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Hotel New Ueno
4.3/586 Reviews

Hotel New Ueno

Ueno/Asakusa/Ryougoku Tokyo|0.67km from Ueno Toshogu Shrine
Good side: very close to Ueno Station, some waiters will speak a few English, the waiters are very warm, the breakfast is very good, the room is clean. Bad aspect: the hotel is a bit dated, my room has a musty smell, the room can't see the scenery except the concrete wall - the hotel is surrounded by concrete walls, not connected to another hotel. I stayed here for one night and it is very close to Ueno Station. From Asakusa exit or Ueno station exit, walk down the steps, cross the road at the crosswalk (no traffic lights) and turn left, cross the road then turn left, then walk less than half a street, this hotel appears on your right hand side. Staff are friendly. I checked in at 1 pm. Arrived at the hotel at 10 am, and after paying the room fee, I asked the waiters, because I was going to see a friend in Shibuya, can the hotel help me with my luggage. They were happy to help me with my luggage and when I came back my luggage was already in my room. I booked a double room because it didn’t look much bigger than a single room and I was happy I did. The room was small...but after all this is Tokyo...I’ve lived in smaller. The bed is a typical bed... It is not bad with other Japanese hotels I have stayed in. The bed is similar to the American double bed... It is a little smaller. Breakfast cost about 1,000 yen... Japanese breakfast. A more detailed discussion will be held later. Breakfast was a bit expensive, but it wasn’t expensive for my harvest, many places were open in the morning and the type of food here wasn’t quite in line with my low carb diet (mostly desserts and cooked food). As mentioned, my room had a musty smell but it was just one night, the price was below $100. The room itself was clean, the room had flat TV, small table, no wardrobe, but there were hangers and hooks to put clothes. There was an alarm in the room and the bathroom had shampoo, conditioner and soap. When I checked in, the waiter gave me a bag of lotion for the foam bath. The air conditioning was very good, in fact, my room became very cold so I turned it off. I have many hotels in Japan where the air conditioner doesn't even cool. My room was quiet. The only time I could hear someone talking was when I went downstairs to the lobby. My room number was 702, in a corner. Breakfast is served from 7am to 9am and the restaurant is located on the ground floor of the hotel. Nothing special but the food is good. When you walk into the restaurant, cold meals are already set on the table, such as Japanese stew (salted vegetables), seaweed (seaweed used to make rice side dishes), jade (Japanese omelet) and so on. When you show them the breakfast label on your door card, the waiter will take you to your seat, and in a short while the waiter will bring me the grilled salmon, miso soup and rice I want. It's already very full for me to eat. I saw a few Japanese men order natto, I didn't want it, they ordered extra rice, there is no charge here. The waiter brought me a cup of green tea and a small cup of orange juice. I asked for a glass of water, and if I wasn't so full, I'm sure they would give me more orange juice if I opened up. The network here is wired LAN, but there is no connection point (it looks a bit like a telephone line). The hotel I stayed in Takasaki has an interface and my router has a socket. So basically I have two sockets. The hotel lobby has Wi-Fi, but the lobby is small, crowded, and smoking is allowed there. After breakfast, I took my iPad to the lobby to go online, and just connected to the Internet, two people sat down to smoke. It was disgusting. The hall looked a bit crowded... two tables, with about 4-6 chairs next to it, some of the luggage of the residents piled up, two computers on one table, coffee machine, big TV, a large copier, and some other things. It felt good when there were no people in the lobby...but when there were a lot of people, it looked crowded and small. On the last day in Tokyo, I left the room at 10am and they let me leave my luggage in the lobby when I was out. When I returned, there was still 40 minutes of free time to kill before I went to the airport, and they were happy to let me stay in the lobby and even turned on the TV for me. It was convenient to go around near Ueno Station. I took the Yamanote Line to Harajuku and Shinjuku for less than 200 yen (about 20 minutes). I took the Hibiya subway line (then the Tsukiji Fish Market on foot) from Ueno Station to Tsukiji Station - about 15 minutes. Kyodo Station (Airport Train) is just across the road from Ono Station (about $30 to the airport, 45 minutes drive). There are many shops and restaurants next to the station. On the other side of the station is Ono Park, you can go there if you have time. There are temples, gardens, museums, zoos and so on. It’s free to go to the park, but the zoo charges and so on. I turned around the park for an hour and a half and haven’t turned around half.
Centurion Hotel&Spa Ueno Station
4.2/582 Reviews

