs Sushi Hoseki, The Bvlgari Bar, The Bvlgari Lounge, and the Bvlgari Dolci boutique, which handles pastries and chocolate. This degree of internal F&B; infrastructure is more typical of a large resort than a 98-room urban property. It means guests can move through multiple distinct dining registers without leaving the hotel , a practical advantage in a city where securing reservations at peer-level independent restaurants requires significant lead time. For a broader view of Tokyo's dining options beyond the hotel, our full Tokyo restaurants guide covers the city's key venues by neighbourhood and category.

    The Spa and Wellness Floor

    The 1,800-square-metre Bvlgari Spa occupies a meaningful physical footprint for an urban property. It includes a 25-metre indoor pool and a fitness centre alongside treatment facilities. In Tokyo's luxury hotel market, spa scale varies considerably: some high-rate city properties treat wellness as a compact amenity, while others make it a primary draw. Bvlgari's spa dimensions place it in the latter group, comparable to resort properties rather than most urban competitors at the same key count. The pool length in particular is above what most Tokyo tower hotels can accommodate given floor-plate constraints at altitude.

    Rooms, Suites, and the 400-Square-Metre Question

    The 98 rooms and suites include fifteen sets of connecting configurations, which is a higher ratio than most comparable properties and suggests deliberate programming for multi-room bookings from families or travelling groups who want privacy alongside shared space. The Bvlgari Suite measures over 400 square metres , a figure that requires context: most luxury suites in Tokyo's competitive tier run between 150 and 250 square metres. At over 400, the Bvlgari Suite is operating in a different physical register entirely, with the kind of floor area that allows the space to function as a private apartment rather than simply a large hotel room.

    Service protocols here lean toward invisibility: in-room check-in, packing and unpacking assistance, and a Berluti shoeshine service indicate a staffing model designed around minimising friction at every logistical point. These are not amenities that add sensory drama; they are operational signals about the kind of guest the property is structured to serve.

    Location and What It Connects

    The Yaesu address puts the hotel within walking distance of Nihombashi and Marunouchi, two of Tokyo's primary financial and corporate districts, and a short distance from Ginza. This triangulation matters: Ginza's concentration of high-end retail and serious restaurants is accessible without requiring a taxi, while the Marunouchi connection serves business travellers whose meetings tend to cluster in that corridor. Tokyo Station, one of the city's major rail hubs with Shinkansen access north and south, is also in the immediate vicinity , a practical advantage for guests combining Tokyo with travel to Kyoto or Osaka.

    For those extending beyond Tokyo, the range of Japan's other serious luxury properties is worth noting. HOTEL THE MITSUI KYOTO offers a contrasting tradition-rooted experience in the former capital. Ryokan-format properties such as Gora Kadan in Hakone, Asaba in Izu, and Nishimuraya Honkan in Kinosaki-cho represent an entirely different mode of Japanese hospitality. Further afield, Amanemu in Mie, Benesse House in Naoshima, and Zaborin in Kutchan each occupy distinct regional and experiential niches. Island options include Halekulani Okinawa and Jusandi in Ishigaki. For nature-led retreats, ENOWA Yufu and Fufu Kawaguchiko anchor distinct regional itineraries, with Fufu Nikko and Sekitei in Hatsukaichi-shi adding further regional depth. For those comparing the Bvlgari model across cities, Bellustar Tokyo and Four Seasons Hotel Tokyo at Marunouchi represent adjacent options within Tokyo itself, while internationally, Aman New York and The Fifth Avenue Hotel offer comparable urban luxury reference points, and Aman Venice provides a European counterpart to consider.

    Planning Your Stay

    The hotel is operated under the Marriott International portfolio, which means reservations can be placed through Marriott's booking infrastructure as well as directly with the property. The phone number on record is +81 3 6262 3333. Room rates begin around $1,509 per night, with the Bvlgari Suite considerably above that figure. Given the hotel's F&B; programming , particularly Il Ristorante reservations, which are separate from room bookings and tend to fill independently , guests are advised to coordinate dining reservations alongside accommodation well in advance of arrival. The Yaesu address connects directly to Tokyo Station, making the hotel accessible from Narita and Haneda airports via rail without requiring a private transfer, though the property's service model is calibrated for guests who prefer one.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What is the signature room at Bvlgari Hotel Tokyo?
    The Bvlgari Suite, at over 400 square metres, anchors the room hierarchy. It is the largest accommodation on offer at the property and operates at a floor area significantly above what comparable Tokyo luxury tower hotels provide in their headline suites. The hotel holds a Michelin three-key designation (2024) and ranked #15 in the World's 50 Best Hotels 2025, providing context for the overall quality standard the suite sits within. Rates for the property begin around $1,509 per night for standard room categories.
    What should I know about Bvlgari Hotel Tokyo before I go?
    The hotel opened in April 2023 and is located in the Yaesu district at 2-2-1 Yaesu, Chuo City, within walking distance of Tokyo Station, Nihombashi, and Ginza. It holds a La Liste score of 95.5 points (2026) and a World's 50 Best Hotels ranking of #15 (2025). The Michelin-starred Il Ristorante - Niko Romito requires separate reservations from the room booking. The 1,800-square-metre spa and 25-metre indoor pool are available to hotel guests. Rates begin around $1,509 per night. The property is part of the Marriott International portfolio.
    What is the leading way to book Bvlgari Hotel Tokyo?
    If you are a Marriott Bonvoy member, booking through the Marriott infrastructure gives you points accrual and potential status benefits. For guests prioritising personalised pre-arrival coordination , particularly for F&B; reservations at Il Ristorante or suite-level service requests , contacting the property directly at +81 3 6262 3333 allows for more tailored handling. Given the hotel's awards profile (World's 50 Best Hotels #15, 2025; La Liste 95.5 points, 2026; Michelin three keys, 2024) and its 98-room scale, availability compresses at peak Tokyo periods, including cherry blossom season in late March and early April and autumn foliage in November. Book several months ahead for those windows.

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