Super Hotel Premier Tokyo Station Yaesu-Chuoguchi
by the TopOfHotel team
The budget pick that still gets you a real natural-spring onsen, free, a 4-minute walk from Tokyo Station — the best value in its price tier.
The budget pick that still gets you a real natural-spring onsen, free, a 4-minute walk from Tokyo Station — the best value in its price tier.
In-Depth Review
Rooms and decor
The 240 rooms cover every base — Theater Rooms with a big screen and a sofa, Suites, Hollywood Twins, Loft Bed Rooms and barrier-free units. They're all done in a minimalist earthy palette with all-cotton fabric, so the look is calm rather than fancy. The standout is the Pillow Gallery: pick from 7 pillow types — memory foam, cotton, latex and more — and guests single out the latex one for an especially good night's sleep. Footprints are a compact 12-15 sqm, standard for a Japanese business hotel, so set expectations to efficient, not roomy.
Food and amenities
Breakfast is a free healthy buffet served 6:30-9:30 — fresh-pressed orange, tomato and apple juice, homemade bread, rice, miso soup, pickles, rolled egg and natto. It's the kind of spread you'd expect at a 4-star, included with the room. Wi-Fi is free, there's a coin laundry, and the front desk is staffed around the clock so a late-night check-in is fine.
Location and getting there
It's a 4-minute walk from Tokyo Station's Yaesu-Chuoguchi (Yaesu Central Exit) — head out past Daimaru and you're at a clean, modern 12-storey building with a sign out front reading "Yaezakura no Yu." From here Ginza is 8 minutes, Kyobashi 6, and Nihonbashi 10.
Things to know before booking
Rooms top out around 12-15 sqm, which is tight if you're used to a luxury room. Check-in runs through an automated kiosk with staff on hand only at certain hours, so skip this one if you want a full concierge. And there's no gym or spa — the Yaezakura no Yu onsen stands in for both.
Our take
This is the budget pick we'd actually book: a real natural-spring onsen and a free breakfast, a 4-minute walk from Tokyo Station, from about $86 a night. The bath alone — separate men's and women's floors, a small outdoor pool open to the Tokyo sky, and a sauna — is reason enough people rebook. If you're keeping the room cheap so you can spend on food and shopping, this is the best value in the neighborhood, with the onsen thrown in free.
Score Breakdown
Assessed by our editorial team from data and real guest reviews
The Honest Verdict — pros & what to know
- A 3-star flagship of the Super Hotel Premier chain, renamed from Super Hotel Lohas, so it keeps the same building and address.
- A natural-spring public bath called Yaezakura no Yu, with separate men's and women's floors, free for guests every night.
- A free healthy breakfast buffet with fresh-pressed juice, homemade bread and a Japanese set, served 6:30-9:30.
- A Pillow Gallery lets you pick from 7 pillow types, including memory foam, cotton and latex, for a better night's sleep.
- A 4-minute walk from Tokyo Station's Yaesu-Chuoguchi exit, with Ginza 8 minutes away and Kyobashi 6 minutes.
- Rooms are a compact 12-15 sqm, standard for a Japanese business hotel but smaller than a luxury room.
- Check-in runs through an automated kiosk and staff are only on hand at certain hours, so anyone expecting a full concierge may be let down.
- There's no on-site gym or spa — the onsen stands in for both.
Who It’s For
Match Score by travel style
Amenities
Location & Nearby Spots
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Insider Tips
- Hit the Yaezakura no Yu onsen between 21:00 and 23:00, when the bath is at its largest and the crowd thins out.
- Book a Theater Room if you want to binge Netflix on the big screen.
- Ask to upgrade your pillow at check-in — you choose from the 7 types on the spot.