9 Cities • 15+ Stations

Hotels by Station

In Japan, picking the right station matters more than picking the right hotel. Start here.

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Kanto

Shinjuku neon lights and crowds at night
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Tokyo

Shinjuku

Shinjuku handles over 3.5 million passengers a day across 11 lines and 50+ exits — it's the most connected station in Japan. JR Yamanote gives you a loop around all of Tokyo's main districts. The Chuo Line shoots you east to Akihabara and west to Mitaka. Odakyu reaches Hakone in 90 minutes. Keio goes to Narita-adjacent areas. If you want to be everywhere without changing trains twice, Shinjuku is the answer. The station itself is disorientating at first — it genuinely has over 200 exits. But once you know East (Kabukicho, Golden Gai), West (skyscrapers, Keio/Odakyu), and South (Takashimaya, direct to Shibuya), you'll navigate it on instinct.

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Shibuya scramble crossing at night with neon lights
Popular
Tokyo

Shibuya

Shibuya is the hub for the Tokyu network — Toyoko Line to Yokohama (25 min), Den-en-toshi Line into southwestern Tokyo, Keio Inokashira Line to Shimokitazawa and Kichijoji. Combined with JR Yamanote and three subway lines (Ginza, Hanzomon, Fukutoshin), Shibuya gives you excellent access across the city. The area around the station has been substantially redeveloped since 2019 — Shibuya Scramble Square, Scramble Hall, Hikarie, and Stream are all new complexes built directly adjacent to or above the station. The scramble crossing is 90 seconds by foot from the main exits. Staying here means you're in Tokyo's most visually dynamic neighborhood.

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Senso-ji temple Kaminarimon gate in Asakusa Tokyo
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Tokyo

Asakusa

Asakusa is where Edo-era Tokyo survives. Senso-ji Temple is a 5-minute walk. The rickshaws, the lantern-lit alleys, the craft shops selling kachi-kachi fans and ningyo-yaki — it's a completely different Tokyo from Shinjuku or Shibuya. The Asakusa Station area is served by the Tokyo Metro Ginza Line (Tokyo's oldest subway, connecting to Ginza and Shibuya), the Toei Asakusa Line (connects to Haneda Airport directly without transfer), and the Tobu Skytree Line (to Nikko in 2 hours). The Tsukuba Express (TX) Asakusa Station is 200m from the area and gives fast access to Akihabara (8 min). Be aware: Asakusa is on the eastern side of Tokyo, which means Shinjuku and the western areas take 35–45 minutes. This is a genuine trade-off you should understand before booking.

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Kansai

Kyoto city view with traditional temple and mountains
Popular
Kyoto

Kyoto Station

Kyoto Station is a modern architectural landmark (designed by Hiroshi Hara, completed 1997) that serves as the nerve center of the ancient capital. Six rail lines converge here: JR Tokaido-Sanyo Shinkansen (Tokyo in 2h15m, Hiroshima in 1h10m), JR Nara Line (Fushimi Inari in 5 min, Nara in 45 min), JR Sagano/San-in Line (Arashiyama / Saga-Arashiyama in 15 min), JR Biwako/Kyoto Line (Osaka in 15 min, Biwako Lake area), Kintetsu Kyoto Line (Nara in 35 min express), and the Karasuma Subway Line (runs directly into the Karasuma-Oike central district). The station building itself contains a hotel, department store (Isetan), multiple restaurant floors, underground shopping, and a rooftop sky garden. Nearly every major Kyoto temple and shrine is accessible by bus from the station's north exit or by subway within 20 minutes.

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Dotonbori canal at night with neon lights and restaurant signs in Osaka
Popular
Osaka

Namba

Namba is where Osaka is most itself. Dotonbori canal with its giant Glico running man sign is a 5-minute walk. Kuromon Market ('Osaka's Kitchen') is 7 minutes on foot. The Namba area is served by five rail lines across three separate station buildings: Osaka Metro Midosuji Line (fastest route to Umeda/Osaka in 7 min, Shin-Osaka Shinkansen connection in 9 min), Osaka Metro Sennichimae Line, Osaka Metro Yotsubashi Line, Kintetsu Osaka-Namba Station (for Nara and Nagoya), and Nankai Namba Station (express to Kansai International Airport in 38 min — the most convenient airport connection in Osaka). The Midosuji Line alone makes Namba a strong base: Shin-Osaka (Shinkansen) in 9 min, direct to Kyoto via transfer.

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Osaka Umeda skyline at night viewed from above
Osaka

Umeda / Osaka Station

Umeda is Osaka's northern commercial center and arguably the more convenient base for rail travelers. The area around Osaka Station/Umeda consolidates Japan Railways (JR), Hankyu, and Hanshin — three entirely separate networks — within a 5-minute walk of each other. JR Osaka Station runs express trains to Kyoto (28 min), Kobe (21 min), and connects to Shin-Osaka Shinkansen (3 min). Hankyu Umeda runs the premium express to Kyoto (44 min) and Kobe (35 min). The underground shopping network (Umeda Chika, Whity Umeda, Diamor Osaka) connects all three stations without going above ground. Osaka's best department stores — Daimaru, Grand Front, Lucua — are directly attached to the station complex.

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Why Your Station Choice Matters

In most countries, you pick a hotel in a neighborhood you like. Japan is different. Because the train system is so dense and efficient, your hotel's station determines your entire travel experience — which lines you can access without transferring, which neighborhoods you can reach in 5 minutes versus 45 minutes, and how easy your morning temple visit will be.

For example: if you're staying in Tokyo and want to visit Asakusa, Harajuku, Akihabara, and Shibuya on the same trip, staying at Shinjuku gives you the Yamanote line and connects to all four areas directly. Staying in a cheaper area near Ikebukuro saves ¥3,000 on the hotel but costs you 20 minutes per day in extra travel time.

Use our station guides to understand the tradeoffs before you book.

Hotels Near Train Stations in Japan — 9 Cities Covered | Japan Insider Guide