Go Back  FlyerTalk Forums > Destinations > Asia > Japan
Reload this Page >

Solid but inexpensive hotels in Tokyo

Community
Wiki Posts
Search

Solid but inexpensive hotels in Tokyo

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old Sep 15, 2022, 4:17 pm
  #46  
 
Join Date: Nov 2013
Location: NYC / TYO / Up in the Air
Programs: UA GS 1.7MM, AA 2.1MM, EK, BA, SQ, CX, Marriot LT, Accor P
Posts: 6,310
Originally Posted by Anna101
Thank you both for narrowing down the too many options. I will look up all those. The ease of the Limousine bus and the Royal Park hotel looks very tempting for its simplicity.
From Narita to TCAT is non-stop -- and has never taken us more than 50 minutes (we live in Hatchobori which is close to TCAT) -- unless there was a typhoon or an accident lol -- and we do it more than 20 times per year on average.... the best part is you come out of baggage claim and the Friendly Limousine Bus service is right in front of you -- which trust me after a 14 hour flight it's a welcome sight! Typically the buses to TCAT run every 15 minutes -- but COVID can change that - but never worse than every 30...
Anna101 likes this.
bmwe92fan is online now  
Old Sep 15, 2022, 7:21 pm
  #47  
 
Join Date: Jan 2019
Location: Canberra
Programs: QF, SQ, VA. Marriott Plat
Posts: 28
This sounds absolutely perfect thank you for the details.
Anna101 is offline  
Old Sep 15, 2022, 9:27 pm
  #48  
Original Poster
 
Join Date: Jul 2017
Location: California
Programs: AA EXP; Hyatt Globalist; Marriott Bonvoy Titanium Elite
Posts: 1,968
So, I've decided to stay at the Tokyu Shinjuku for the second half of my trip instead of the moxy or the hyatt regency. But I'm having a hell of a time trying to book from the Tokyu website (which is about $100-150 cheaper than booking in USD through other websites). I select my dates, and it keeps shifting the dates back. I'm wondering if this is a timezone thing as it is converting me back from JST to PDT. Anyone here book through the Tokyu website and experience this?

EDIT: after changing my laptop's time zone to JST, it comes up on the correct days. so yeah the website doesn't convert time zones correctly. All good now though. $460 for 8 nights ain't bad and the location is killer!
freecia, pudgym29, boboqui and 3 others like this.

Last edited by seigex; Sep 15, 2022 at 9:46 pm
seigex is online now  
Old Sep 16, 2022, 8:39 pm
  #49  
 
Join Date: Jan 2019
Location: Canberra
Programs: QF, SQ, VA. Marriott Plat
Posts: 28
Stayed here in Shibuya some years back and recommend it. I had a restful view over the temple and ‘shrines’. https://dormyinn-shibuya-jingumae.h-rez.com/

They still have a couple of lightweight electric bikes which were very welcome for going out for a ride around Shibuya before breakfast when there are only 100 people out instead of 500,000 a couple of hours later. Very comfortable (small) rooms. There is a shuttle from the hotel to Shibuya station. Is a bit of a walk from Shibuya to the hotel.
I found Shibuya station very trying went first arriving.
Anna101 is offline  
Old Sep 22, 2022, 8:17 pm
  #50  
 
Join Date: Nov 2013
Location: NYC / TYO / Up in the Air
Programs: UA GS 1.7MM, AA 2.1MM, EK, BA, SQ, CX, Marriot LT, Accor P
Posts: 6,310
Originally Posted by Anna101
I found Shibuya station very trying went first arriving.
You aren't alone -- I've been through there hundreds of times and I still get lost -- as does my wife -- when you have to physically leave the station -- and then re-enter at another entrance -- just to change lines -- well that's confusing....
Anna101 likes this.
bmwe92fan is online now  
Old Sep 22, 2022, 10:18 pm
  #51  
 
Join Date: Jul 2018
Posts: 201
Piggybacking on this thread (hope its ok) regarding cheap hotels in Tokyo. I was wondering if anyone had experience with Hotel Kanra in Kyoto. It looks nice, but wondering if the location is any good?
sameruval is offline  
Old Sep 24, 2022, 11:44 am
  #52  
Original Poster
 
Join Date: Jul 2017
Location: California
Programs: AA EXP; Hyatt Globalist; Marriott Bonvoy Titanium Elite
Posts: 1,968
Originally Posted by Objectivelyreal
The Hotel New Ueno is a 60-step walk from the turnstile devices on the left-hand side at Ueno Station’s main entrance, the one that’s in front of Ameyoko, the notorious market for contraband and pirated goods. I’ve stayed there about six times. Price varies by season by you can get a decent room there for about 45 US Dollars a night. No room service, breakfast, gym or public bath. A classic, no frills business and tourist hotel.
Thanks for this tip, ended up changing my Moxy booking to this one, given it's right outside of Ueno for 3 days before I head down to Osaka. Location looks perfect, and the price through Agoda was killer, half the price from the hotel directly.

