In-Room Massage for Hyatt Centric Ginza Guests — Ginza
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Boutique lifestyle hotel in the heart of Ginza. Shop all day, massage all evening.
BOOK NOWHyatt Centric Ginza Tokyo sits on Namiki-dōri Street — the tree-lined avenue that runs parallel to Ginza’s main Chuō-dōri boulevard. It’s a 164-room boutique lifestyle hotel on the 3rd through 12th floors of a building that once housed the first Tokyo office of the Asahi Shimbun newspaper. The neighbours on this stretch include Louis Vuitton, Rolex, and Versace. Ginza Station is a two-minute walk. This is not a hotel on the edge of Ginza — it is in the middle of it.
Opened in 2018 as the first Hyatt Centric in Asia-Pacific, the hotel was designed for guests who spend their days outside the room and come back to recharge. The 35-square-metre rooms have separate bathtubs and showers, Nespresso machines, Bluetooth speakers, and multifunctional tables. NAMIKI667 on the 3rd floor serves Akigawa Wagyu and slow-cooked specialities with a 40-metre terrace overlooking the street. The Library Lounge on the 4th floor has power outlets and quiet seating. It’s compact, considered, and built around the idea of launching into Ginza and returning to recover.
That return-and-recover concept is exactly where we fit. Melody Tokyo brings professional in-room massage to Hyatt Centric Ginza guests from 5pm until 7am nightly. You’ve spent the day on Chuō-dōri and in Ginza Six. You’ve had cocktails at NAMIKI667. Message us your room number and a therapist arrives in 15 to 25 minutes. No deposit. No advance booking needed. The room is 35 square metres with a proper bathtub — soak first, massage second, sleep third.
Ginza’s boutique launchpad. Your room. Our therapist. Fifteen minutes.
Address: 6-6-7 Ginza, Chuo-ku, Tokyo 104-0061
Phone: +81 (3) 6837 1234
Website: hyatt.com
Opened: January 2018 — First Hyatt Centric in Asia-Pacific
Building: Floors 3F–12F of the Tokyo Ginza Asahi Building (12 storeys)
Rooms: 164 total (including 9 suites)
Room Sizes: Standard 35 sqm • Suite 77 sqm • Namiki Suite 127 sqm (top floor, terrace, teppanyaki grill)
Reception: 4F • Restaurant: 3F • Guest Rooms: 5F–12F
Nearest Stations: Ginza (B5/B6 exit, 2 min walk) • Yurakucho (6 min walk) • Shimbashi (5 min walk)
Airport Access: Haneda ~40 min • Narita ~90 min
Location: Namiki-dōri Street, Ginza 6-chōme • Steps from Ginza Six, Kabuki-za, Chuō-dōri
🎨 Design & Character: Pop-art lobby with bold colour palette • Playful artwork referencing Ginza’s media, fashion, landscape & entertainment • Former Asahi Shimbun newspaper site • Dramatic wrap-around staircase connecting lobby to NAMIKI667
🍽️ NAMIKI667 (3F): All-day dining & bar • 630 sqm, entire 3rd floor • Show kitchen • 40m terrace on Namiki-dōri • Akigawa Wagyu • Roku craft gin cocktails • Happy Hour 5–7pm • Library Lounge (4F)
🛏️ Room Features: Separate bathtub & shower • Nespresso machine • Bluetooth speakers • Ultra HD TV • Multifunctional table • Filtered water cooler on each floor • Reusable water bottles • 24-hour fitness centre
A boutique launchpad in the centre of Tokyo’s most famous shopping district.
Namiki-dōri runs parallel to the main Chuō-dōri boulevard. Step outside and you’re between Louis Vuitton and Versace. Ginza Six is a two-minute walk. Kabuki-za Theatre is five. Ginza Station’s B5 exit is 200 metres away. This isn’t “near Ginza” — this is Ginza 6-chōme, the postcode that defines the district. You don’t commute to shopping here. You take the elevator down and you’re already there.
164 rooms across eight guest floors. That’s roughly 20 rooms per floor — quiet corridors, short elevator waits, staff who recognise you by day two. The pop-art lobby has bold colours and rotating artwork. The Library Lounge on 4F has books and power outlets. It feels like a well-designed apartment building where someone else handles the cleaning. Intimate, not imposing. World of Hyatt points apply.
