Hyatt Centric Ginza Tokyo

Tokyo, Japan
Ginza

164 Rooms

It would take more space than we have here to exhaustively enumerate the relationships between Hyatt’s various sub-brands, but the short version is that Hyatt Centric is aimed at a younger generation of traveler — which implies a traveler with no less taste, but perhaps a tighter budget than the guests who frequent the Park Hyatts of the world. In Tokyo,...

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Hotelist Club members receive:
  • Upgrade to next room category, based upon availability at check-in
  • 100 USD hotel credit per room, per stay (2 night minimum, valid towards incidentals)
  • Guaranteed 2pm late check-out
  • Complimentary welcome gift on arrival
  • Personal Hotelist concierge that can arrange airport transfers, activities, and more.

6-6-7 Ginza, Chuo-ku, Tokyo, Tokyo, 104-0061, JPN

Amenities

  • 24 hour front desk
  • Parking
  • Free wi-fi
  • Gym
  • Restaurant
  • Bar
  • Cribs (subject to availability)
  • Wheelchair accessible
  • Room service
  • Concierge
  • No pets allowed
  • Self service parking (charges apply)
  • Off street parking
  • Babysitting (on request)
  • Adjoining rooms
  • 100% non-smoking hotel
  • Designated smoking area
  • Library
  • Lounge
  • Luggage storage
  • Multi-lingual staff
  • Wake-up service
  • Air conditioning
  • Shopping area nearby

Hyatt Centric Ginza Tokyo

It would take more space than we have here to exhaustively enumerate the relationships between Hyatt’s various sub-brands, but the short version is that Hyatt Centric is aimed at a younger generation of traveler — which implies a traveler with no less taste, but perhaps a tighter budget than the guests who frequent the Park Hyatts of the world. In Tokyo, however, one of the world’s capitals of high-end hospitality — and in Ginza in particular, an upscale shopping district of great renown — you should expect the Hyatt Centric Ginza to have more than a touch of luxury.

The building, once a newspaper office, is tucked away on Namiki-dori, a particularly ritzy side street. And its rooms follow through on the promise: though a shade less extravagant than those in Tokyo’s top-end hotels, they’re surprisingly spacious, plush, and exceedingly well-appointed. Where it departs the most from the Park/Grand Hyatt mold is in its facilities, which are rather less encyclopedic: there’s a well-equipped gym, but no spa, and but a single restaurant: NAMIKI667, an all-day eatery that’s flexible enough to handle everything from international comfort food to local specialties like Wagyu beef and fresh fish from the market.