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Review: the Conrad Tokyo hotel (Hilton Honors)

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This is our review of the Conrad Tokyo hotel, part of Hilton Honors.

After an exceptional stay at the Conrad Osaka last year (review here), I couldn’t resist checking in to Conrad Tokyo to see how it compared. This is the older of the two Conrads in Japan (a third is under construction in Nagoya) and opened in 2005.

As is typical for a high-end hotel in Asia, it occupies the upper floors of an office building; in this case the top nine floors of the Shiodome building:

Review: the Conrad Tokyo hotel (Hilton Honors)

Thank you to Hilton for arranging my stay for review purposes. The hotel website is here.

The first part of this article series, my review of Japan Airlines premium economy cabin on the new A350, is here.

Where is Conrad Tokyo?

The location is an interesting one. Unlike London, Tokyo is a much less centralised city with a variety of neighbourhoods serving different purposes, from Shibuya to Shinjuku to Ginza, Roppongi and others. Each has unique characteristics but it also means there is no real ‘zone one’ central business district.

Review: the Conrad Tokyo hotel (Hilton Honors)

Like many other luxury hotels in the city, Conrad Tokyo is in a neighbourhood of high-end offices in Shimbashi; you won’t find much residential or retail in the immediate surrounds and outside of office lunch hours it is a quiet area.

Review: the Conrad Tokyo hotel

That said, it is just on the edge of Ginza, the luxury shopping district, which is about a ten minute walk via the skywalks (another feature Asian cities have perfect but never took off in London). With access to two metro stations (Shiodome and Shimbashi, the latter of which is also a commuter rail station) you have plenty of options for getting around.

From Haneda, the central Tokyo airport, it’s about a 45 minute journey (assuming you don’t get on the wrong train like I did and overshoot your station!) or by taxi (which is not cheap in Tokyo) about 30 minutes.

Inside the Conrad Tokyo hotel

As mentioned above, the hotel occupies the top nine floors of a 37-storey office block. Entrance is via ground level and up a set of elevators to the 28th floor, which is where you’ll find the main hotel lobby and indeed the hotel restaurants and bar.

The hotel lobby is an imposing double-height space with expansive artworks by Toko Shinoda.

Review: the Conrad Tokyo hotel

If you’re a Diamond member you can head straight to the Executive Club lounge to check-in. Everyone else checks in in the main lobby.

My arrival on a national holiday meant the hotel was particularly busy but there were plenty of staff managing the check-in process. It all went pretty smoothly and I was quickly on my way.

King Suites at the Conrad Tokyo

I had been upgraded to a King Suite. Unfortunately, as the hotel was fully booked, I was unable to see a standard room which is half the size.

My suite opened up to a large hallway – far larger than it needed to be as I’m not sure what you’d use it for! A single toilet is located here for guests, should you have a business meeting or similar in the living room and not want them to enter the main bathroom. Naturally it features an electric toilet.

On your left have a walk-in wardrobe connecting to the bathroom with ample luggage racks, drawers and hanging space.

Review: the Conrad Tokyo hotel

The bathroom connects from the walk-in wardrobe to the bedroom and is clad in marble tiles.

Review: the Conrad Tokyo hotel

It features the usual Byredo Mojave Ghost toiletries:

Review: the Conrad Tokyo hotel

There’s another toilet inside a frosted glass cubicle as well as a cubicle featuring a shower and bathtub, complete with a Conrad rubber duck. Each hotel has its own different duck to collect.

Review: the Conrad Tokyo hotel

After the bathroom is the bedroom with a large and comfortable king-size bed with cherry blossom motif above it:

Review: the Conrad Tokyo hotel

Two big bedside tables were on either side as well as a mains style socket – Japan uses the same two-prong plug as the USA. Two international adaptors were conveniently supplied in the room and were much sturdier than my multi-adaptor which has a habit of falling out.

