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The Best Luxury Hotels in Tokyo with Skyline Views

  • Tokyo
  • Japan
  • Luxury
  • Skyline Views
  • Mt Fuji

The best luxury hotels in Tokyo with a view, ranked by what you actually see, the floor the view starts at, and whether the bathtub and bar share it.

Most "Tokyo hotels with a view" lists stop at naming the hotel — the half that doesn't matter. At this tier the view is the thing you're paying the premium for, so the real questions are narrower: how high does the view start, which way do the best rooms face, does the bathtub share the panorama, and can you get the same skyline from the bar without booking the suite? This ranking of the best luxury hotels in Tokyo with a view answers those property by property, and ranks by view quality, not by the logo on the robe.

It names the icons — Park Hyatt, Aman, Andaz Toranomon, Conrad, Ritz-Carlton, Mandarin Oriental, Four Seasons, the Peninsula — but orders them by what you see from the room: the floor the view starts at, the room category worth booking, whether the bathtub faces the glass, and the bar or lounge that sells the same skyline for a cocktail.

The one-line answer: for the most cinematic skyline-from-your-room moment in the city — and the best odds of catching Mt. Fuji from the bathtub — book the Park Hyatt Tokyo, reborn in December 2025 atop Shinjuku, and book a high-floor Deluxe Room on the west side specifically (Hyatt Newsroom; Upgraded Points). Everything below is about whether a different view — the Imperial Palace calm, Tokyo Tower lit up, the bay and Rainbow Bridge — suits your trip better.

How to read a Tokyo "view" before you pay for it

Before the picks, the four distinctions that separate a real view premium from a marketing one — hold every hotel against them:

  • Altitude is the first filter. Tokyo is a low, sprawling city pierced by a handful of towers, so the view is mostly a function of how high you start. The hotels here range from rooms beginning around the 8th floor (the Peninsula) to the upper 40s and low 50s (Park Hyatt, Andaz, Ritz-Carlton, BELLUSTAR) — and that gap matters more than the brand.
  • Direction decides which view. Mt. Fuji sits about 100 km southwest of central Tokyo, so a Fuji room must face roughly west (Towers in Tokyo). Tokyo Tower and the bay are south and east; the Imperial Palace is dead center. Two rooms on the same floor can show completely different cities.
  • The bathtub is the underrated luxury. A deep soaking tub at floor-to-ceiling glass — bathing with the skyline in front of you — is a genuine differentiator, and only some of these hotels deliver it. Where they do, it's flagged below.
  • You can often buy the view with a cocktail instead of a suite. Most of these towers put a bar or club lounge on their top floor with the same panorama as the priciest rooms. If the view is a one-evening want, not a wake-up-to-it need, that's the move — noted per hotel.

For the wider luxury trip — neighborhoods, timing, the splurges worth making — start with our luxury Tokyo travel guide. Now, the hotels.

Park Hyatt Tokyo — the reference skyline view, reborn (Shinjuku)

The benchmark for the Tokyo-from-your-room moment — and it's brand new again. The Lost in Translation hotel reopened on 9 December 2025 after a 19-month, roughly $500M gut renovation, occupying the upper 14 floors (39–52) of Shinjuku Park Tower with 171 redesigned rooms (Hyatt Newsroom; Wallpaper*). The geometry is the whole point: one side faces Mt. Fuji, the other puts the Shinjuku skyline center-stage (Upgraded Points).