The entire 3rd floor is a single restaurant-bar-lounge. A show kitchen with a prominent oven. Akigawa Wagyu and slow-cooked specialities using Kanto-area produce. The bar features six signature cocktails with Japan’s Roku craft gin. The 40-metre terrace overlooks Namiki-dōri — one of the most coveted outdoor dining spots in Ginza. Happy Hour runs 5 to 7pm daily. It’s the hotel’s living room, and it opens onto the street.
Every room at 35 sqm has a proper bathtub separate from the shower. The Nespresso machine, Bluetooth speaker, and Ultra HD TV complete the recovery setup. The rooms are designed around a multifunctional table that works for dining, working, or getting ready. Compact but purposeful — nothing wasted, everything considered. The soaking tub is deeper than you’d expect for a lifestyle hotel.
Floors 5 through 8 look out over the retro offices, galleries, and studios that give Ginza’s side streets their character. From the 9th floor up, the view opens to sky and the iconic rooftop scenes of the district. The Namiki Suite on the top floor has a 45-square-metre terrace with views over Ginza and toward Shiodome. Every floor delivers a different angle on the neighbourhood.
The building occupies the former site of Japan’s Asahi Shimbun newspaper’s first Tokyo office, established in 1888. The hotel’s design references this heritage throughout — from elevator interiors to the four design concepts of media, fashion, landscape, and entertainment that shape the public spaces. It’s a building with a story under its pop-art surface, and the Ginza location connects that past to the present.
The standard rooms are 35 square metres — designed to eliminate wasted space. The multifunctional table folds or slides aside easily, giving our therapists clear working space around the bed. Suites at 77 sqm have separate living areas. The Namiki Suite at 127 sqm with its own living room and teppanyaki kitchen is ideal for couples massage with space to spare.
Every room has a bathtub separate from the shower — not a combination unit. Soak in the tub while the Bluetooth speaker plays something calm, then step out to the bed for your massage. The separate layout means you can use both without compromise. The soaking tub is deeper than standard, and the bathrobes are the kind you’ll want to keep.
From the 9th floor up, rooms open to Ginza’s skyline and rooftop scenes. At night, the neon and city lights of the district become your massage backdrop. The lower floors (5F–8F) look out over the neighbourhood’s galleries and retro offices — quieter, more intimate. Both work well. The higher floors add the visual drama.
Ginza 6-chōme is at the centre of our coverage area. Our therapist enters on the ground floor, takes the elevator to the 4th-floor reception, and is directed up to your room. The compact 164-room layout means short corridors and quick navigation. From message to knock: 15 to 25 minutes.
Dinner on the 3rd floor. Roku gin cocktails at the bar. The 40-metre terrace as the evening cools. Then elevator up to your room and message us. Or reverse it — massage first, then head down for a late drink at the bar. The hotel’s single-restaurant concept means everything is one elevator ride apart. No maze of corridors. No leaving the building.
Connect your phone to the room’s Bluetooth speaker and set the mood before the therapist arrives. Nespresso for a post-massage pick-up, or filtered water from the cooler on your floor. The Ultra HD TV goes quiet, the speaker plays low, and the room becomes your private treatment space in the middle of Tokyo’s most famous shopping street.
Hyatt Centric Ginza has a 24-hour fitness centre but no spa or massage facility. That’s by design — it’s a lifestyle hotel built for exploring, not for all-day wellness retreats. But after a day of exploring Ginza on foot, your body still needs recovery.
Melody Tokyo fills the gap. Professional massage delivered to your room from 5pm to 7am nightly. Same-day booking. No deposit. The 35 sqm rooms with separate bathtubs were designed for exactly this kind of end-of-day recovery — the hotel just doesn’t provide the massage. We do.
We hire only Japanese female therapists who excel in all three qualities: skill, hospitality, and appearance. We maintain the highest standards in both technique and service, with extensive experience at luxury hotels frequented by international guests.
Our pricing is completely transparent. Unless you request additional services or options, there are no extra charges—ever. You can book with confidence knowing the final amount matches exactly what we quote upfront.
Every therapist photo on our site shows the actual person who will visit you. The therapist you select is exactly who arrives—no exceptions. We strictly enforce this policy to eliminate any concern about misleading photos or last-minute substitutions.
