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The Skyline View Deluxe Room offers a peaceful stay with stunning views of Tokyo Bay and the Rainbow Bridge. It blends traditional Japanese style with
The Imperial Garden View Premium Room offers a peaceful retreat in the heart of Tokyo. Each of the 20 rooms is 56 square meters. They
The Imperial Garden View Junior Suite offers elegant comfort and modern style. Each of the 98 rooms and suites feels like a luxurious home. The
The Skyline View Superior Suite offers a beautiful mix of space, comfort, and art. It overlooks the Imperial Palace and Tokyo Station, giving stunning city
The Skyline View Deluxe Corner Suite spans 105 square meters. It combines comfort with style. It features two distinct areas: a cozy living room and
The Skyline View Premium Suite offers 117 square meters of luxury and calm. It is designed for rest and comfort. The suite has a bedroom,
The 2 Bedroom Deluxe Suite covers 156 sqm. It feels open and calm, making it easy to settle in. Floor-to-ceiling windows frame wide skyline views
Bulgari Hotel Tokyo occupies the 40th to 45th floors of Tokyo Midtown Yaesu, directly above one of the city's key transport and business districts. The hotel looks across Tokyo Station, Marunouchi, Ginza, Nihombashi, and, on clear days, toward Mount Fuji. It is a high-rise urban retreat, yet it avoids the anonymous feel of many tower hotels. Italian design, Japanese craft, skyline views, rooftop gardens, and precise service create a calm world above the capital.
The location is one of the hotel's strongest assets. Tokyo Station is close enough to make arrivals, departures, Shinkansen travel, and city movement unusually easy. Ginza is nearby for shopping and dining. Marunouchi places offices and polished streets within reach. Nihombashi adds heritage, department stores, food culture, and old merchant-city texture. Bulgari Hotel Tokyo sits at the meeting point of all of these areas, then lifts the stay far above them.
Tokyo Midtown Yaesu gives the hotel a powerful base. The building stands near Tokyo Station, one of the city's most practical anchors. From the upper floors, trains, towers, and city lights form a constantly shifting view. The hotel's height adds drama, but the setting also brings real convenience. Guests can move across Tokyo with ease, then return to a quieter world in the sky.
This is not the Tokyo of small alleys or low wooden houses. It is the city of precision, rail movement, finance, shopping, and vertical light. Bulgari Hotel Tokyo suits that side of the capital. The hotel feels fast when it needs to be, but the upper-floor setting softens the city's pressure once guests step inside.
The interiors were designed by Antonio Citterio Patricia Viel, whose work links Bulgari hotels around the world. In Tokyo, the design language blends Italian glamour with Japanese restraint. Dark stone, bronze, silk, lacquer-like surfaces, fine woods, and tailored furniture create a rich but controlled atmosphere.
Japanese influence appears through craft, pattern, proportion, and the way materials are handled. The hotel does not rely on heavy themes. It uses detail more quietly: a ceiling curve, a textured wall, a framed view, or a shift from polished stone to softer fabric. The result feels precise, calm, and highly finished.
Bulgari Hotel Tokyo has 98 rooms and suites. They are set high above Yaesu, so the view is part of the room experience from the start. Floor-to-ceiling windows frame Tokyo's skyline, while interiors keep the mood warm and composed. Rooms use Italian furniture, Japanese detailing, deep stone bathrooms, rich fabrics, and careful lighting.
The design is not bare. It is edited. Surfaces feel rich, but the rooms are also practical for Tokyo: strong desks, generous bathrooms, comfortable seating, and a calm layout after busy days outside. Many rooms draw the eye toward the city, especially at night when Tokyo becomes a field of light.
Suites bring more space and a stronger residential feeling. The Bulgari Suite is the property's largest accommodation, known for its scale and rare skyline position. For longer stays or special occasions, the suites make the hotel feel less like a place to sleep and more like a private Tokyo apartment above the city.
