In-Room Massage for Mandarin Oriental Tokyo Guests
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A hotel this good deserves a massage that matches
BOOK NOWWe’ve visited the Mandarin Oriental Tokyo enough times to know the lobby by feel. The elevator sound, the hallway carpet, the way the door clicks shut and suddenly you’re thirty-something floors above Nihonbashi with nothing but skyline and quiet. It’s one of those hotels where the room itself is part of the experience — and honestly, that makes our job easier. When the setting is already this good, a massage just slots right in.
Melody Tokyo provides certified in-room massage for guests staying at the Mandarin Oriental. The hotel does have a genuinely excellent spa on the 37th floor — we’re not pretending it doesn’t — but it closes in the evening. And what we hear from guests, again and again, is that the moment they actually want a massage is after dinner, after drinks, after they’ve already changed into the bathrobe and have zero intention of going anywhere. That’s the gap we fill.
Booking takes a minute or two. Message us on LINE, WhatsApp, or your preferred app. Tell us your room floor if you know it, what time works, and what kind of session you’re after. We confirm and give you a real arrival time — typically 15 to 25 minutes for this hotel, since Nihonbashi is central and close to our base. No deposits, no upfront payment, no paperwork.
The view is already there. We bring the rest.
Official Name: Mandarin Oriental, Tokyo
Address: 2-1-1 Nihonbashi Muromachi, Chuo-ku, Tokyo 103-8328
Phone: +81 (3) 3270 8800
Website: mandarinoriental.com/tokyo
Category: 5-Star Luxury Hotel
Total Rooms: 179 rooms & suites
Floors: Occupies top floors (30F–38F) of Nihonbashi Mitsui Tower
Check-in / Check-out: 3:00 PM / 12:00 PM
Nearest Station: Mitsukoshimae (Ginza Line / Hanzomon Line) — directly connected
Also Nearby: Shin-Nihonbashi (JR Sobu Line) — 3 min walk
Tokyo Station: ~8 min walk or 1 stop by subway
Ginza: 2 stops on Ginza Line (~5 min)
Narita Airport: ~60 min by Narita Express + transfer
Haneda Airport: ~30–40 min by taxi or train
Neighborhood: Nihonbashi — Tokyo’s historic financial and mercantile district
Forbes Travel Guide Five-Star rating for over ten consecutive years in both Hotel and Spa categories. Regularly listed among the best hotels in Tokyo by Travel + Leisure, Condé Nast Traveler, and DestinAsian. The hotel’s Pizza Bar on 38th also holds a place among the world’s top 50 pizzerias — a detail that surprises most people and delights everyone.
For guests visiting from overseas, this hotel hits a particular sweet spot. Here’s what makes it work.
Nihonbashi sits right in the center of Tokyo but doesn’t have the sensory overload of Shinjuku or the tourist density of Ginza. For first-time visitors especially, that matters. You get the location benefits without the noise. The subway is literally underneath the building, so you can get anywhere quickly and come back to something peaceful.
This is a huge deal for international guests. Tokyo Station is where the Shinkansen departs, where the Narita Express arrives, and where half the JR lines intersect. Being 8 minutes away on foot — not 30 minutes by taxi — means you can step off a bullet train from Kyoto and be in your room within 20 minutes. And then message us.
Even the standard Deluxe rooms here are over 50 square meters. That’s massive by Tokyo standards — most city hotels give you 25 to 30. For massage, this makes a real difference. We can lay out a proper floor mat with room to work from all sides, or use the bed with full range of movement. No cramped corners, no furniture shuffling.
The concierge team here is genuinely multilingual — English, Mandarin, Cantonese, and other languages. For visitors who are nervous about navigating Japan with a language barrier, that’s reassuring. And when our therapist arrives, the front desk handles everything smoothly because they’re experienced with outside service providers.
Twelve restaurants under one roof, including a Bib Gourmand pizzeria ranked among the world’s top 50, a Cantonese restaurant, French fine dining, and a sushi counter. International guests who are tired from a day of exploring don’t have to figure out where to eat — they can stay in the building, have a great meal, and then book a massage in their room. Easiest evening in Tokyo.
For travelers interested in more than neon and anime, Nihonbashi offers a different side of Tokyo. The Mitsui Memorial Museum, Nihonbashi Bridge (the historical starting point of Japan’s five great roads), and century-old shops like Ninben and Yamamoto Nori are all within walking distance. It’s a neighborhood with depth, and staying here gives you a chance to appreciate Tokyo’s layered history.
These rooms are among the most spacious in Tokyo. A Deluxe room starts at over 50 square meters, which means we can set up a full floor mat and still have room to move. Suites are even better. There’s no compromising on technique when the space is this generous.
Every guest room sits on the 30th floor or higher. No street noise, no train sounds — just city lights and sky. At night especially, the views create an atmosphere that makes a massage feel like something more. Our therapists say this is one of the quietest hotels they work in.
The bathrooms here have a proper soaking tub and a separate shower — which matters more than you’d think. A quick shower before the session makes the massage more effective, and afterward you can soak in the tub with the oils still on your skin. Small detail, big difference.
Five-star hotels handle outcall visits differently. At the Mandarin, our therapist walks in, is greeted professionally, and directed to your floor without any awkwardness. No suspicion, no questions. The staff here are trained for this. It’s one of the smoothest arrivals of any hotel we visit.
Nihonbashi is central and close to our base. When a therapist is available, arrival to Mandarin Oriental is one of the shortest of any hotel we serve — usually 15 to 25 minutes. Some of our Roppongi and Ginza therapists can reach here even faster depending on the time.