She enters the building at ground level, takes the elevator to the 4th-floor lobby, and checks in with the reception team. The staff direct her to your room floor. The 164-room hotel means the staff know who’s expecting a visitor. It’s a compact building — the process is quick and discreet.
Haneda is about 40 minutes away. Message us your expected check-in time and we’ll coordinate. The separate bathtub in the 35 sqm room is ideal for arrival-night recovery — deep soak, bathrobe, 90-minute massage, and the Nespresso in the morning. You’ll wake up on the 9th floor with Ginza outside your window and your body clock reset.
Standard rooms at 35 sqm have the bed, the multifunctional table, and the bathroom. The table slides aside easily, creating clear floor space. Suites at 77 sqm have separate living and sleeping areas with two TVs. The Namiki Suite at 127 sqm on the top floor has a living room, kitchen, and a 45 sqm terrace — more space than most Tokyo apartments.
Nothing. We bring everything. Soak in the separate bathtub first. Connect your phone to the Bluetooth speaker. Dim the lights. The therapist arrives, works for 60 to 120 minutes, and leaves. The filtered water cooler is on your floor. Nespresso is in the room. You don’t need to leave the room again until morning.
Dinner at the show kitchen on 3F. Akigawa Wagyu. Dessert fresh from the oven. A Roku gin cocktail at the bar. The 40-metre terrace as the evening settles. Message us from your table. The therapist arrives by the time you’ve taken the elevator up, run the bath, and put on the robe. The whole evening happens inside one building.
Two therapists, same room, same time. Standard rooms at 35 sqm can accommodate two setups with the table moved. Suites at 77 sqm with separate living areas are more comfortable. The Namiki Suite at 127 sqm is ideal. Each person picks their own style and pressure. Mention “couples” when you message.
“The Namiki-dōri Wind-Down”
Warm essential oils worked into tired muscles with long, flowing strokes. Soak in the separate bathtub first. Connect the Bluetooth speaker. The therapist works from feet to shoulders as the Ginza lights flicker outside. From the 9th floor up, the city skyline frames the room. On the lower floors, the quieter gallery views add their own calm. You chose a lifestyle hotel for how it feels — this is how the evening is supposed to end.
“For the Chuō-dōri Day”
Ginza Six. Mitsukoshi. Matsuya. Wako. You’ve walked every floor, carried every bag, and crossed Chuō-dōri more times than you can count. The shoulders are tight, the calves are knotted. Deep tissue targets those specific compression points with sustained pressure. The multifunctional table is moved aside. The 35 sqm room becomes a recovery ward for shopping fatigue. Direct and effective — no ambience needed, just results.
“Japanese Pressure in the Heart of Ginza”
Rhythmic thumb and palm pressure along the body’s meridian lines. No oil, performed through clothing. Shiatsu developed from traditional Japanese medicine and your therapist trained in it here in Tokyo. The hotel sits where old and new Ginza meet — the traditional technique feels right in a building that references the Meiji-era Asahi Shimbun on a street lined with 21st-century luxury. Deep, methodical, and thoroughly Japanese.
Experienced with Ginza’s lifestyle hotels. All verified. All Japanese. All professional.
Aromatherapy & Relaxation Specialist
Nana understands that Hyatt Centric guests spend their energy outside the hotel and return to recharge. Her aromatherapy sessions start slowly, matching the pace of someone who’s been on their feet since morning. She’ll suggest using the separate bathtub first and setting the Bluetooth speaker to low. Rooms on 9F and above with Ginza skyline views are her favourite working environment. For couples in the 77 sqm suites, she coordinates timing with a second therapist so both sessions begin and end together. A quiet, precise professional who makes the compact room feel like a much larger space.
Deep Tissue & Shiatsu Specialist
Ren sees the same pattern every evening — guests who’ve walked Ginza Six, crossed Chuō-dōri a dozen times, and are carrying their shopping fatigue in their shoulders and calves. Her deep tissue work targets these exact compression points. For shiatsu, she works the meridian lines with focused pressure that’s firm enough to release tension without leaving you sore the next morning. She knows the 35 sqm layout well and rearranges the multifunctional table efficiently. If you mention the Namiki Suite, she’ll bring two setups — one for the bedroom, one for the living room. Direct communication, strong hands, zero wasted movement.