The room to book: the Deluxe Rooms sit on floors 42–51 and pair a king or double with a deep soaking tub and a daybed with city or Mt. Fuji views — and you choose your side (Hyatt Newsroom). For Fuji, request a high-floor, west-facing Deluxe; for the glittering grid, take the Shinjuku side (Upgraded Points). The tub shares the glass — one of the best soak-with-a-view rooms in the city. What you see: the Shinjuku skyline, the NTT Docomo Yoyogi clock tower, and Mt. Fuji on the western horizon on a clear day (The Most Perfect View). View starts at: floor 39, rooms to floor 52 — the highest room band in this guide. The bar alternative: the legendary New York Grill & Bar on the 52nd floor, restored to its original look with nightly live jazz and a sweeping skyline panorama — the single most famous view-with-a-cocktail in Tokyo, no suite required (Hyatt Newsroom). Who it's for: the traveler who wants the iconic Shinjuku-and-Fuji panorama, a tub at the window, and is happy with a Shinjuku base over a dead-center one. The honest trade-off: Shinjuku's western pocket (Nishi-Shinjuku) is a 10-plus-minute walk from the station and a taxi or train from the Ginza/Marunouchi action — you're buying the view and the altitude, not a walk-everywhere address. Price band: $$$$ (top-tier).

Our top pick for the view itself: the Park Hyatt Tokyo, in a high-floor west-facing Deluxe Room. Nothing else in the city pairs this altitude, a Fuji-capable orientation, and a soaking tub at the glass.

Check live rates for a high-floor Deluxe Room at the Park Hyatt Tokyo →
Mt Fuji and Shinjuku skyline view from a west-facing Deluxe Room at Park Hyatt Tokyo
Photo by Luke Lawreszuk on Pexels

Aman Tokyo — the Imperial Palace calm, and a stone bath at the glass (Otemachi)

If Park Hyatt is the skyline, Aman is the serenity. It occupies the top six floors (33–38) of the Otemachi Tower, with 84 oversized suites on levels 35–38, floor-to-ceiling windows, and panoramas across the Imperial Palace Gardens and — on clear days — Mt. Fuji (Aman; Aman – Rooms & Suites). The view here is greener and quieter than the neon ones: the palace moat and forest below, the city beyond.

The room to book: every accommodation is a suite, so the decision is orientation and floor — request a high-floor suite facing the Imperial Palace Gardens for the signature green-and-skyline composition. The headline luxury: each room has a deeply immersive stone furo bath positioned to take in the city view while you bathe — a true bathtub-with-view, and arguably the most beautiful soak on this list (Aman – Rooms & Suites). What you see: the Imperial Palace Gardens and moat, the central Tokyo skyline, and Mt. Fuji on a clear day (Aman). View starts at: floor 33 (public spaces), suites on 35–38. The bar alternative: The Lounge by Aman on the 33rd floor, beneath the soaring washi-paper atrium, shares the palace-side view over afternoon tea or an evening drink — the calm-view alternative to Shinjuku's buzz. Who it's for: the traveler who wants stillness over spectacle — the palace's green calm, a ceremonial stone bath at the window, and a dead-central Otemachi address minutes from Tokyo Station. The honest trade-off: Aman's restraint reads as austere to some, and the palace-side view trades neon drama for a quieter, more contemplative picture. If you want the city lit up and buzzing, this isn't your view. Price band: $$$$ (top-tier).

For the full head-to-head with its rivals, see our Aman vs Bvlgari vs Four Seasons Tokyo comparison.

Andaz Tokyo Toranomon Hills — Tokyo Tower from a curved glass wall (Toranomon)

For the Tokyo Tower romance — the orange lattice lit at night — the Andaz is the pick. Its 164 rooms (including eight suites) sit on the upper floors (roughly 47–52) of the 52-story Toranomon Hills tower, wrapped in floor-to-ceiling glass that curves around the room (Hyatt; The Most Perfect View).

The room to book: the King Deluxe Room with Tower View is the best non-suite category — Tokyo Tower framed through the curving glass (Hyatt – Rooms). Corner rooms widen the panorama to take in Tokyo Bay, Rainbow Bridge and Ginza. The bathroom is a Japanese-style wet room with a large circular stone tub — a soak with the skyline alongside (Oyster). What you see: Tokyo Tower (from the Tower-view side), plus Tokyo Bay, Rainbow Bridge and the Ginza district from the bay side (Hyatt; The Most Perfect View). View starts at: the upper floors of the 52-story tower (roughly floor 47 up). The bar alternative: the Rooftop Bar on the 52nd floor — a semi-open-air terrace with night views of Tokyo Tower, the Skytree, Tokyo Bay and Odaiba (Toranomon Hills; Time Out Tokyo). One of the best open-air skyline drinks in the city, and you don't need to be a guest. Who it's for: the traveler who wants Tokyo Tower as the headline, an open-air rooftop, and a design-led hotel in the polished Toranomon business district. The honest trade-off: the Tower view is confined to the correct side — a bay-facing room is gorgeous but won't show the Tower, so name the orientation when you book. Toranomon is sleek but quiet after dark. Price band: $$$$ (top-tier).

