Hotel in Manila, Philippines
Nobu Hotel Manila
325ptsJapanese Fusion Hospitality

About Nobu Hotel Manila
Nobu Hotel Manila brings Nobu Matsuhisa's Japanese-Peruvian fusion framework to the City of Dreams Manila complex in Parañaque, pairing a 250-foot outdoor pool, a full-service spa with traditional Filipino massage techniques, and rooms dressed in Japanese calligraphy art with direct access to one of Metro Manila's largest casino and entertainment precincts. Google reviewers award it 4.5 stars across more than 1,500 ratings.
Where the Nobu Brand Lands in Manila's Hotel Market
Manila's premium hotel tier has long been concentrated in two corridors: the Makati CBD, where properties like Fairmont Makati, Makati , and Discovery Primea Manila anchor the financial district, and the Manila Bay waterfront, where Conrad Manila and Admiral Hotel Manila – MGallery compete for bay-view guests. Nobu Hotel Manila occupies a third category entirely: the integrated resort, where a hotel brand operates as one component inside a much larger entertainment complex. At City of Dreams Manila on Aseana Boulevard in Parañaque, the property shares infrastructure with a 380-table casino, a DreamWorks-themed family attraction, and a retail boulevard. That positioning makes it a different proposition from a standalone luxury address, and understanding that context shapes what the stay actually delivers.
Nobu Hospitality, the hotel group behind the property, grew out of Nobu Matsuhisa's restaurant network, which now spans more than 35 locations globally. The design firm Rockwell Group — responsible for the interiors of multiple Nobu restaurants and the brand's hotels in Las Vegas and Miami — handled the Manila property as well, which gives it a visual coherence that some brand-extended hotels lack. The result is a Japanese-inflected aesthetic that runs from calligraphy art above beds to slippers and bathrobe details, sustained across the guest rooms rather than confined to the lobby.
The Culinary Logic Behind the Brand
Japanese fusion cooking occupies a particular position in global restaurant culture. The cuisine that Matsuhisa developed over decades draws directly from his Japanese training and his time cooking across North and South America, most formatively in Peru. That cross-continental sourcing history is visible in how Nobu restaurants worldwide build their menus: Japanese technique applied to South American ingredients and preparations, producing dishes like black cod with miso or tiradito that read as neither purely Japanese nor purely Latin American. The approach treats ingredient sourcing as a creative act rather than a logistical one, which is partly why the brand carries authority at this price tier.
Manila is a city where Japanese food culture has deep roots, and where the appetite for fusion formats is well-established. The Nobu Restaurant at City of Dreams Manila operates as part of that wider dining scene, though it also functions as the brand's regional flag in the Philippines. For guests staying at the hotel, the restaurant is the most immediate expression of that culinary philosophy. For the broader Manila dining context and how the Nobu restaurant sits within it, our full Manila restaurants guide covers the competitive field in more detail.
Inside the Rooms
The room design at Nobu Hotel Manila draws on a version of Japanese spatial economy that translates well into the hotel format. Custom calligraphy art, intended to evoke the concept of chi as energy flow, sits above beds in select rooms. All guest rooms are equipped with Simmons pillow-leading mattresses, smart TVs, computerized in-room safes, individual climate control, and audio docking stations. The Japanese-inspired slippers and custom bathrobes are consistent with how the brand signals its culinary origins inside the guest experience.
The Nobu Suite measures 732 square feet and centres on a white king-sized bed as the primary design element. Its bathroom features a freestanding marble bathtub positioned at the centre of the room, with Natura Bissé products supplied as the amenity line. That suite-level specification places it in a comparable tier to suite categories at Dusit Thani Manila and Discovery Suites Manila Philippines, though the integrated resort context means the overall guest journey differs considerably from either of those standalone addresses.
The City of Dreams Complex
Integrated resorts in Southeast Asia follow a model pioneered in Macau and refined in Singapore: a single campus that combines gaming, accommodation, dining, retail, and family entertainment under one roof or set of connected buildings. City of Dreams Manila is the Philippines' version of that format. The casino alone runs to 380 gaming tables and 1,700 slot machines, which gives the complex a scale that sets it apart from most Metro Manila hotel precincts.
For guests who are not primarily there for gaming, the complex still offers substantial coverage. The Shops at the Boulevard provides access to high-end retail within walking distance of the hotel entrance. DreamPlay by DreamWorks, the interactive family attraction built around DreamWorks Animation properties including Kung Fu Panda, Shrek, How to Train Your Dragon, and Trolls, makes the property more viable for family travel than most luxury hotels in the Makati corridor. That family-friendly infrastructure is a meaningful differentiator in the Manila market, where properties like Hyatt Regency Manila City of Dreams share the same campus and compete for similar guests.