Review: the Conrad Tokyo hotel

The right hand side had lighting controls for all the bedroom lights (but not the bathroom or living room) plus the electric curtains / blinds. It was all very intuitive to use which isn’t always the case.

Opposite the bed was a large TV whilst, in the window, a recliner and a small coffee table with a vase of cherry blossom – a nice touch (and my only sight of the Sakura as I was about a week too early!)

Review: the Conrad Tokyo hotel

Adjacent to the bedroom, and completing a full loop of the room, is the living room. This is very spacious and features a sofa, armchair and round dining table / desk:

Review: the Conrad Tokyo hotel

and

Review: the Conrad Tokyo hotel

There’s another wall-mounted TV here plus tea and coffee making facilities (Nespresso) as well as a stocked minifridge.

Review: the Conrad Tokyo hotel

The room was serviced twice a day, once in the morning and once with a turndown service in the evening. Housekeeping lays out a set of pyjamas you can borrow for your stay – this is a typical Japanese custom.

Conrad Tokyo spa, pool and gym

On to the other facilities in the hotel. The spa, pool and gym are all on the 29th floor, so one story above the lobby. The pool is surprisingly large and has a view of the Tokyo Skytree as well as the surrounding area. You are supposed to wear supplied swim caps during your stay but this wasn’t very clear until one of the staff came in and told me.

Review: the Conrad Tokyo hotel

The spa features a thermal suite for use by all hotel guests with some hot pools, a steam room and sauna, but sadly no plunge pool. As is customary this is fully nude – there are separate facilities for men and women.

Finally, the gym overlooks the pool from a mezzanine level with large windows. There is a row of running and other cardio machines plus some weight machines and lifting equipment.

Review: the Conrad Tokyo hotel

Conrad Club

The top – 37th – floor features a Club Lounge for those who have booked Club rooms or are Hilton Honors Diamond members as I am. This is an open-plan space spilling across both sides of the corridor and with views in both directions.

Breakfast, afternoon tea and cocktail hour are all served here, although the selection of drinks is stronger than the food – it’s certainly not enough for a full meal. The afternoon tea selection, for example, included just two types of sandwiches / wraps and two sweet desserts:

Review: the Conrad Tokyo hotel

Conrad Tokyo dining and breakfast

There are four restaurants on site, all on the 28th floor:

  • Collage offers French cuisine
  • China Blue is modern Chinese cooking
  • Kazahana is classic Japanese
  • Cerise is a casual restaurant

During busy periods, all four are pressed into service for breakfast to accommodate everyone, although the selection is the same.

There is a buffet complemented by an a la carte menu. This features things like lobster omelet, eggs benedict, avocado toast, sakura shrimp and bamboo shoot chawanmushi, matcha pancakes and of course eggs any way you like them.

I was surprised to see the eggs benedict feature a spear of white asparagus – something I’ve only ever encountered in Germany:

Review: the Conrad Tokyo hotel

The buffet featured all the usual items you would expect, including a wide variety of fruit, juices, pastries and similar:

Review: the Conrad Tokyo hotel

Japanese items included cod roe and chicken yawata rolls:

Review: the Conrad Tokyo hotel

Dinner at Kazahana

I was invited to dinner at Kazahana, the classic Japanese restaurant. Dishes included tiny squid:

Review: the Conrad Tokyo hotel

…. and sea bream and squid sashimi:

Review: the Conrad Tokyo hotel

I love squid sashimi, it has an interesting creamy texture – not rubbery at all. Delicious. The main course was wagyu steak in three different cuts:

Review: the Conrad Tokyo hotel

Conclusion

Whilst it isn’t quite as modern as the Conrad Osaka, Conrad Tokyo still holds its own next to its younger sibling.

Rooms are beautifully appointed with spectacular city-wide views thanks to their position on the 30th floors and above.

The spread at the Conrad Club is a little sparse but the hotel amenities make up for it with a large pool, well equipped gym and classic Japanese spa.

