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★★★Amagasaki
7.8/ 10Good

Based on public data

Review

This hotel has little guest-verified firsthand data yet. 0 reports; thin data, conclusions stay cautious. High-value questions (upgrades, lounge, breakfast) stay marked insufficient — we label thin data, we never fabricate.

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06External scores · reference only, not verified
7.8/10FlyerKey composite

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Rooms & Views

Double Room
1x Double 20 Up to 2

Featuring free toiletries, this double room includes a private bathroom with a bath, a shower and a hairdryer. This doub…

Twin Room
2x Twin 20 Up to 2

Offering free toiletries, this twin room includes a private bathroom with a bath, a shower and a hairdryer. The twin roo…

T2 · Official booking system. Actual features may vary.

Restaurants nearby

  • Yonemasu★ Michelin The menus are focused on words associated with the traditional calendar; ingredients are plotted on a map of Japan to show which items come from where. The proprietor and his cooks begin by introducing the ingredients then work as a team to prepare the meal, presenting freshly cooked aromas and flavours. Strict attention is paid to temperature and texture. The choice of serving vessels and presenting food on paper or leaf garnishes convey hallowed customs in Japanese cuisine. The flavours of the season are savoured with the calendar never far from your mind.4.6km
  • Chukasoba MugenBib While eating ramen, salt water from the noodles gradually dilutes the soup. You can experience this for yourself. First, pour a little of the soup into a separate bowl. Finish the noodles in the original bowl, then try sipping the reserved soup—the difference in taste will amaze you. The harmony created by a bowl of ramen goes beyond taste. The slurping of noodles forms a duet with the classical music in the background. The joy of ramen knows no bounds: ‘mugen’.3.8km
  • Point★ Michelin Originality is demonstrated here through ingredients from each season and classic techniques. Omakase set menus feature refined, beautiful arrangements, with light flavours to suit a modern sensibility. The name declares that the house is a gathering point, bringing together everyone and everything else involved in food and restaurants. The site chosen for its relaunch was where Point first started. Anticipation is building for this fresh turning point.5.0km
  • Sobakiri KaraniBib Sobakiri Karani worked with a woodworking artist to create the interior using re-used wooden materials. Large tables with mismatched chairs and unique ceiling paintings express a whimsical spirit. The menu’s appetisers, including tofu pickled in unrefined sake and duck-and-onion miso, tempts one to a cup of sake. Soba is coarse-ground and cut into both thin and thick noodles, furnishing variety in finish and flavours. Enjoy soba the way you like it in a congenial atmosphere.4.5km
  • Oudon YomogiBib This à la carte udon shop is a project of the proprietress of the Japanese restaurant Miyamoto. The plain-wood counter and bamboo accents lend the restaurant a kappo feel. À la carte dining is available for both lunch and dinner, while dinner service generally begins with a set offering of appetiser and hassun. Udon noodles are house-made, their broth light and clear like Japanese soups. Sake and side dishes end with a serving of udon; closing with udon rather than soba is one of the restaurant’s charms.4.5km
  • via del emmeBib Cuisine that weaves together the seasons of Japan and the culture and climate of Italy. Flavours such as bamboo shoot, sweetfish, pike conger and game express their respective seasons. Having burnished his skills in inland and coastal regions, the chef is schooled in the bounty of both land and sea. He modifies each single ingredient by a wide range of preparation techniques, bringing out a side of it never seen before. Individual needs and tastes are catered for: guests can choose from a variety of pastas, for example, or request preferred portion sizes.4.7km
  • Sakamoto SushiBib With Nishikujo Station to guide them to the spot, every evening customers gather at Sakamoto Sushi, where the familiar chef greets them with a smile. The omakase menu, which begins with a snack, is astounding in variety and breadth. Fish are painstakingly prepared by methods such as marination and searing, and are paired with white sushi rice in the Kansai way. Nigirizushi are interspersed with bozushi and hand-rolled sushi to keep things interesting. The chef uses the highest-grade fish, yet the prices won’t break the bank.4.8km
  • Izakaya TokitameBib The proprietor’s parents ran a bento shop, so he helped with the cooking from a young age. Lessons learned from his mother about making side dishes find expressions in his obanzai. The lore that informs his shiraae, koya-dofu, macaroni salad and other dishes makes each item somehow nostalgic. Always solicitous of guests’ impressions, the chef shows great proficiency in tending to their needs. Portions of shared dishes are adjusted to match the size of the party. Onigiri may also be moulded larger or smaller by request.4.8km
  • AyamuyaBib The shop opened its doors a quarter century ago and is as popular as ever. Father and son tend the charcoal brazier, taking the tiller together. Two breeds of free-range chicken, each suited for different cuts, are grilled over kishu-binchotan charcoal. Skewers are served one at a time on antique dishes, combining respect for yakitori with the gracious service for which Ayamuya is renowned. Omakase meals don’t include any veggie skewers, so diners can appreciate the full flavour of the chicken.4.9km
  • ku:de kiyo ‘Kuude’ is ‘let’s eat’ in Osaka dialect, the chef’s nickname is Kiyo, and the whole name has a French sound to it. A colour scheme of bright blue and green declares the shop’s freedom from convention. The theme is ‘unforgettable cuisine’: each dish features no more than three items, arrangements are minimal, and portions are generous. At lunchtime, set meals of Western items paired with rice and miso soup make ku:de kiyo a local favourite.2.8km

Includes Michelin / Black Pearl / guide picks (reference quality, no prices); data from Overture, Michelin Guide and others.

Attractions nearby

  • Amagasaki Castle Japanese castle in Amagasaki, Hyogo prefecture1.9km

Attraction data from Wikidata (CC0) — reference only.

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