In-Room Massage for Tokyo Station Hotel Guests — Marunouchi
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You’re sleeping inside a national treasure. We’ll come to your room.
BOOK NOWThe building you’re sleeping in opened in 1915. Tatsuno Kingo designed it — the same architect who did the Bank of Japan. Red brick, European classical style, those twin cupola domes at each end. In 2003 the whole thing was designated an Important Cultural Property of Japan, and in 2012 it was painstakingly restored to its original 1914 form. The hotel runs the entire length of the Marunouchi side of Tokyo Station — longer, they say, than Tokyo Tower is tall. You don’t just stay near the station. You sleep inside it.
It’s a boutique hotel by Tokyo standards — 150 rooms across just a few floors, with ceiling heights up to 3.9 meters. Some rooms look out at the Marunouchi skyline and the Imperial Palace in the distance. Others look directly into the ornate cupola domes of the station. The maisonette rooms are split across two levels. There’s an AN SPA with a carbonated hot spring and saunas, ten restaurants and bars, and the kind of breakfast that people plan their mornings around. It’s a member of Small Luxury Hotels of the World, and it feels like one — intimate, distinctive, impossible to replicate.
The catch is that this location connects you to everywhere. Shinkansen to Kyoto. Narita Express to the airport. Day trips to Kamakura or Nikko. You come back to the hotel after full days that start early and end late. That’s where we come in. Melody Tokyo brings professional in-room massage to Tokyo Station Hotel guests from 5pm until 7am nightly. Message us your room number, and we’ll have a therapist there in 15 to 25 minutes. No deposit. No advance booking needed.
A hundred-year-old building. A same-day massage. Both are waiting for you.
Address: 1-9-1 Marunouchi, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo 100-0005 (inside Tokyo Station Marunouchi Building)
Phone: +81 (3) 5220 1111
Website: thetokyostationhotel.jp
Total Rooms: 150 rooms & suites
Room Floors: 2F–3F (building spans the full length of Tokyo Station’s Marunouchi side)
Building: Tokyo Station Marunouchi Building — Important Cultural Property of Japan (designated 2003)
Opened: 1915 • Restored and reopened October 2012
Architect: Tatsuno Kingo (also designed the Bank of Japan)
Brand: Small Luxury Hotels of the World (SLH) member since 2015
Station Access: Inside JR Tokyo Station • Direct Shinkansen, Narita Express, JR lines • Marunouchi Line (metro)
Airport Access: Haneda ~30 min (monorail) • Narita ~60 min (N’EX express)
Location: Marunouchi, Chiyoda-ku • 10 min walk to Ginza • 20 min walk to Imperial Palace
🧖 AN SPA: Carbonated hot spring • Cold bath • Dry sauna • Steam sauna • Fitness centre • Terrake (French brand) treatments • Contemporary design with exposed stone walls
🏛️ Architecture: Red brick (akarenga) European classical • North & South Cupola domes with eagle sculptures & zodiac reliefs • 3.0–3.9m ceiling heights • Longer than Tokyo Tower is tall
🍽️ Dining (10 venues): Blanc Rouge (French fine dining) • Sushi Asanogawa • Cantonese En • Enoteca Norio (Italian) • Teppanyaki Shichi Jyu Ni Kou • Yakitori Seo • The Atrium (guests-only breakfast) • Bar Camellia • Bar Oak • The Lobby Lounge
It’s the only hotel in Japan where the building itself is the destination.
The Tokyo Station Marunouchi Building is a designated Important Cultural Property of Japan. The red brick facade, designed by Tatsuno Kingo in 1914, was restored to its original form in 2012 after years of meticulous work. Your hotel room is inside those walls. The corridors run along the station’s length. The ceilings are 3 to 3.9 meters high. You can feel the age and the care in every surface. There is no hotel experience like this in Tokyo — or anywhere else.
Four rooms sit alongside the North and South Cupola domes of Tokyo Station. Draw the curtains and you’re looking at ornate ceiling reliefs — eagle sculptures, zodiac animals — from a perspective no one else gets. Below, commuters stream through the ticket gates. Above, century-old art. The dome rooms are 30 to 44 sqm with 3.9-meter ceilings, and they’re the single most unique accommodation in the city.
Tokyo Station is the terminus for Shinkansen lines running west (Kyoto, Osaka, Hiroshima) and north (Sendai, Hokkaido). The Narita Express departs from downstairs. JR lines connect to every part of the city. The Marunouchi metro line runs beneath the building. You can get anywhere in Japan from your hotel, and you don’t need a taxi to start. Take the elevator down, walk through the station, and you’re on your way. When you come back exhausted, home is the same building.