Wellness at Nobu Fitness and Spa
The Nobu Fitness and Spa programme includes signature treatments that blend the brand's Japanese identity with local practice. The Nobu Rakuen treatment is a foot bath ritual combined with massage. Juan's Hilot Pride draws on the traditional Filipino hilot massage technique, which involves a specific manual approach developed across generations of local practice. The inclusion of hilot alongside Japanese-inspired treatments reflects the broader trend in Southeast Asian luxury hospitality of grounding spa programmes in regional therapeutic traditions rather than offering purely international menus. The 250-foot outdoor swimming pool, positioned directly outside the Nobu Restaurant, provides a more casual decompression option that works with Manila's climate across most of the year.
Planning Your Stay
Nobu Hotel Manila sits within the City of Dreams Manila complex at the corner of Aseana Boulevard and Diosdado Macapagal Boulevard in Tambo, Parañaque , south of the Manila Bay waterfront and accessible from the airport corridor, which makes it a practical first or last night for travellers connecting through Ninoy Aquino International Airport. The property draws a 4.5-star rating from 1,539 Google reviewers, a volume of feedback that gives the score meaningful statistical weight. Booking routes for the property are most reliably handled through the Nobu Hospitality central reservations system or major hotel booking platforms. Travellers planning wider Philippines itineraries might also consider the range of island and resort properties available beyond Metro Manila, including Amanpulo in Pamalican Island, Banwa Private Island in Palawan, Cauayan Island Resort in El Nido, or the beach-focused options at Crimson Resort and Spa in Boracay, Amorita Resort in Panglao Island, BE Grand Resort in Bohol, and Bluewater Sumilon Island Resort. For those spending more time in the Visayas or Cebu, Dusit Thani Mactan Cebu Resort offers a comparable international brand standard in a beach resort format. Other Philippines escapes worth considering include Ogtong Cave Resort in Bantayan, Phuket Village in Polillo, Anya Resort Tagaytay, Cala Laiya in Batangas, and Discovery Coron. Internationally, the Nobu brand's integrated resort model has parallels at properties like Aman New York, The Fifth Avenue Hotel in New York City, and Aman Venice, all of which place a restaurant identity at the centre of the hotel proposition.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What's the most popular room type at Nobu Hotel Manila?
- The Nobu Suite is the property's flagship room category at 732 square feet, featuring a central freestanding marble bathtub and Natura Bissé amenities. Standard guest rooms across the property include calligraphy art in select configurations, Simmons pillow-leading mattresses, and the full Nobu Hospitality amenity set. Room preference at integrated resorts often correlates with length of stay: shorter visits tend to skew toward standard rooms, while the suite tier suits guests using the property as a base for multiple days at the City of Dreams complex.
- What should I know about Nobu Hotel Manila before I go?
- The hotel operates inside the City of Dreams Manila integrated resort in Parañaque, which means the guest experience extends well beyond the hotel's own footprint. The casino, DreamPlay, the retail boulevard, and multiple dining options are all on the same campus. The Nobu Restaurant itself carries the brand's Japanese-Peruvian fusion identity established across Matsuhisa's global network of more than 35 restaurants. The property holds a 4.5-star Google rating across more than 1,500 reviews, which is a reliable reference point given the volume.
- What's the leading way to book Nobu Hotel Manila?
- Direct booking through Nobu Hospitality's reservations system or major hotel booking platforms are the standard routes. Given the property's position inside an integrated resort, guests with specific gaming or entertainment requirements may find value in contacting City of Dreams Manila directly for packages that bundle hotel nights with other complex amenities. Room rates and availability vary seasonally, and Manila's peak travel periods around the Christmas season and Holy Week can affect both pricing and availability.
- What's Nobu Hotel Manila a strong choice for?
- If the priority is access to gaming, family entertainment, and a branded dining experience under one roof in Metro Manila, the City of Dreams location delivers that efficiently. The Nobu brand's culinary reputation adds credibility to the food and beverage offer in a way that few integrated resort hotels can match. If the priority is a quieter, neighbourhood-embedded luxury experience, the Makati corridor properties are a better structural fit.
- How does the Nobu spa programme at this property connect to local Filipino traditions?
- The Nobu Fitness and Spa at City of Dreams Manila includes Juan's Hilot Pride, a treatment built around hilot, the traditional Filipino massage technique that uses manual pressure and, in traditional practice, warm banana leaves. Placing hilot alongside the brand's Japanese-derived Nobu Rakuen foot bath ritual reflects a deliberate effort to anchor the spa menu in local therapeutic practice rather than offering an entirely imported wellness format. This approach has become a consistent feature of how international luxury spa brands differentiate their Southeast Asian outposts.
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