New travel plan using business hotels that hopefully is fully set now:

10/31 - Arrive Narita
10/31 - 3 nights at New Ueno Hotel ($138)
10/31-11/3 - Hang around Tokyo

11/3 - Activate JR Pass and head to Osaka on the Shinkansen
11/3 - ibis Styles Osaka Namba (5 nights - $236)
11/3-11/8 - Bounce around Southern Japan with the JR Pass
11/8 - Head back to Tokyo on the Shinkansen
11/8 - Tokyu Stay Shinjuku (5 nights - $360)
11/8-11/9 - Shinkansen to Niigata and Sendai
11/10-11/13 - Hang around Tokyo
11/13 - Head to Haneda to fly home
pudgym29, progol, Anna101 and 1 others like this.

Last edited by seigex; Sep 24, 2022 at 1:11 pm
seigex is online now  
Old Oct 10, 2022, 3:11 am
  #53  
 
Join Date: Jan 2019
Location: Canberra
Programs: QF, SQ, VA. Marriott Plat
Posts: 28
Would love to see a thread just like this for Los Angeles. 😊
seigex likes this.
Anna101 is offline  
Old Oct 11, 2022, 7:51 pm
  #54  
 
Join Date: Oct 2018
Posts: 11
Just stayed here few weeks ago:

check this one. very cheap. very nice and good location.

https://www.uds-hotels.com/yuen/shinjuku/

I think they are part of Muji group.

The rooms are not that big but very cheap.

s
bobrowiec is offline  
Old Oct 11, 2022, 10:21 pm
  #55  
 
Join Date: Jun 2015
Location: SFO
Posts: 181
Originally Posted by bobrowiec
check this one. very cheap. very nice and good location.

https://www.uds-hotels.com/yuen/shinjuku/
Yuen is new and looks nice indeed. I have seen a few pictures, nice interior design, and roof top (open) onsen; however, the location is not that great personally. It's at least 15 minutes of walk to JR Shinjuku station or 8 to 10 minutes of walk to the subway stations.
LCUF is offline  
Old Nov 16, 2022, 11:34 am
  #56  
 
Join Date: Jul 2021
Programs: AP AS BA
Posts: 364
Originally Posted by od_sf
A couple of suggestions:

Pullman Tokyo Tamachi is a very nice, relatively new 4-star hotel with incredibly affordable rates - one of the best C/P hotels in Tokyo, IMO. The direct area is a bit boring, but the hotel is a 2-minute walk to Tamachi station (Yamanote line).

https://all.accor.com/hotel/B137/index.en.shtml

The Royal Park Shiodome - decent 4-star, nice views, very cheap rates. Shiodome station is downstairs, Shimbashi station (with easy access to all of the city) is a 5-minute walk. Easy walking distance to Shimbashi, Toranomon, Ginza, Tsukiji.

https://www.the-royalpark.jp/the/tokyoshiodome/
Thank you for the suggestion of Royal Park Iconic Shiodome. Not mentioned in the pros listed above is that it's one train (no connection) to either NRT or HND - I took both. Shimbashi is connected via underground mall on level B1. The only con I found was that the windows in the room are not that sound proof so you can hear the noise from the trains.
od_sf likes this.
fbrdky is offline  
Old Nov 16, 2022, 1:51 pm
  #57  
Suspended
 
Join Date: Jul 2022
Posts: 39
Originally Posted by fbrdky
Thank you for the suggestion of Royal Park Iconic Shiodome. Not mentioned in the pros listed above is that it's one train (no connection) to either NRT or HND - I took both. Shimbashi is connected via underground mall on level B1. The only con I found was that the windows in the room are not that sound proof so you can hear the noise from the trains.
What is a “C/P hotel” as stated in a post above?
Objectivelyreal is offline  
Old Nov 16, 2022, 7:27 pm
  #58  
Original Poster
 
Join Date: Jul 2017
Location: California
Programs: AA EXP; Hyatt Globalist; Marriott Bonvoy Titanium Elite
Posts: 1,968
So, this time I decided to use some of the recommendations in this thread and stay at cheaper business hotels, and here are a few thoughts on the ones I stayed at, Hotel New Ueno, ibis Styles Osaka Namba, and Tokyu Stay Shinjuku, stars given are based on the business-style hotel market, not hotels in general:

Hotel New Ueno

Booked Through - Agoda
Nights: 3
Cost - $138.82 - avg. $46.27
Stars: 4/10

Location: Right across the street from the JR Ueno Station, 5-minute walk from the Keisei Ueno Station. Lots of food options nearby, ramen shops, gyudon (Matsuya, Yoshinoya) shops, izakaya, and western (Wendy's). Right next to the Ueno Park and a quick walk into the main part of Ueno where there are a lot more food/entertainment options (lots of Karaoke places).