Rates at the Conrad Tokyo start from around £400+ per night or 100,000 Hilton Honors points if booking a redemption.

If you are booking for cash, we recommend booking a ‘Hilton for Luxury’ package via our luxury hotel partner Emyr Thomas at Bon Vivant. You will receive:

  • Complimentary breakfast for two
  • $100 equivalent food & beverage credit
  • Double Hilton Honors points
  • One category upgrade, early check-in and late check-out, subject to availability

…. for the same price as the standard Best Flexible Rate. You pay on departure as usual. You can learn more about ‘Hilton for Luxury’ here and contact Emyr here.

You can find out more, and book, on the hotel website here.


How to earn Hilton Honors points and status from UK credit cards

How to earn Hilton Honors points and status from UK credit cards (April 2025)

There are various ways of earning Hilton Honors points from UK credit and debit cards.  Many cards also have generous sign-up bonuses.

There are two dedicated Hilton Honors debit cards. These are especially attractive when spending abroad due to the 0% or 0.5% FX fee, depending on card.

You also receive FREE Hilton Honors status for as long as you hold the debit cards – Gold status with the Plus card and Silver status with the basic card. This is a great reason to apply even if you rarely use it.

We reviewed the Hilton Honors Plus Debit Card here and the Hilton Honors Debit Card here.

You can apply for either card here.

NEW: Hilton Honors Plus Debit

10,000 bonus points, Hilton Gold status and NO FX fees Read our full review

NEW: Hilton Honors Debit

2,500 bonus points, Hilton Silver status and 0.5% FX fees Read our full review

There is another way of getting Hilton Honors status, and earning Hilton Honors points, from a payment card.

Holders of The Platinum Card from American Express receive FREE Hilton Honors Gold status for as long as they hold the card.  It also comes with Marriott Bonvoy Gold, Radisson Rewards Premium and MeliaRewards Gold status.

We reviewed American Express Platinum in detail here and you can apply here.

The Platinum Card from American Express

80,000 bonus points and great travel benefits – for a large fee Read our full review

You can also earn Hilton Honors points indirectly with:

and for small business owners:

The conversion rate from American Express to Hilton Honors points is 1:2.

Click here to read our detailed summary of all UK credit cards which can be used to earn Hilton Honors points.

Comments (61)

  • Norfolk&Chance says:

    “ Rats at the Conrad Tokyo start from around £400+ per night”

    Those are fancy rats

  • TJ says:

    Whilst the Conrad is not in the most vibrant location, you can also walk to the Tsukiji Outer Market in 15mins which has some great food stalls and restaurants.

  • Lou says:

    We stayed here a couple of years ago. Despite being fully booked, the service was excellent. The gym facilities are top-notch too

  • WorldTraveller says:

    Very overpriced but a decent hotel. Generally speaking, Tokyo is extremely overpriced compared to anywhere else in Japan. Much better to stay virtually anywhere else in Japan – you’ll get larger rooms and pay less than half the price for the equivalent of this hotel.

    • meta says:

      Japanese hotels are not known for larger rooms. Conrad has one of the biggest, if not the biggest standard rooms in Tokyo at 48sqm2.

    • astra19 says:

      I agree. We stayed one night here due to credits expiring but I would never pay the cash rate.
      After one night here we moved to Grand Bach Ginza which is part of a small Japanese chain; it was less than half the price and had Conrad beat on basically every factor except the view.

    • Jingle says:

      Apart from Benesse Art Hotel On Naoshima 😬

  • meta says:

    Taxi is cheap if you use one of the apps (Go Taxi, Didi, Uber as well) compared to London. I only paid £35 from Haneda to Conrad a year ago. And checking now it is about 6500 yen.

    Where it gets expensive is to Narita or longer distances, but that is understandable given it’s 1h+ to get there.

    • Alex G says:

      Agreed. We took a taxi from Shinjuku to Avis/Budget near HND last year, booked through Uber, and it was very good value as we had two large cases and saved us a lot of time.