Compare view-facing luxury hotels across Tokyo

The Ritz-Carlton, Tokyo — the Fuji-and-Shinjuku club view (Roppongi)

The Ritz-Carlton occupies the top floors (45–53) of the Midtown Tower in Roppongi, one of Tokyo's tallest buildings, with 245 rooms (Ritz-Carlton). It's a serious Fuji contender on altitude alone — and it gates the best of the view behind the club tier.

The room to book: for Fuji, the highest floors are the prize — guest rooms on the 51st and 52nd floors overlook Mt. Fuji and the Shinjuku skyline (StarsDesk). Step up to a Club Deluxe Room and you add 53rd-floor Club Lounge access. Floor-to-ceiling windows throughout frame the cityscape from the National Stadium out to Mt. Fuji (Ritz-Carlton – Rooms). What you see: Mt. Fuji and the Shinjuku skyline to the west, the Roppongi cityscape, and the Imperial Palace from the lounge (StarsDesk). View starts at: floor 45, with the Fuji-facing rooms up on 51–52. The bar alternative: the Club Lounge on the 53rd floor — the highest occupied floor — serves the panoramic Shinjuku, Fuji and Imperial Palace view across the day, but it's reserved for Club-tier guests rather than open to all, so it's a room-category decision, not a walk-in one. Who it's for: the traveler who wants a Fuji-capable high-floor room and the all-day club-lounge ritual, in the lively Roppongi/Midtown district. The honest trade-off: the headline Fuji rooms and the lounge view both sit at the Club tier and the top floors, so the view here costs a clear step up from the entry rate. Below floor 51 you lose the Fuji odds. Price band: $$$$ (top-tier).

Mandarin Oriental, Tokyo — Skytree, the old city, and a western Fuji chance (Nihonbashi)

The Mandarin Oriental crowns a Nihonbashi tower with its 179 guest rooms on floors 30–36, each a generous 50 sqm or more, looking over the historic merchant district toward the Tokyo Skytree, the bay and — from the west-facing rooms on a clear day — Mt. Fuji (Mandarin Oriental – Deluxe Room).

The room to book: orientation is the decision. For the Skytree and old-city panorama, book a Deluxe Premier Room (floors 32–36) facing the tower; for the Fuji chance, ask for a west-facing room — the official line is that "Mount Fuji scenery can be enjoyed from the guest rooms in the west, subject to weather conditions" (Mandarin Oriental – Deluxe Room). Rooms have floor-to-ceiling windows and a bath-and-walk-in-shower; the bath isn't billed as a view-tub, so treat the soak-with-a-view as unconfirmed here. What you see: the Tokyo Skytree, the Nihonbashi cityscape and bay, with a clear-day Mt. Fuji from the west rooms (Mandarin Oriental – Deluxe Room). View starts at: floor 30, rooms to floor 36. The bar alternative: the Mandarin Bar on the 37th floor — the top of the hotel — pairs Nihonbashi-inspired cocktails and live jazz with the night-time city view, open without a room booking (Tabelog). Who it's for: the traveler drawn to the Skytree and the older, lower-rise eastern skyline, who wants a central Nihonbashi base near Tokyo Station and a possible Fuji bonus. The honest trade-off: the rooms start lower than the Shinjuku and Toranomon towers (30s vs 40s–50s), so the view is a touch less vertiginous — and the Fuji angle is a west-room-only, weather-dependent chance, not a feature you can count on. Price band: $$$$ (top-tier).