Thoughts: This hotel was small, smallest of the three hotels I stayed at. Bathroom was decent, included a bidet/washlet, water pressure was powerful. There was no safe in the hotel room I had. Bed for the price was a twin that took up almost the entire room, with a small desk taking up most of the other area. Normal Japanese hotel stuff, including an electric kettle, a yukata, and slippers. The window in the room did open to the road behind the hotel, which allowed fresh air in. It served a purpose of giving me a place to lay my head at night but wasn't the most comfortable room. The bathroom also included soap/shampoo and toothbrushes.

One big annoyance was that I was required to hand in my key card every time I left, I didn't catch that when I checked in, was caught and asked to give up my keycard as I was walking out the door to go grab food the first night. Which means you also have to go through the front door to pick your card back up on the way back in, which is annoying after a few drinks.

Overall, it was an OK hotel, but I won't stay there again.

ibis Styles Osaka-Namba

Booked Through - Accor (direct)
Nights: 5
Cost - 33,939円 - avg. 6789円 or $47/ni based on exchange rate at checkin
Stars: 7/10

Location: On the street that runs along the opposite of the river from Dotonbori. It's right in the middle of things, near a huge amount of food and entertainment options. Also about a 5-minute walk from several entrances to Namba Station to catch the Midōsuji Line (among others), and also 5 minutes to the Kintetsu-Nihombashi subway station to catch the Namba, Sakaisuji, and Sennichimae Lines. Super walkable area, and north of the hotel is a red-light district but with lots more smaller/more local food options. The one big problem I have with Dotonbori in general is that it's just dirty with trash and vomit all over the ground in the morning. They do a good job of cleaning it up though before noon, just to get trashed again, but once you get past that, the area is just full of activity, food, and things to do.

Thoughts: This was the biggest of the three hotel rooms. Not huge like I'd find in a Hyatt, but enough size to be able to stretch out. The bed was nice and comfortable, there was a good-sized desk, a safe in the room, very large bathroom, a chair, an air purifier, and the window opened (though there's a sign saying not to). The A/C was nice and cold. The staff were nice, there was a coffee machine on the bottom floor including drip coffee, latte's, mochas, and hot chocolate. There's an entrance in to the neighboring 7-11 right inside the hotel, so no need to go out. Downstairs has a computer you can use to access the internet, and a bar along the window you can sit at and charge your phone if you need to before checking in. I got in early and they held my luggage no problem until 2pm when I was allowed to check in. The bathroom also included soap/shampoo and toothbrushes.


Tokyu Stay Shinjuku

Booked Through - Tokyu Stay (direct)
Nights: 5
Cost - 51,643円 - avg. 10,328円 or $73/ni based on exchange rate at checkin
Stars: 9/10

Location: Right around the corner from the exit of the Shinjuku-Sanchome station with the Shinjuku Line that is one station away from Shinjuku station and also gets you close to places like Akihabara, via the Iwamotocho station, without needing to go to Shinjuku to get on a JR line. The area itself is a good mix of izakayas (right around the hotel) and small restaurants, starbucks, higher end restaurants, higher end stores (Gucci for example), a 15-minute walk to the main Shinjuku (and JR Shinjuku Station), and a 15-minute walk to Shinjuku proper and Kabukicho. Area-wise, this was my favorite of the three spots, as I'm a huge fan of staying in Shinjuku.

Thoughts: This hotel room was the middle-sized one of the three (though really not much smaller than the ibis), so less value per $$ based solely on room, but location made up for it. The hotel also has a coffee machine at the bottom floor but only drip coffee, no latte's and mochas, along with a beer vending machine for 230円 per beer, and another one with the typical teas/milk teas/coffees for about 120-140円. The staff were very nice, and the hotel itself was extremely clean and my room looked new. The bathroom was great, including washlet, and the tub was massive. I was given a room on almost the top floor, and that gave me a nice view of Shinjuku and it's buildings. Same as the others, this room included the typical Japanese hotel things like the Yukata, slippers, and kettle, and there was a selection of tea bags, and some other amenities, on the bottom floor near the elevators. The bathroom also included soap/shampoo and toothbrushes. Overall this was my favorite hotel of the 3, based on how clean and new the room was, the location, and getting a high up floor with a nice view. Definitely will be staying here again.