Step outside and you’re already there. Ginza Six is a two-minute walk. Mitsukoshi, Matsuya, and Wako department stores line Chuō-dōri. The luxury boutiques on Namiki-dōri — the hotel’s own street — include global flagships. Chuo-dori closes to traffic on weekends and becomes a pedestrian paradise. You can shop until NAMIKI667’s last dinner service, then head upstairs for your massage.
Five minutes on foot. The grand Kabuki theatre in Higashi-Ginza offers single-act tickets for visitors who want to experience traditional Japanese performing arts without committing to a full show. Evening performances end around 9pm — walk back to the hotel, change into the bathrobe, and book a massage for the perfect cultural-to-relaxation transition.
A 15-minute walk south toward Shiodome takes you to this Edo-period tidal garden with its teahouse on the water, seawater ponds, and 300-year-old pine trees. The contrast between the Ginza shopping streets and this peaceful landscape is dramatic. Walk back to the hotel, use the separate bathtub, and let the aromatherapy massage complete the decompression.
Ginza has one of the highest concentrations of Michelin-starred restaurants in the world. Sushi Saito, Sukiyabashi Jiro, and dozens of other legendary establishments are within walking distance. Or stay in-house at NAMIKI667 for Akigawa Wagyu and Roku gin cocktails on the terrace. Either way, dinner flows naturally into a late-evening massage back in your room.
Ten minutes on foot east of the hotel. The outer market remains a food lover’s paradise — fresh sushi for breakfast, tamagoyaki, grilled seafood, and matcha sweets. The morning walk from the hotel is easy and flat. Eat your way through the stalls, walk back, and you still have the whole afternoon for Ginza shopping before your evening massage.
Yurakucho Station is a six-minute walk north. From there, the Imperial Palace East Gardens and Hibiya Park are a short stroll. The palace running route is a favourite among joggers. The hotel’s 24-hour fitness centre handles your gym needs, but the palace loop offers something the treadmill can’t — 5km of moats, stone walls, and gardens. Come back, shower, and book your recovery massage.
Yes. Hyatt Centric Ginza Tokyo accommodates outside massage services for registered guests. Our therapist checks in at the 4th-floor reception and is directed to your room floor. We recommend having your booking confirmation or room key ready. The process is smooth and the staff are accustomed to professional service providers visiting guests.
That’s exactly the gap we fill. Hyatt Centric Ginza has a 24-hour fitness centre but no spa or massage service. The hotel is designed as a lifestyle launchpad — facilities are streamlined. Melody Tokyo brings professional massage directly to your room from 5pm to 7am nightly. Your 35 sqm room with its separate bathtub becomes your treatment space. Same-day booking, no deposit, no advance reservation needed.
Absolutely — first-night bookings are among our most popular. Haneda is about 40 minutes from Ginza. Message us your expected check-in time and we’ll coordinate. Most guests check in, soak in the bathtub, and have the therapist arrive within 15 to 25 minutes. Jet lag recovery is the best use of your first evening in Tokyo.
Yes. Two therapists arrive together and work simultaneously. Standard rooms at 35 sqm can accommodate this with the multifunctional table moved aside. Suites at 77 sqm with separate living areas offer more comfort. The Namiki Suite on the top floor at 127 sqm with its living room, bedroom, and terrace is the ideal couples massage setting. Mention “couples” when you message us so we can coordinate both therapists.
Cash (Japanese yen) is preferred and has no additional charge. We also accept credit cards, Apple Pay, and Google Pay with a 10% processing fee. Payment is made directly to the therapist at the end of the session. No deposit. No advance payment required.
Melody Tokyo is a licensed massage service operating in Tokyo since 2013. Our therapists are trained professionals. All photos on our website show the actual therapists. Pricing is transparent with no hidden fees. We serve guests at luxury hotels throughout central Tokyo. Read our reviews and check our verified therapist profiles before booking.
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Professional in-room massage service for hotel guests in central Tokyo. Operating since 2013. Serving Ginza, Marunouchi, Roppongi, Shinjuku, Shibuya, and surrounding areas. Available 5pm to 7am nightly.