Only 150 rooms in a building that spans the length of the station. It feels intimate in a way that 300-room towers never do. The corridors are long and quiet. The staff remember your name. The Atrium breakfast is for hotel guests only, which keeps it civilized. As a member of Small Luxury Hotels of the World since 2015, it sits in the company of independent properties that prioritize character over scale.
French fine dining at Blanc Rouge with its 1,000-bottle wine cellar. Edomae sushi at Asanogawa with Kanazawa influences. Cantonese En for Chinese. Enoteca Norio for Italian. Yakitori Seo for skewers. Teppanyaki for theatrical Japanese grilling. And the 75-year-old signature “Tokyo Station” cocktail at Bar Camellia. You could eat at a different place every night of your stay and still have options remaining.
Palace side rooms look out over the station promenade, down the grand Gyoko-dori avenue, all the way to the Imperial Palace. At night, the illuminated red brick of the station reflects off the wet pavement. The Marunouchi Building and KITTE Building frame the scene. It’s one of the most photographed views in Tokyo, and from your room, it’s your private version of it — including at 2am when the plaza is empty and the station belongs to no one.
Ceiling heights here range from 3.0 to 3.9 meters — dramatically higher than typical Tokyo hotel rooms. The rooms themselves range from compact 23 sqm classics to 65 sqm maisonettes. Even in the smaller rooms, the ceiling height changes the feel completely. There’s vertical space to breathe, and the classic European proportions make the room feel larger than the numbers suggest. Our therapists appreciate the extra headroom when working.
The maisonette rooms are 65 sqm split across two levels — living and dining area downstairs, bedroom upstairs. For in-room massage, this is ideal: your therapist can set up on one floor while the other stays undisturbed. It’s the closest thing to having a private apartment inside a century-old landmark. If you’re booking a longer session or a couples massage, the maisonette layout makes everything more comfortable.
You might expect noise from being inside a train station, but the restoration included serious soundproofing. Hotel floors are sealed off with keycard-access lockout doors. Once inside, the corridors are hushed and the rooms are quiet. The contrast between the busy station below and the calm of your room above is part of what makes this place special. Our therapists consistently comment on how peaceful the rooms feel.
The Marunouchi location is central to our therapist coverage area. Our therapist enters through the hotel entrance near the Marunouchi South Exit, checks in at reception, and is directed to your floor. The hotel is well-secured with keycard access, and the staff are familiar with the process. From the time you message us to the knock on your door: 15 to 25 minutes.
The bathrooms feature deep soaking tubs and rain showers, with the hotel’s original “Est. 1915” amenities created in collaboration with Histoires de Parfums. A pre-massage bath or shower in these rooms feels appropriate to the setting — unhurried, old-world, intentional. The bathrobes are thick, the slippers are soft, and the transition from bath to massage to sleep is seamless.
After the last train, the station goes quiet. The plaza empties. The red brick glows under the lights with nobody looking at it except you. This is the best time for a massage — the building has settled, the corridors are still, and your room feels like a private chamber in a monument. Our peak booking window here is 10pm to midnight, right when the contrast between the day’s frenzy and the night’s calm is sharpest.
AN SPA is a beautiful contemporary hideaway inside a historic building. We’re the late-night complement.
| Aspect | 🏛️ AN SPA | 🛏️ Melody Tokyo (Your Room) |
|---|---|---|
| Experience | Exposed stone walls, contemporary design. Carbonated hot spring, cold bath, dry sauna, steam sauna. Terrake (French brand) treatments with feathers and warm stones. Fitness centre attached. | Therapist comes to your room inside the historic building. Massage on your bed or floor mat. Your bathtub beforehand, your heritage room afterward. No leaving, no changing. The building is your spa. |
| Hours |
Daytime to evening Advance booking recommended Additional fee for non-guests |
5pm–7am nightly Same-day message No deposit required |
| Best for | Planned wellness — soak in the carbonated spring, steam, then treatment. A dedicated escape within the hotel. | After the last train. Post-Shinkansen day trip. The “I just walked 25,000 steps and I’m not moving again” moment. |
Use AN SPA’s hot spring and sauna during the day. Message us when you’re back from dinner. Both belong in the same stay.
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 hotel entrance near the Marunouchi South Exit and checks in at reception. The hotel floors are secured with keycard-access doors, so our therapist is escorted or granted access to your floor. The staff are familiar with the process. Despite being inside a major station, the hotel operates as a completely separate, private space.
Day trip to Kyoto? Kamakura? Nikko? The Shinkansen and JR lines are downstairs. You leave at 7am, spend 12 hours exploring temples and streets, and you’re back in your room by 8pm without ever hailing a taxi. Message us on the train back. By the time you’ve showered, the therapist is at your door. This is the most common booking pattern at this hotel — Shinkansen exhaustion followed by in-room recovery.
