Grand Hyatt Tokyo
Daily price line
Upcoming nightly rates
Review
Character and identity
Anchored in Roppongi and physically connected to the Roppongi Hills complex, this is a contemporary urban hotel built around Japanese materials and craft: warm wood, high ceilings, clean lines, and roughly 200 pieces of art threaded through the public spaces. The 387 rooms and suites lean minimalist with generous bathrooms. Dining is the headline act, with ten restaurants and bars covering steak, sushi and French all-day fare. Up on the fifth floor, the 13,993-square-foot Nagomi Spa runs eight treatment rooms, a hydrotherapy zone with sauna, steam, hot bath and cold plunge, plus a sizeable indoor pool.
Who's it for
Best for:
Design-literate couples and food-focused travellers who want a central Tokyo base with serious culinary range on site, plus business guests who value the Roppongi Hills connection. Families are genuinely catered for, with children's yukata, tiny slippers and family-friendly perks that go beyond the usual token gestures.
Should look elsewhere:
Travellers chasing a traditional ryokan experience, intimate boutique scale, or the quieter neighbourhoods of Ginza or Marunouchi. Roppongi's nightlife buzz and the hotel's larger footprint won't suit anyone after hushed seclusion or a more historic Tokyo address.
Bottom line
The defining reason to book here is the combination of ten in-house restaurants and bars and a properly large spa floor, all plugged directly into Roppongi Hills. Pay up for a Grand Club room to access the lounge views, cocktails and dedicated check-in; the Airport Limousine drops at the door, which makes arrival from Haneda or Narita painless.