Conrad Tokyo — the bay, Rainbow Bridge and a garden below (Shiodome)

For a water view rather than a skyline one, the Conrad is the answer. It spans floors 28–37 of the Shiodome tower, and its 291 rooms split cleanly: Bay View rooms over the historic Hamarikyu Gardens and Tokyo Bay, and City View rooms over the skyline (Hilton – Conrad Tokyo; TravelUpdate).

The room to book: the Executive Bay View Room is the standout — 48 sqm with a panorama over the Hamarikyu Gardens' green and the bay beyond, taking in the Rainbow Bridge (Hilton – Rooms & Suites; The Most Perfect View). It's the rare central-Tokyo view that frames a formal garden, water and a bridge at once. Choose Bay over City unless a dense skyline is the point. What you see: Tokyo Bay, the Rainbow Bridge and the Hamarikyu Gardens (Bay View), or the central skyline (City View) (TravelUpdate). View starts at: floor 28, rooms to floor 37. The bar alternative: the Executive Lounge on the 37th floor is split into a city-view side and a bay-view side, so club-tier guests can take in both (TravelUpdate); the hotel's Gordon Ramsay restaurant sits high in the tower too. The lounge is a club-access perk rather than a public bar. Who it's for: the traveler who prefers water, garden and bridge to neon — a calmer, more open view — with Ginza walkable and Haneda an easy run. The honest trade-off: the City View rooms here are the weaker half of the building; the whole reason to choose the Conrad is the bay, so don't book the city side and wonder what the fuss was about. Price band: $$$ to $$$$ (upper-tier; bay rooms at the top of the band).

Four Seasons Hotel Tokyo at Otemachi — the palace view, flawlessly run (Otemachi)

The newer of Tokyo's two Otemachi flagships, the Four Seasons sits on the top six floors of the 39-storey Otemachi One Tower, with guest rooms on floors 34–38 and a rooftop crown of restaurants, lounge and spa (Four Seasons; Four Seasons – Accommodations). Like Aman next door, the headline is the Imperial Palace — but this is the slicker, more responsive operation.

The room to book: the scenic corner suites — Imperial Palace Gardens on one side, sweeping cityscape on the other (Four Seasons – Accommodations). For the top of the building, the Imperial Suite on the 38th floor delivers a panoramic palace view; for a room rather than a suite, request a high-floor Imperial Garden-view category. All rooms have floor-to-ceiling windows framing the palace, Mt. Fuji and the cityscape on clear days. What you see: the Imperial Palace Gardens, the central cityscape, and Mt. Fuji on a clear day (Four Seasons). View starts at: floor 34, rooms to floor 38. The bar alternative: the hotel's top-floor lounge and bars share the palace-and-city panorama — the calm, polished alternative to the louder Shinjuku rooftops. Who it's for: the traveler who wants the palace view and the most internationally fluent, instantly responsive service of the central-Tokyo flagships, on a dead-central Otemachi address. The honest trade-off: it's the more conventionally "grand-hotel" of the Otemachi pair — handsome but less singular than Aman's washi-and-stone serenity a tower away. The view is similar; the atmosphere is more hotel, less sanctuary. Price band: $$$$ (top-tier).

The Peninsula Tokyo — the most central palace-and-park view (Marunouchi)

The Peninsula is the location pick — a freestanding tower on the corner of the Imperial Palace Outer Gardens and Hibiya Park, a walk from Ginza, Marunouchi and the palace itself (The Most Perfect View; Into Japan). The catch for a view-first booking: its 302 rooms run from floor 8 to 33, lower than the Shinjuku and Toranomon towers, so this is a green-and-grand view, not a vertiginous one (Into Japan).