The Mandarin provides high-quality bathrobes and slippers as standard. So the pre-massage routine is effortless: shower, robe on, wait for the knock. After the session you don’t need to change — just stay in the robe and drift off. This is the kind of small thing that makes a luxury hotel massage actually feel luxurious.
The Mandarin’s 37th-floor spa is world-class. We’re not competing with it — we’re complementing it. Here’s how they differ.
When it works best: Daytime or early evening, when you have time to linger. The heat-and-water area, the ceremony, the views from the treatment suite — it’s a full experience, not just a massage.
What to know: Advance booking is recommended. The spa has limited availability, especially on weekends. Treatments start in the mid-to-upper price range for Tokyo luxury spas. Closes in the evening.
Best for: The spa-as-destination experience. A special occasion, a half-day of self-care, or a structured wellness ritual with all the trimmings.
When it works best: After 9pm. After dinner. After the spa is closed. After you’ve changed into the bathrobe and realized you’re too tired to go anywhere. Basically — the moment you most want a massage but can’t be bothered to leave the room.
What to know: Same-day booking, usually within minutes. Available 5pm to 7am. Transparent pricing with no surprises. The therapist comes to you — you don’t move an inch.
Best for: The practical, spontaneous need. You’re exhausted, you want relief now, and you want it where you are. No elevator ride, no booking days ahead, no getting dressed again.
Both are excellent options. Many of our repeat guests at this hotel use the spa during the day and our service at night — they serve different purposes and coexist naturally.
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 through the Nihonbashi Mitsui Tower lobby on the ground floor, takes the hotel elevator to your floor, and knocks. The front desk staff at Mandarin Oriental are accustomed to outside wellness providers and handle the process without fuss. You don’t need to come downstairs or call ahead — just wait in your room.
Nihonbashi is one of the closest areas to our therapist base. Typical arrival: 15 to 25 minutes when a therapist is available. Occasionally faster. We give you a precise time at booking — not a window, an actual ETA.
With 50㎡+ of floor space, we can lay out a full mat beside the bed. If you prefer bed-based massage, that works just as well — the beds here are wide and firm enough. For suites, the living area gives even more options. We adapt to whatever layout you prefer.
Almost nothing. A quick shower beforehand makes the most difference. The hotel’s bathrobe is perfect pre- and post-massage attire. We bring all the linens, oils, towels, and a small speaker for ambient music. You just need to be in the room.
We get a lot of first-night bookings at this hotel. People arrive from Narita or Haneda, check in, and the jet lag hits within an hour. Being 8 minutes from Tokyo Station means many guests arrive earlier than expected and have time for a session before dinner. You can message us even before you arrive — we’ll time it to your check-in.
The hotel’s spa closes in the evening, but our service runs until 7am. The most popular slot for Mandarin Oriental guests is actually between 10pm and midnight — after dinner at one of the hotel’s restaurants, back in the room, not yet sleepy. That two-hour window is when we do a lot of our work here.
These three suit the hotel’s environment particularly well. Full menu available — see all styles here.
The combination of a spacious, quiet room 30+ floors above the city with warm oil and careful hands is… well, it’s hard to beat. The Mandarin’s rooms amplify everything about an aromatherapy session — the silence lets you hear the music, the dim lighting sets the mood, and the views give your eyes somewhere beautiful to rest. Slip into the bathrobe after and you don’t want to move. 90 or 120 minutes recommended here — don’t rush it.
A lot of Mandarin Oriental guests are here on business. Tokyo meetings, Shinkansen to Osaka, client dinners, long desk hours — the upper back and shoulders take the worst of it. This session targets the accumulated tension with firm, controlled pressure. We focus on neck, traps, lower back, and whatever specific area is giving you trouble. Sixty minutes is usually enough for targeted relief; go to 90 if you want full-body coverage with extra attention on the problem spots.
With over 50 square meters to work with, this is one of the few Tokyo hotels where a proper floor-based shiatsu session feels completely natural. We lay out a full mat, and the therapist works with elbow, palm, and thumb pressure along the body’s meridian lines. No oil, no undressing — wear the hotel’s pajamas or loungewear. If you want a session that feels deeply Japanese without leaving a 5-star international hotel, this is it.
These therapists frequently handle Nihonbashi and central Tokyo bookings. See all profiles here.
Precise, intuitive pressure work. Particularly requested by business travelers dealing with neck and shoulder tension from long meetings.
Gentle, flowing oil work with perfect rhythm. Creates a spa-like atmosphere in the room that feels natural in the Mandarin’s setting.
Nihonbashi is quieter than Shibuya or Shinjuku, but that doesn’t mean your legs agree.
The famous bridge, Mitsukoshi main store, Ninben dashi shop, Yamamoto Nori. An hour or two of standing and walking on hard pavement.
Kamakura, Hakone, Nikko, or Kyoto round-trip. You’re back at the hotel by 8pm and every joint is stiff from the train.
Five minutes by subway to Ginza’s department stores and boutiques. Three hours of browsing equals aching feet. Then back to the room.
Early morning fish market visit. You’ve been on your feet since 6am, eaten too much, and walked too far. Perfect massage candidate.
Back-to-back meetings in the financial district. Tense shoulders, tight jaw, screen fatigue. A deep tissue session is the answer.
Dinner and drinks at the shopping complex next door. You walk back to the hotel pleasantly full and slightly tired. The ideal pre-massage state.
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Payment is accepted in Japanese yen cash or by credit card only.
A 10% handling fee applies to credit card payments.
Your quiet reset after a long day in Tokyo. We bring relaxation to your room—whether you're here for business or leisure. Available daily, 5pm–7am.