Bulgari Hotel Tokyo ranks #3 on our 2026 list of the best business hotels in the world. The case below explains why — the lobby, the breakfast, the suite category that gets paid up for, and the alternatives we measured it against.
“Bulgari's 2023 Tokyo opening — Antonio Citterio interiors on floors 40-45 of the Yaesu Tower. Niwa restaurant has one Michelin star. The Italian-Japanese fusion executed without compromise.”
Bulgari's 2023 Tokyo opening — Antonio Citterio interiors on floors 40–45 of Yaesu Tower, the Michelin-starred Niko Romito kitchen, and the most decisive Italian-Japanese fusion in the city.
"The lobby on the 45th floor with hand-painted gold ceilings, the Niwa sushi counter behind dark stone, the 25-metre pool with the city below — Bulgari has spent twenty years learning how to do hotels, and Tokyo is the answer."
Bulgari Hotel Tokyo opened in April 2023 — the brand's eighth property worldwide and the second in Asia after Shanghai. It occupies the top six floors, levels 40 to 45, of the Tokyo Midtown Yaesu Central Tower, directly above Tokyo Station's Yaesu exit. The location is the operational heart of central Tokyo: a five-minute walk to Ginza, ten minutes to Marunouchi and the Imperial Palace, fifteen to Nihonbashi. From the windows, the curve of Tokyo Bay is to the east, the Imperial Palace gardens to the west, and Mount Fuji visible on a clear winter morning across the Marunouchi rooftops.
London, New York, Tokyo, Hong Kong, Paris, Singapore, Zurich, Milan: the cities where business hotel competition is intense and the standard is set by hotels that have been hosting the same accounts for fifty years. The lobby has to compete not just with other hotels but with the most demanding traveller economy in the world — guests who could be anywhere have a thousand other places to go. The properties that earn top-of-list inclusion in financial-centre cities do something the city itself cannot: deliver the meeting, the bar, the breakfast, and the WiFi at a single address.
Bulgari Hotels are the jeweller's twenty-year project, run with Marriott's Luxury Group as silent partners. Antonio Citterio interiors, Niko Romito running the kitchens. For business travel the case is location — Bulgari builds in the city centre, not the airport corridor — combined with the operating standard a Marriott back-end produces. Tokyo on Yaesu Tower is the operational heart of central Tokyo. Shanghai is on the Bund. Beijing is a four-minute walk from the embassy district. The Bulgari is where deals get done by people who already know each other.
Architecture and interior are by the Milanese studio Antonio Citterio Patricia Viel, who have designed every Bulgari Hotel since the first in Milan in 2004. The Tokyo treatment is the warmest in the portfolio: pale wood, hand-painted gold ceilings in the lobby and reception, saffron leather headboards, and walnut panelling that quotes traditional Japanese carpentry without imitating it. There are 98 rooms and suites starting at 50 square metres for the entry Bulgari Room — among the most generous category sizes in any new Tokyo opening — with the Bulgari Suite at 400 square metres and the duplex Tokyo Suite, with its private rooftop terrace facing Mount Fuji, at 425.
Il Ristorante – Niko Romito, on the 40th floor, holds one Michelin star — the Italian three-Michelin chef's only outpost in Asia, serving a menu that reads as classical Italian read through Japanese ingredients. Sushi Hōseki is an eight-seat counter run by chef Kenji Nagano, formerly of Sushi Yoshitake, with a tasting menu that runs at one of the highest covers in the city. The Bulgari Bar, on the 40th floor, is among the most photogenic hotel bars in Tokyo — circular, dark, with a single panoramic window facing the Imperial Palace at sunset. Bulgari Dolci on the ground floor is the chocolate boutique-pâtisserie that anchors every Bulgari hotel.
For a 2026 deal trip at this level, the most direct comparisons are The Connaught in London (#2 on this list), Aman Tokyo (#4 on this list), Aman New York in New York (#1 on this list). Bulgari Hotel Tokyo earns the higher rank for one or two specific reasons covered in the verdict above — usually a combination of address, lobby gravity, and the dining room that holds when the meeting goes long. The other properties are not lesser hotels — in some cases the answer for your particular trip is the runner-up.
Address: 2-chōme-2-1 Yaesu, Chuo City, Tokyo 104-0028, Japan. Business categories — the executive king, the club-floor suite, the corner room with the second working desk — book three to six months ahead in shoulder season; closer to twelve months in peak event weeks. The full review at the hotel page has current rates, the room categories worth paying up for, the executive lounge access details, and the dining programmes worth booking pre-arrival. Use the business occasion page for the broader context, or the Tokyo city guide for what else is in walking distance.
Sibling entries on the Top 50 Business list with full editorial cases:
#2 · The Connaught · London#4 · Aman Tokyo · Tokyo#1 · Aman New York · New York#5 · Mandarin Oriental Tokyo · Tokyo