The room to book: insist on a park-and-palace facing room — a higher floor over the Imperial Palace Outer Garden and Hibiya Park, the rare Tokyo view that's mostly trees and historic open space rather than towers (The Most Perfect View). Ask for the highest park-facing category; the street-side rooms don't carry the view. What you see: the Imperial Palace Outer Garden, Hibiya Park and the Marunouchi cityscape (The Most Perfect View). View starts at: floor 8, rooms to floor 33 — the lowest band here, so altitude is the trade. The bar alternative: Peter, the modern-French restaurant and bar on the 24th floor, has the building's stellar view over the palace gardens and Hibiya Park — the in-house way to buy the view with dinner or a drink rather than a high-floor room (The Peninsula Tokyo). Who it's for: the traveler who values a peerless central location and a green palace-park view over raw altitude — and who'll happily take the Peter view up top. The honest trade-off: the rooms top out at the 33rd floor, so if your dream is a 50th-floor skyline or a clear Fuji line, this isn't it. The Peninsula's edge is location and the park view, not height. Price band: $$$$ (top-tier).

BELLUSTAR Tokyo, A Pan Pacific Hotel — the altitude value play (Kabukicho)

The newest skyscraper view in Shinjuku, BELLUSTAR occupies the uppermost floors (39–47) of the Tokyu Kabukicho Tower with just 97 keys, and its calling card is glass: seven-metre-wide windows framing the Tokyo panorama from a dusky grey-and-blue interior (Pan Pacific; Pan Pacific – The Hotel).

The room to book: for the headline, the penthouse suites on floors 45–47 sit at roughly 200 metres' altitude — among the highest hotel rooms in Tokyo (Pan Pacific – The Hotel). For a non-penthouse, any high-floor room benefits from those seven-metre windows; request the highest available, and a west orientation for a Fuji chance on a clear winter morning. What you see: a wide Shinjuku-and-beyond skyline panorama; on the highest floors, an exceptionally broad sweep of the city (Pan Pacific – The Hotel). View starts at: floor 39, rooms to floor 47. The bar alternative: the Sky Private Villa's multi-level restaurant on the topmost floors carries the most dramatic of the hotel's views (Pan Pacific – The Hotel). Who it's for: the traveler who wants top-tier altitude and a big modern skyline view, and is comfortable with a Kabukicho address. The honest trade-off: BELLUSTAR sits above Kabukicho, Shinjuku's nightlife-and-neon quarter — thrilling to some, a lot to others — and as a young property it has a shorter track record than the established flagships. The view, though, is genuinely top of the city. Price band: $$$ to $$$$ (upper-tier; penthouses well into the top band).

Tokyo view hotels compared at a glance

The single most useful table for this decision — because what you see, the floor it starts at and whether the bathtub shares it are exactly what generic lists leave out. Price bands are nightly and highly seasonal; central Tokyo five-stars average well into the high hundreds of dollars and the top suites run into the thousands, so treat bands as a guide, not a quote (KAYAK). $$$ ≈ upper five-star · $$$$ ≈ top-tier flagship.

HotelWhat you seeView starts atBest view room to bookBathtub with view?Bar / lounge view
Park Hyatt TokyoShinjuku skyline + Mt. Fuji (west)Floor 39 (rooms to 52)High-floor west-facing DeluxeYes (soaking tub at glass)New York Bar, 52F (public)
Aman TokyoImperial Palace + skyline + Fuji (clear days)Floor 33 (suites 35–38)High-floor palace-facing suiteYes (stone furo at glass)The Lounge, 33F (public)
Andaz Toranomon HillsTokyo Tower + bay + Rainbow Bridge~Floor 47 (tower top)King Deluxe Tower ViewYes (circular stone tub)Rooftop Bar, 52F (public)
Ritz-Carlton TokyoMt. Fuji + Shinjuku + palaceFloor 45 (Fuji rooms 51–52)Club Deluxe / 51–52F roomNot confirmedClub Lounge, 53F (club only)
Mandarin Oriental TokyoSkytree + old city + Fuji (west)Floor 30 (rooms to 36)West-facing Deluxe PremierNot confirmedMandarin Bar, 37F (public)
Conrad TokyoTokyo Bay + Rainbow Bridge + gardenFloor 28 (rooms to 37)Executive Bay View RoomNot confirmedExec Lounge, 37F (club only)
Four Seasons OtemachiImperial Palace + city + Fuji (clear days)Floor 34 (rooms to 38)Scenic corner suiteNot confirmedTop-floor lounge (public)
The Peninsula TokyoImperial Palace gardens + Hibiya ParkFloor 8 (rooms to 33)High-floor park-facing roomNot confirmedPeter, 24F (public)
BELLUSTAR TokyoWide Shinjuku skyline panoramaFloor 39 (rooms to 47)High-floor / penthouse (45–47)Not confirmedSky Villa restaurant (top floor)