BONUS - Sauna & Capsule hotel Cure Kokuboncho


Booked Through - at the capsule hotel
Nights: 1
Cost - 5500円 - $39 based on exchange rate at the time
Stars: 5/10

Location - Kokuboncho is a 15-minute walk from the Sendai station or a 10-minute ride on the Namboku Line to the Kotodaikoen Station. From there the capsule hotel is another easy 5 or so minute walk. The area had some excellent yakiniku restaurants, several gyutan (beef tongue - something Sendai is famous for) restaurants, and typical izakayas and ramen places. The area didn't have much more going on, closed a bit early and was a bit sleepy for the most part, but Sendai does get quite busy, with a lot more to do and not far away either by walking or train. The area was clean and safe. I didn't really spend much time there, from what I experienced, I liked the place, especially the Sendai Horumon (仙一ホルモン) restaurant, which had some of the most flavorful meat I've eaten at a Yakiniku restaurant.

Thoughts - I got stuck in Sendai trying to make it to Toshirojima (cat island), getting there after the last boat where I didn't need an overnight hotel stay on the island, which honestly I wish I would have just done since they ran about 7000 yen and included dinner and breakfast the next morning, and it's on cat island, but with the hour train ride back to Sendai, I didn't want to deal with trying to get a late night Shinkansen raid back to Shinagawa station. I ended up just searching capsule hotels and that one came up with good reviews.

The hotel itself was pretty easy to get checked in, take shoes off and get a locker for them, give the key to the front desk, they give you a wrist band with a locker/capsule number on it, some clothes to wear once you're up on the floor, and direct you to the payment machine to the left side. You can pay via cash or credit card. I paid, and went to the third floor where my capsule was. On each of the capsule floors there are sets of lockers, several banks of sinks with hair dryers, tooth brushes, and a machine with combs. There's also a beer and tea vending machine on each floor, along with a smoking room, and a cell phone usage room.

On the 5th floor is a sento with both indoor and outdoor baths, an area to purchase a body scrub/massage, a sauna, several showers to clean yourself off before you go into the water, and a vending machine with different types of milk (regular, strawberry, chocolate) and some mango drink, which is traditional for people to drink after a soak in the onsen/sento. The capsule I got was on the bottom level (there are 2 levels) was about 7' long, had a small tv with a headset, and a light that made it quite bright inside. There was also a quite thick blanket, that you could also use to sleep on. The place was clean, no weird smells, but given that it's a capsule, it's not overly comfortable and the place is noisy with snoring at night and alarms going off as early as 5:30am. For a quick place to sleep, it wasn't bad, but it cost more than I would have paid if I weren't in a rush to find a place. There were also "premium" capsules, which were basically rooms with a curtain instead of a door, I beleive those went for 7500 yen. Overall not bad, just had a hurt back by the time I woke up in the morning.



ibis Styles Osaka-Namba (excuse the wire mess)

Tokyu Stay Shinjuku

Hotel New Ueno

sauna&Capsule hotel Cure Kokuboncho
YariGuy, pudgym29, fbrdky and 1 others like this.
seigex is online now  
Old Nov 16, 2022, 11:22 pm
  #59  
 
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: PVG
Programs: MU Platinum, HH Diamond
Posts: 827
Thanks for the reports and photos! Hotel New Ueno did look small, but to be honest if I were traveling by myself (without wife and kid) I'd be perfectly happy with rooms like these.

Booking with the chains (Toyoko Inn or APA) usually gives me peace of mind too with what the rooms are going to look like.

By the way, this video (Japanese) is an inspiration on what to do to enjoy these hotels:


In this video he's in a Saga business hotel and even eats whale. But the best part is the beer drinking.

This guy is hilarious. He does videos riding trains, eating at home, etc. too.
seigex likes this.

Last edited by YariGuy; Nov 16, 2022 at 11:30 pm
YariGuy is online now  
Old Nov 17, 2022, 3:14 am
  #60  
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: SFO
Programs: Delta Gold 1MM, JAL JGC Diamond, Marriott LT Titanium
Posts: 395
Originally Posted by Objectivelyreal
What is a “C/P hotel” as stated in a post above?
C/P = Cost/Performance (Ratio)
Daytona is offline  


Contact Us - Manage Preferences - Archive - Advertising - Cookie Policy - Privacy Statement - Terms of Service -

This site is owned, operated, and maintained by MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. Copyright © 2024 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Designated trademarks are the property of their respective owners.