Just 57 rooms beside Tokyo Station — the smallest Four Seasons in Asia. Reopens after a comprehensive renovation in spring 2026 with new mid-century interiors and the three-Michelin-starred SÉZANNE intact.
"Just 57 rooms above Tokyo Station — the smallest Four Seasons in Asia and the most personally-served. Three-Michelin-star SÉZANNE under one roof. The boutique five-star that closed for two years to come back better in spring 2026."
The Four Seasons Hotel Tokyo at Marunouchi opened in 2002 and reopens, after a comprehensive twenty-four-month renovation, on 29 April 2026. It occupies floors 1, 3, and 4–7 of the Pacific Century Place tower — directly opposite the Yaesu South entrance to Tokyo Station, two minutes' walk to the JR ticket gates and three to the Marunouchi central towers. With just 57 rooms, it is the smallest Four Seasons property in Asia and one of the smallest in the brand's worldwide portfolio. The scale is the entire point — service runs at near-private-villa ratios, the lift system is essentially private, and there is no formal check-in queue at any hour.
The 2026 reopening introduces a complete redesign by the Hong Kong-based AB Concept studio: warm wood, mid-century silhouettes in walnut and brushed bronze, hand-knotted Japanese silk rugs, and a new residential palette of ash, sage, and amber. Rooms range from the 41-square-metre Deluxe to the 100-square-metre Chairman's Suite with its corner panorama of Tokyo Station's restored 1914 brick façade and the Marunouchi skyline. The Deluxe One-Bedroom Suites at 65 square metres have a separate sitting room with a writing desk overlooking the Yaesu courtyard. Every room is finished with a deep-soaking ofuro tub, a separate rain-shower wet area, and the Four Seasons signature pillow menu.
SÉZANNE on the seventh floor, under chef Daniel Calvert, holds three Michelin stars and is among the most decorated restaurants in central Tokyo — a contemporary French tasting menu read through Japanese ingredients, served in a 28-cover dining room with brass-trimmed banquettes and Tokyo Bay light. The opening of SÉZANNE in 2021 changed the Marunouchi dining map; Calvert was named Asia's Best Pastry Chef in 2023 and Asia's Best Chef in 2024. MAISON MARUNOUCHI, the all-day Parisian-style bistro, opened with the renovation and serves a less formal counterpart menu. The Spa at Four Seasons is a six-room boutique facility on the 4th floor — recently renovated with a new sequence of cool plunges and a single hammam-style steam room.
Service is the most personal in any Tokyo five-star — staff-to-guest ratio is the highest in central Tokyo, and the institutional Four Seasons standard is delivered at near-private-residence intimacy. Every returning guest is greeted by name from the Marunouchi station entrance; preferences for room type, breakfast, and dinner are tracked across stays in five-year increments. The hotel's chauffeured-Lexus airport transfer is included with every Premier Suite booking. For solo travellers, business travellers running a tight Tokyo schedule, or anyone allergic to the volume of a 200-room luxury hotel, this is the right Tokyo answer.
For a business trip to Tokyo with a tight Marunouchi schedule, this is the address — closer to Tokyo Station than any other five-star, with the smallest scale and the most efficient arrival sequence in the city. The hotel's three private dining rooms on the 7th floor double as discreet meeting spaces; SÉZANNE's chef's table is bookable for high-stakes lunch meetings. Request a Deluxe One-Bedroom Suite for the separate sitting room and the writing desk that runs the length of the window. Travelling on a Tuesday-Thursday window, this is the most efficient Tokyo five-star.
For an anniversary built around food rather than spectacle, the Four Seasons Marunouchi is the most considered Tokyo answer. Book a Premier Suite for the Tokyo Station view; brief the concierge for a SÉZANNE chef's-table dinner and a private breakfast in-suite served on a French dining trolley. The hotel's compact scale means the SÉZANNE team will know you by name by night two. The new MAISON MARUNOUCHI is a quietly perfect anniversary lunch the day after, with the late-morning Tokyo Station bustle filtered through a single tall window.
For a solo traveller wanting central Tokyo without the volume of the Park Hyatt or Mandarin, the Four Seasons Marunouchi is a quietly perfect three-night retreat. The 57-room scale means the bartender remembers your drink by night two, the breakfast room is never crowded, and the spa is essentially private. Use the new MAISON MARUNOUCHI as the working-laptop bistro and SÉZANNE as the closing-night ritual. Pair with two or three nights at Hoshinoya Tokyo for the urban onsen counterpoint.
Rates checked May 2026. Reopens spring 2026.
Four Seasons Tokyo at Marunouchi reopens in spring 2026 with a complete renovation, the SÉZANNE three-star intact, and the smallest scale of any Tokyo five-star.
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