The Mt. Fuji reality check (read this before you book a "Fuji room")

The most over-promised view in Tokyo. The honest version: Mt. Fuji is clearly visible only about 80 to 120 days a year from the Tokyo area, and the odds swing hard by season — roughly two-thirds of December days offer a clear or partial view, while July and August drop below 20% as summer haze settles in (Towers in Tokyo; Japan Highlights). Three rules follow:

  • Season is everything. A "Fuji room" in November–February is a real shot; the same room in June–September (when most leisure travelers visit) will spend most days looking at haze. No hotel can change this.
  • Morning beats afternoon — Fuji is most reliably visible 6–9 AM, before the day's haze builds (Towers in Tokyo).
  • You must face west/southwest. Only the west-facing rooms at the Park Hyatt, Ritz-Carlton, Mandarin Oriental, Four Seasons and Aman have a chance; an east- or bay-facing room has none.

Bottom line: book the right side, in the right season, for the right morning — and treat any Fuji sighting as a bonus, never a guarantee.

The view without the room rate

The luxury secret of view-hotel Tokyo: you can buy almost every one of these skylines for the price of a drink. If the view is a one-evening want rather than a wake-up-to-it need, skip the view-room premium and take a table instead:

  • Shinjuku skyline: the New York Bar (Park Hyatt, 52F) — the famous one, with live jazz and the full Shinjuku panorama, open to non-guests (Hyatt Newsroom).
  • Tokyo Tower + Skytree + bay: the Rooftop Bar (Andaz, 52F) — semi-open-air, the best skyline-and-fresh-air combination in the city (Time Out Tokyo).
  • Nihonbashi + Skytree: the Mandarin Bar (Mandarin Oriental, 37F), jazz and Nihonbashi-inspired cocktails at the top of the tower (Tabelog).
  • Imperial Palace calm: The Lounge at Aman (33F) under the washi atrium, or Peter at the Peninsula (24F) over the palace gardens and Hibiya Park (The Peninsula Tokyo).

The Ritz-Carlton's 53rd-floor Club Lounge and the Conrad's 37th-floor Executive Lounge are the exceptions — those are reserved for club-tier guests, so the view there is a room-category decision.

How to choose your Tokyo view

The honest decision logic, by the view you actually want:

  • Iconic Shinjuku-and-Fuji skyline, tub at the glass: the Park Hyatt Tokyo, high-floor west-facing Deluxe.
  • Serene Imperial Palace green and a ceremonial stone bath: Aman Tokyo, a high-floor palace-facing suite.
  • Tokyo Tower lit up, from an open-air rooftop: the Andaz Toranomon Hills, a Tower-view King Deluxe.
  • Best Fuji odds plus an all-day club lounge: the Ritz-Carlton Tokyo, a Club Deluxe on the 51st–52nd floor, in winter.
  • The Skytree and the older eastern skyline: the Mandarin Oriental, a west room for a Fuji chance.
  • Water, garden and the Rainbow Bridge, not neon: the Conrad Tokyo, an Executive Bay View Room.
  • The palace view with the slickest service, or the most central base: Four Seasons Otemachi (a corner suite) or the Peninsula (a high-floor park room).
  • Maximum altitude and a big modern panorama: BELLUSTAR Tokyo, the highest floor you can get.