Centurion Hotel&Spa Ueno Station

Ueno/Asakusa/Ryougoku Tokyo|0.76km from Ueno Toshogu Shrine
We stayed 5 nights in Standard Double room (Main building) on third floor. The hotel is very convenient, 3 mins walk to Ueno station, plenty of restaurant, cafes, shopping, convenient stores. Our room double bed on the side, with dressing table and 3 seated sofa, which give us plenty of room to sit and open the luggage. Bathroom with nice bathtub. We don't have heated toilet as it was not working, we try to call the front desk, leave a note on the bathroom door to the housekeeping, didn't get fixed during our 5 nights. Check in and front desk is located on 2nd floor, the public onsen, vending machines and smoking area is also on the same floor, not much privacy if you're wearing hotel robe and slipper for onsen or if you just want to have a smoke. If you are a light sleeper, please request the room on higher floor, it's very noisy on the street even after midnight and early morning because of the restaurants and bars, also we can hear the 2nd floor public onsen and water noise from our room in the middle of the night during our stay. Our booking included breakfast and due to covid 19, they don't served buffet, mainly served with japanese style and we can choose from rice or bread, they didn't change the menu and we have the same food every day, breakfast time is from 7am to 9am, my advise is there are plenty of cafes, not worth to pay top price for breakfast. Also the hotel have main building and annex building, and they are completely different place where annex building is around the corner on the side street. Centurion had several hotel in Ueno, make sure you have the correct address details. There is only one small lift (2 ppl with 2 luggage will fill the lift) for the whole hotel, we stayed during non peak season and quite often we were waiting some time for the lift, there was a note in the reception to encourage guests to use the stairs instead.