Il Ristorante Niko Romito is located on the 40th floor and brings Bulgari's Italian culinary identity to Tokyo. The restaurant has earned a Michelin star for consecutive years since opening, which gives it a serious role within the city's already competitive dining landscape. The room combines Tokyo views with a polished Italian mood.
The menu expresses Niko Romito's modern Italian cooking rather than a broad hotel-restaurant style. The setting includes Japanese design cues, including a curved wood ceiling, but the cooking remains clearly Italian. Tokyo is outside, Italy is at the table, and Bulgari's precise design holds both together.
Sushi Hoseki gives the hotel a more intimate Japanese dining counter. The restaurant is small, highly focused, and built around omakase. Its scale makes it feel like a quiet inner world within the larger hotel. For guests who want Japanese dining without leaving the property, it adds a serious local counterpoint to Il Ristorante Niko Romito.
The presence of both restaurants gives the hotel range. Bulgari Hotel Tokyo could lean only on Italian identity, but Sushi Hoseki grounds the dining program in the city. Guests can move between Italian refinement, Japanese precision, rooftop drinks, sweets, and lounge moments without leaving the upper floors.
The Bulgari Bar sits on the 45th floor, between rooftop terraces and above Tokyo's skyline. It is one of the hotel's most dramatic spaces. The bar has indoor seating and outdoor terraces, so the atmosphere can shift with the season, weather, and hour. On clear evenings, the view stretches across the city and sometimes toward Mount Fuji.
The bar is designed like a Mediterranean garden pavilion in the sky, with Bulgari's aperitivo culture translated into Tokyo's vertical setting. It works for a late-afternoon drink, a first stop before dinner, or a final pause after a night in Ginza. The rooftop setting gives the hotel a social focal point without making the whole property feel loud.
The Bulgari Spa adds a major wellness layer to the hotel. Treatment rooms, a gym, relaxation spaces, and an indoor pool create a calm retreat far above the streets. The spa's design uses refined materials and soft lighting, keeping the mood consistent with the rest of the property. It is polished, but also genuinely useful after long days in Tokyo.
The pool is one of the standout features. It has a strong visual identity and a calm mood that contrasts with the city below. Tokyo can be tiring, even when everything works well. The spa gives the stay a slower rhythm: swim, treatment, sauna, quiet rest, then return to the city or to dinner upstairs.
The hotel's position near Tokyo Station makes it unusually practical. Shinkansen routes, airport transfers, subway lines, taxis, and walking access to Marunouchi and Ginza all support an efficient stay. For business travelers, this matters. For leisure travelers, it means less friction when moving between neighborhoods.
Ginza brings boutiques, department stores, sushi counters, cocktail bars, and polished restaurants close to the hotel. Nihombashi adds a more historic commercial tone, with food halls, bridges, and long-standing shops. The Imperial Palace area and Marunouchi bring wide streets and green edges. Bulgari Hotel Tokyo can sit at the center of a full visit without making the city feel hard to use.
What makes the hotel memorable is the way it uses height. It is not simply high for the sake of views. The upper floors shape the entire stay: arrivals feel elevated, rooms feel removed, restaurants look outward, and the bar turns the skyline into part of the evening. The hotel takes Tokyo's vertical energy and makes it calmer.
The rooftop terraces are rare in this part of the city. They give fresh air, seasonal light, and a sense of openness that many Tokyo hotels lack. In a dense urban setting, that outdoor space changes the mood. It allows Bulgari Hotel Tokyo to feel both metropolitan and airy.
Bulgari Hotel Tokyo suits travelers who want Tokyo with design, height, dining, and convenience. It works well for couples, business travelers, style-focused guests, food lovers, and visitors who want immediate access to Tokyo Station and Ginza without staying in a conventional business hotel. The hotel is especially strong for short stays where every transfer and meal needs to work smoothly.
It is less suited to guests who want a low-rise ryokan mood or a small neighborhood inn. Its strength is different: Italian precision, Japanese craft, skyline views, serious dining, a rooftop bar, and a powerful location above Yaesu. Used that way, Bulgari Hotel Tokyo becomes one of the city's most distinctive modern luxury hotels.
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