The rule that ties it together: at this tier the room is the view, not the hotel. Decide the kind of view first — skyline, palace calm, Tower, bay, or Fuji-chasing — then book the specific category and orientation that delivers it, and confirm the floor and direction with the hotel. Do that and you'll never pay flagship rates to look at the wrong half of the city.

FAQ

Which luxury hotel in Tokyo has the best view from the room? For the iconic skyline-and-Fuji combination, the Park Hyatt Tokyo on floors 39–52 of Shinjuku Park Tower — book a high-floor west-facing Deluxe Room for the soaking tub at the glass and the best Fuji odds. For the Imperial Palace's green calm, Aman Tokyo (with a stone bath at the window) is the rival; for Tokyo Tower, the Andaz Toranomon Hills.

Which Tokyo hotels have the best chance of a Mt. Fuji view? The high, west-facing rooms at the Park Hyatt (floors 42–51), the Ritz-Carlton (floors 51–52), the Mandarin Oriental (west rooms), Aman and the Four Seasons Otemachi. But Fuji is clear only about 80–120 days a year — best in December–February, early in the morning — and never from an east- or bay-facing room. Treat any sighting as a bonus, and weight a Fuji trip toward winter.

Can I get a Tokyo skyline view without paying for a view room? Yes — and it's the smart move if the view is a one-evening want. The Park Hyatt's New York Bar (52F), the Andaz Rooftop Bar (52F) and the Mandarin Bar (37F) are open to non-guests with the same panoramas as the rooms. The Ritz-Carlton's and Conrad's lounges are the exceptions — those are club-tier-only, so the view there is a room-category decision.

Which Tokyo luxury hotel has a bathtub with a view? The standouts are the Park Hyatt Tokyo (a deep soaking tub at floor-to-ceiling glass), Aman Tokyo (a stone furo bath positioned for the city view) and the Andaz Toranomon Hills (a large circular stone tub in a glass-walled wet room). At the others, the soak-with-a-view is not confirmed, so ask the hotel before booking on that basis.

Is the Conrad or the Park Hyatt better for a view? Different views. The Conrad (Shiodome, floors 28–37) is the pick for a water view — Tokyo Bay, the Rainbow Bridge and the Hamarikyu Gardens from an Executive Bay View Room. The Park Hyatt (Shinjuku, floors 39–52) is the pick for a skyline-and-Fuji view from higher up, with a tub at the glass. Choose the Conrad for the bay and garden, the Park Hyatt for altitude and Fuji.

Ready to book your view?

Pick the kind of view first — Shinjuku skyline (Park Hyatt), Imperial Palace calm (Aman, Four Seasons), Tokyo Tower (Andaz), the bay (Conrad), or a Fuji-chasing high room (Ritz-Carlton) — then book the specific room category and confirm the floor and orientation with the hotel. Use the map above to compare what's actually free on your dates, and check live prices and view-facing room categories before you commit. Do that and the view is the one you came for, not a gamble.

Planning the rest of the splurge? See where to stay in Tokyo for luxury travelers, our pick of the best luxury honeymoon hotels in Tokyo, and the Aman vs Bvlgari vs Four Seasons Tokyo comparison.