Classic rooms (23–47 sqm) have the bed plus a seating area. The high ceilings make even compact rooms feel open. Palace side rooms (26–55 sqm) offer more space. Dome side rooms (30–44 sqm) have 3.9m ceilings. Maisonettes (65 sqm, two floors) are ideal — massage downstairs, sleep upstairs. For shiatsu, the generous floor space alongside the bed works well in most room types.
Nothing. We bring everything — linens, oils, towels, ambient music. Shower or soak in the deep tub using the hotel’s “Est. 1915” amenities. Put on the bathrobe. That’s it. After the session, you can order room service or walk down to Bar Camellia for a nightcap — it’s right inside the hotel. The classic “Tokyo Station” cocktail pairs well with post-massage calm.
French at Blanc Rouge. Sushi at Asanogawa. Teppanyaki. Italian. All inside the hotel. Or walk 10 minutes to Ginza for dinner and come back. Message us while you’re finishing dessert. The therapist arrives before your bathrobe gets cold. This hotel makes the dinner-to-massage transition effortless because everything — restaurants, room, station — is in the same building.
Two therapists, same room, same time. Palace side rooms at 40–55 sqm accommodate two setups comfortably. Maisonettes are ideal — the two-level layout gives 65 sqm of working space. Each person picks their own style and pressure. The dome rooms at 44 sqm (superior) also work for couples who want the most unique setting in the city. Just mention “couples” when you message.
Tailored to Shinkansen travelers, heritage seekers, and late-night red-brick calm. Full menu — see all styles here.
The high ceilings and European proportions of these rooms create a different atmosphere from typical Tokyo hotels. The oil massage settles into that space naturally — warm oil, steady rhythm, the scent rising into 3.9 meters of air above you. In the palace side rooms, the city lights outside the window provide a soft backdrop. In the dome rooms, you’re being massaged inside a 110-year-old landmark. 90 minutes is the most popular choice; 120 if the day included a Shinkansen round trip.
Tokyo Station is the starting point for everything. Shinkansen to Kyoto and back. Day trips to Kamakura’s temples or Nikko’s shrines. Morning at Tsukiji, afternoon in Asakusa, evening in Ginza. By the time you’re back in your room, your step count is astronomical and your calves, feet, and lower back are demanding attention. This session goes after the specific damage with firm, deliberate pressure. 60 minutes for targeted work; 90 for full body.
There’s a poetic logic to receiving Japanese shiatsu inside a building that represents the fusion of Western architecture and Japanese spirit. No oil, fully clothed, deep rhythmic pressure through acupressure points. The high ceilings and generous floor space in the palace side and dome side rooms accommodate a shiatsu mat comfortably. Maisonettes offer even more room on the lower level. 60 or 90 minutes.
These therapists frequently cover the Marunouchi/Tokyo Station area. See all profiles here.
Flowing oil technique with a natural sense of rhythm. Creates the kind of slow, intentional atmosphere that matches the hotel’s heritage character. Popular with couples and guests in the dome and maisonette rooms.
Precise, firm pressure that targets the knots from Shinkansen day trips and all-day sightseeing. Knows the hotel’s layout and moves through the building efficiently. First choice for guests coming back from Kamakura or Kyoto.
Every train in Japan starts downstairs. Every day ends upstairs.
Kyoto round trip: 4.5 hours total on the train, 8 hours of temples and streets. Kamakura: 1 hour each way, hiking the Daibutsu trail. Nikko: 2 hours, all those shrine stairs. You come back to your room with 20,000+ steps and train-stiff shoulders.
20 minutes on foot from the hotel. The East Gardens are free and open most days. The 5km moat loop on gravel and stone paths. The view from the palace grounds back toward the station’s red brick facade is iconic. Ankles and calves pay the price.
Marunouchi Naka-dori is steps away. KITTE Building is across the plaza. Ginza is 10 minutes on foot. Hours on polished marble floors in real shoes. Your feet don’t care how beautiful the architecture is.
Blanc Rouge for French. Asanogawa for sushi. Cantonese En for Chinese. Enoteca Norio for Italian. All inside the building. Finish with the signature cocktail at Bar Camellia. Take the elevator back to your room. Message us.
Corporate offices surround the station. Meetings, presentations, client dinners. By evening, your shoulders and neck are locked. The walk from the office district back to the hotel takes 5 minutes. The massage takes 60 to 90.
JR lines from Tokyo Station reach everywhere. Asakusa via the Ginza Line from nearby Nihombashi. Akihabara in 3 minutes by JR. Shibuya and Shinjuku via Chuo Line. Full days on cobblestones, crossing signals, and subway stairs. The hotel is always waiting when you come back.
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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.