Aman Tokyo ranks #39 on our 2026 list of the best family hotels in the world. The case below explains why — the kids’ programme, the suite layout, the pool depths, and the alternatives we measured it against.
“Kerry Hill's Tokyo flagship — 33rd-floor lobby with panoramic views, 84 suite-only rooms, and a six-storey atrium that has reset the standard for urban Aman properties.”
Kerry Hill's Tokyo flagship at Otemachi Tower — a 33rd-floor sky lobby, a six-storey atrium, and 84 suite-only rooms that reset the standard for urban Aman properties.
"The 33rd-floor lobby with a six-storey atrium, washi-paper screens the height of a building, and the Imperial Palace gardens at your feet. Aman Tokyo doesn't whisper luxury — it withdraws from it. The most quietly extraordinary city hotel in Japan."
Aman Tokyo opened in December 2014 — the brand's first urban property after thirty years of remote retreats — and it remains, in 2026, the benchmark by which every other city Aman is measured. It occupies the top six floors of the Otemachi Tower, levels 33 to 38, in the financial district directly above five-line Otemachi station and a short walk from Tokyo Station and the Imperial Palace gardens. The architect was Kerry Hill, the late Australian whose Aman work in Bhutan, Bali, and Sri Lanka set the visual grammar of the entire brand. Tokyo is his masterwork — and his last urban Aman before he died in 2018.
City family trips reward hotels that are operationally serious about families without making the lobby feel like a play area. Connecting rooms are real two-bedroom configurations. The kids' programme is genuinely scheduled rather than improvised. The breakfast room handles both 7am toddlers and 10am teenagers without judgement. London, Paris, Tokyo and New York each have a specific small set of hotels that solve this — the Connaught, Le Meurice, Mandarin Oriental Tokyo, the Carlyle.
Aman is unusual on a family list. Most Amans are calibrated for adults — adults-only by design at Tokyo and New York, and the wellness-and-architecture ethos is built for couples rather than children. The Amans that earn family-list inclusion are different: Amangani's mountain villa programme, Amanyara's beachside compound, Amankora's circuit through Bhutan. These are the Amans where the kids' programme exists and the architecture has space for a family. They are not the Aman default.
There are 84 rooms and suites — among the largest entry-level rooms in any Tokyo luxury hotel. The smallest category, Deluxe, is 71 square metres. The Aman Suite, at 157 square metres, is among the largest single-key residences in the city. Every room is finished in Hill's signature palette: basalt stone, cypress wood, washi paper screens, and the largest bathtubs in Tokyo — Japanese ofuro tubs hand-crafted from camphor wood, set against floor-to-ceiling windows looking down across the city. Premier rooms face the Tokyo Skytree; Aman Suites and corner suites command the Imperial Palace gardens and, on a clear winter morning, Mount Fuji a hundred kilometres west.
Arva, on the 33rd floor, serves a quietly inventive Italian-Japanese tasting menu in a long stone room that opens onto a garden of 186 trees. Musashi by Aman is the eight-seat sushi counter run by chef Hiroyuki Musashi, formerly of Sukiyabashi Jiro — one of the most difficult reservations in central Tokyo. The Lounge by Aman, on the 33rd floor, is open all day for tea ceremony, kaiseki bento, and an evening cocktail programme. The Aman Spa is the largest of any hotel in central Tokyo at 2,500 square metres, with a 30-metre swimming pool finished in dark stone, a sequence of onsen-style hot pools, and twelve treatment rooms.
For a 2026 family trip at this level, the most direct comparisons are Amangalla in Sri Lanka (#38 on this list), Rosewood Mansion on Turtle Creek in Dallas (#40 on this list), Six Senses Yao Noi in Phuket (#37 on this list). Aman Tokyo earns the higher rank for one or two specific reasons covered in the verdict above — usually a combination of kids’ programme depth, suite configuration, and the parent restaurant 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: The Otemachi Tower, 1-chōme-5-6 Ōtemachi, Chiyoda City, Tokyo 100-0004, Japan. Family-suited categories — the connecting suites, the multi-bedroom villas, the rooms with sofa beds plus a separate king — book six to twelve months ahead in school holiday peaks (Christmas, Easter, summer). The full review at the hotel page has current rates, the room categories worth paying up for, and the kids’ programme details. Use the family occasion page for the broader context, or the Tokyo city guide for what else to do while you’re there.
Sibling entries on the Top 50 Family list with full editorial cases:
#38 · Amangalla · Sri Lanka#40 · Rosewood Mansion on Turtle Creek · Dallas#37 · Six Senses Yao Noi · Phuket