      But we also used a taxi for the short ride from Shinjuku Station to our hotel, and it was only £5 / ¥1000 (and of course no tipping)

  • Vistaro says:

    Rooms remarkably similar to The Conrad in Dubai.

  • Alex G says:

    Yes, you will get a large room if you stay at an American chain hotel, but for heavens sake people, if you are going to Japan, do it properly and stay in Japanese hotels. Unless you also plan to eat at McDonald’s or KFC.

    Surprised at Rhys not knowing you don’t wet your hair in a public bath (haven’t you been to an Onsen, Rhys?), but it’s a useful reminder that you should read up on local customs before visiting this amazing country.

    • meta says:

      Japanese-chain hotel rooms are too small for me (as a minimum I need 25sqm). However, I found a couple of boutique hotels just outside the usual tourist areas and also AirBnBs that are very nice and cheap. Other than first time visitors, people should really look beyond Shinjuku/Ginza as Tokyo is comprised of small cities and each neighbourhood has a different feel.

    • astra19 says:

      Generally yes, even if bald, you need to wear a cap but that only applies in fitness/lane-type swimming pools. In a leisure pool in a resort in Japan nobody wears caps. I stayed here and wouldn’t have known until they told us either.

    • Rhys says:

      The caps were very discreetly laid out so it wasn’t clear!

  • meta says:

    I like this hotel having stayed here six times, but it is showing its age. I think it’s great for first time visitors who want to experience the glamour of Ginza. Hamarikyu Gardens below is also a must visit (oldest pine tree in Japan, teahouse, etc.)

    Standard rooms have either Tokyo Bay or city views (but not the full vista and if your room is close to one of the high rises, not even that). Book Bay view rooms if you want a view. The toto is also an old version.

    You also have to bear in mind which the review fails to mention is that the queues at breakfast are horrendous if the hotel is busy even when they use all the spaces. Last year I had to wait 20+ minutes so after first day I ditched the breakfast and went to Kimuraya instead. The quality of food items has also gone downhill since covid. Check-in can also be a lengthy experience.

    • Tony J says:

      I’ve just completed a 5 night stay there utilising a very reasonable points 5 for 4 rate on dates where the cash price was 600 or so per night.

      The breakfast was just OK, the coffee abysmal (make sure you ask for a double shot in a cappuccino, don’t expect it to taste good) and the wait times for ordering the a la carte (which in fairness was included) was inconsistent. The bacon was once very crispy thin streaky but 4 days was thick almost like pork belly, not crispy and basically inedible.

      Would agree on taxi comments, it’s not that bad for quick runarounds… Which you will need as this hotel is a bit off the beaten track for ease of connection.

      I wouldn’t stay there again due to location.

      That being said the service was excellent, as was the standard room (we actually refused an upgrade as we didn’t want to repack) and the spa/pool was good.

      If you don’t mind getting taxis (and you will be doing a hell of a lot of walking anyway) then it’s fine.

      The Hilton in Hiroshima on the other hand, which is ‘only’ a 4*, was superior in every way (food in particular) and about 1/4 of the the cash price. Still terrible coffee but there is an amazing coffee shop opposite the hotel at least!

      • meta says:

        You don’t need taxi here, just need to know how to use the overground and underground passages to get basically anywhere around Tokyo Station

      • WorldTraveller says:

        You go to Japan and eat western breakfast then what do you expect. Not sure why you’d travel to Japan to eat western breakfast. The Japanese traditional breakfast options are top notch.

        • meta says:

          They normally do western breakfast better than any Western country.

          A lot of contemporary Japanese food culture is basically perfecting the Western food using top notch ingredients and new techniques.

          Sadly not in most Western chains. It actually used to be different, but with over tourism things have gone downhill and weak yen means that a lot Japanese guests can’t afford staying in these hotels. (staycation is a big thing in Japan and they had this culture before the word entered vocabulary). In turn this means, that hotels have no-one to keep them in check.

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