Sources

  • Hyatt Newsroom — Park Hyatt Tokyo reopens following 19-month renovation (Dec 9 2025; floors 39–52; 171 rooms; Deluxe Rooms floors 42–51 with deep soaking tubs and city/Mt. Fuji views; New York Grill & Bar 52F): newsroom.hyatt.com
  • Wallpaper* — Park Hyatt Tokyo reopening (Studio Jouin Manku renovation): wallpaper.com
  • Upgraded Points — Park Hyatt Tokyo review (west side faces Mt. Fuji, other side Shinjuku; request a west room for Fuji): upgradedpoints.com
  • Aman Tokyo — official site (top floors 33–38 of Otemachi Tower; 84 suites; Imperial Palace Gardens and clear-day Fuji views): aman.com
  • Aman Tokyo — Rooms & Suites (suites on levels 35–38; deep stone furo bath positioned for city views while bathing; floor-to-ceiling windows): aman.com
  • Hyatt — Andaz Tokyo Toranomon Hills (164 rooms incl. 8 suites on the top floors of the 52-story tower; Tokyo Tower and Imperial Palace views): hyatt.com
  • Hyatt — Andaz Tokyo Toranomon Hills Rooms (King Deluxe Room with Tower View; floor-to-ceiling glass): hyatt.com
  • Oyster — Andaz Tokyo Toranomon Hills review (Japanese wet room with a large circular stone tub): oyster.com
  • Toranomon Hills — Rooftop Bar (52F semi-open-air terrace; Tokyo Tower, Skytree, bay and Odaiba views): toranomonhills.com
  • Time Out Tokyo — Rooftop Bar, Andaz Tokyo (open-air 52F bar with skyline views): timeout.com
  • The Ritz-Carlton, Tokyo — overview (floors 45–53 of Midtown Tower; 245 rooms): ritzcarlton.com
  • The Ritz-Carlton, Tokyo — Rooms & Suites (floor-to-ceiling windows; cityscape from National Stadium to Mt. Fuji): ritzcarlton.com
  • StarsDesk — Ritz-Carlton Tokyo review (guest rooms on the 51st and 52nd floors overlook Mt. Fuji and the Shinjuku skyline; 53F Club Lounge): starsdesk.com
  • Mandarin Oriental, Tokyo — Deluxe Room (floors 30–36; City/Skytree view; Mt. Fuji from west rooms subject to weather; floor-to-ceiling windows): mandarinoriental.com
  • Tabelog — Mandarin Bar, Mandarin Oriental Tokyo (37th-floor bar, live jazz, Nihonbashi-inspired cocktails): tabelog.com
  • Hilton — Conrad Tokyo (floors 28–37; 291 rooms; city or bay views over Tokyo Bay and Hamarikyu Gardens): hilton.com
  • Hilton — Conrad Tokyo Rooms & Suites (Executive Bay View Room, 48 sqm, Hamarikyu Gardens and Tokyo Bay): hilton.com
  • TravelUpdate — Conrad Tokyo Bay View Room and City View Suite review (37F Executive Lounge split into city-view and bay-view sides): travelupdate.com
  • Four Seasons Hotel Tokyo at Otemachi — official site (top six floors of the 39-storey Otemachi One Tower; Imperial Palace, Mt. Fuji and cityscape views): fourseasons.com
  • Four Seasons Otemachi — Accommodations (guest rooms on floors 34–38; scenic corner suites; Imperial Suite on the 38th floor; floor-to-ceiling windows): fourseasons.com
  • The Peninsula Tokyo — Peter (24th-floor modern-French restaurant and bar with Imperial Palace gardens and Hibiya Park views): peninsula.com
  • Into Japan — The Peninsula Tokyo (freestanding tower; guest rooms floors 8–33; 302 rooms incl. 47 suites; facing Imperial Palace Gardens and Hibiya Park): intojapan.co.uk
  • Pan Pacific — BELLUSTAR Tokyo (uppermost floors 39–47 of Tokyu Kabukicho Tower; 97 keys; seven-metre-wide windows): panpacific.com
  • Pan Pacific — BELLUSTAR Tokyo, The Hotel (floor-to-ceiling skyline windows; five penthouses on floors 45–47 at ~200 m altitude; Sky Private Villa): panpacific.com
  • The Most Perfect View — Tokyo hotels with the best skyline views (per-hotel view, floor and orientation detail): themostperfectview.com
  • Towers in Tokyo — Best views of Mt. Fuji from Tokyo (visible ~80–120 days/year; ~68% of December days, under 20% in July–August; best 6–9 AM; face southwest, ~100 km away; never guaranteed): towersintokyo.com
  • Japan Highlights — Mt. Fuji visibility by month (deep-winter months clear a large majority of mornings): japanhighlights.com
  • KAYAK — Best 5-Star Hotels in Tokyo (nightly price reference): kayak.com