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Reviews for Tokyo Hotels

Searching for hotels near Ueno Toshogu Shrine? Compare room rates and reviews to find your ideal stay.
Hotel Graphy Nezu
4.6/569 Reviews
Ueno/Asakusa/Ryougoku
It was my first time staying at Hotel Graphy in over 5 years and it's still a wonderful experience. The staff are super and the small touches like daily welcome drink, fully stocked communal kitchen, roof lounge, etc. we still great. My one minor complaint is that the breakfast was much better in the past. I would previously go just for the breakfast when I was in the area.
Hotel Kangetsuso
3.4/51 Reviews
Ueno/Asakusa/Ryougoku
The hotel is in a good location, just across the road from Ueno Park, next to JR Ueno Station, and about 3 minutes walk from Ueno-Machi-cho, Ueno, very convenient. The room has complete toiletries, no need to bring it, there is a hot water bottle, I don't see the hair dryer, I guess I will give it to the front desk. I can't use my hair too short, so I didn't ask. No matter the breakfast, there are a lot of places to eat next to the hotel. There is a ramen noodle restaurant that opens at five o'clock in the morning. If you go out early, you can solve it there. 7-11 can also be located next to 100. The front desk is old man, but simple English can communicate, there is no translation software. Free luggage storage. Overall cost-effective hotel.
Hotel New Ueno
4.3/586 Reviews
Ueno/Asakusa/Ryougoku
Good side: very close to Ueno Station, some waiters will speak a few English, the waiters are very warm, the breakfast is very good, the room is clean. Bad aspect: the hotel is a bit dated, my room has a musty smell, the room can't see the scenery except the concrete wall - the hotel is surrounded by concrete walls, not connected to another hotel. I stayed here for one night and it is very close to Ueno Station. From Asakusa exit or Ueno station exit, walk down the steps, cross the road at the crosswalk (no traffic lights) and turn left, cross the road then turn left, then walk less than half a street, this hotel appears on your right hand side. Staff are friendly. I checked in at 1 pm. Arrived at the hotel at 10 am, and after paying the room fee, I asked the waiters, because I was going to see a friend in Shibuya, can the hotel help me with my luggage. They were happy to help me with my luggage and when I came back my luggage was already in my room. I booked a double room because it didn’t look much bigger than a single room and I was happy I did. The room was small...but after all this is Tokyo...I’ve lived in smaller. The bed is a typical bed... It is not bad with other Japanese hotels I have stayed in. The bed is similar to the American double bed... It is a little smaller. Breakfast cost about 1,000 yen... Japanese breakfast. A more detailed discussion will be held later. Breakfast was a bit expensive, but it wasn’t expensive for my harvest, many places were open in the morning and the type of food here wasn’t quite in line with my low carb diet (mostly desserts and cooked food). As mentioned, my room had a musty smell but it was just one night, the price was below $100. The room itself was clean, the room had flat TV, small table, no wardrobe, but there were hangers and hooks to put clothes. There was an alarm in the room and the bathroom had shampoo, conditioner and soap. When I checked in, the waiter gave me a bag of lotion for the foam bath. The air conditioning was very good, in fact, my room became very cold so I turned it off. I have many hotels in Japan where the air conditioner doesn't even cool. My room was quiet. The only time I could hear someone talking was when I went downstairs to the lobby. My room number was 702, in a corner. Breakfast is served from 7am to 9am and the restaurant is located on the ground floor of the hotel. Nothing special but the food is good. When you walk into the restaurant, cold meals are already set on the table, such as Japanese stew (salted vegetables), seaweed (seaweed used to make rice side dishes), jade (Japanese omelet) and so on. When you show them the breakfast label on your door card, the waiter will take you to your seat, and in a short while the waiter will bring me the grilled salmon, miso soup and rice I want. It's already very full for me to eat. I saw a few Japanese men order natto, I didn't want it, they ordered extra rice, there is no charge here. The waiter brought me a cup of green tea and a small cup of orange juice. I asked for a glass of water, and if I wasn't so full, I'm sure they would give me more orange juice if I opened up. The network here is wired LAN, but there is no connection point (it looks a bit like a telephone line). The hotel I stayed in Takasaki has an interface and my router has a socket. So basically I have two sockets. The hotel lobby has Wi-Fi, but the lobby is small, crowded, and smoking is allowed there. After breakfast, I took my iPad to the lobby to go online, and just connected to the Internet, two people sat down to smoke. It was disgusting. The hall looked a bit crowded... two tables, with about 4-6 chairs next to it, some of the luggage of the residents piled up, two computers on one table, coffee machine, big TV, a large copier, and some other things. It felt good when there were no people in the lobby...but when there were a lot of people, it looked crowded and small. On the last day in Tokyo, I left the room at 10am and they let me leave my luggage in the lobby when I was out. When I returned, there was still 40 minutes of free time to kill before I went to the airport, and they were happy to let me stay in the lobby and even turned on the TV for me. It was convenient to go around near Ueno Station. I took the Yamanote Line to Harajuku and Shinjuku for less than 200 yen (about 20 minutes). I took the Hibiya subway line (then the Tsukiji Fish Market on foot) from Ueno Station to Tsukiji Station - about 15 minutes. Kyodo Station (Airport Train) is just across the road from Ono Station (about $30 to the airport, 45 minutes drive). There are many shops and restaurants next to the station. On the other side of the station is Ono Park, you can go there if you have time. There are temples, gardens, museums, zoos and so on. It’s free to go to the park, but the zoo charges and so on. I turned around the park for an hour and a half and haven’t turned around half.
TS Shinobazu Hotel
3.5/51 Reviews
Ueno/Asakusa/Ryougoku
The location is very good, very close to Ueno Station, many restaurants around, convenient.
Hotel Resol Ueno
4.6/5174 Reviews
Ueno/Asakusa/Ryougoku
I think it is 2 〜 3 minutes walk from Asakusa Guchi from Ueno Station Central Ticket Ticket. It was very convenient because there were many restaurants and convenience stores nearby. The hotel room booked a twin. The bed and bathtub were large and rested slowly. The amenities were taken by themselves from the front desk, with cleaning, face washing form, makeup water, emulsion, and bath salts. Breakfast was a good amount of sandwiches, soup, drinks, yogurt and delicious. It's good when it's crowded because you can carry it to the room. I don't care about the noise and it was a hotel I wanted to use again. Thank you.
Hotel Sunroute Stellar Ueno
4.1/535 Reviews
Ueno/Asakusa/Ryougoku
The front desk correspondence is normal. I told him I wanted to borrow an umbrella because of the rain pattern, and the room number was confirmed. I was asked when I returned. The room is easy to use, but the impression that there is a step in the unit bus is a hotel a long time ago. Breakfast is a half Viking that chooses the main, but the same menu is arranged for the guest who comes later, and it doesn't come after a while, so if I ask the attendant if I'm still preparing, ”I'm preparing now.” I felt cold with a response without a word and no affection. Overall, the hard side is not bad, but the response of the person is bad.

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