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Toyoko Inn Osaka Umeda Nakatsu No.1

Toyoko InnToyoko Inn Club Card★★★Osaka
8.2/ 10Very good

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
8.23/10FlyerKey composite · 2 sources

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Rooms & Views

Premium Single Room, Non Smoking
1x Twin 10 Up to 2

1 Large Twin Bed 108 sq feet Internet - Free WiFi Entertainment - 40-inch flat-screen TV with digital channel…

Separate Twin Room, Smoking
2x Twin Up to 4

2 Twin Beds Internet - Free WiFi Entertainment - 40-inch flat-screen TV with digital channels and pay movies F…

Economy Double Room, Non Smoking
1x Double Up to 3

1 Double Bed Internet - Free WiFi Entertainment - 40-inch flat-screen TV with digital channels and pay movies…

Standard Single Room, Non Smoking
1x Double Up to 2

1 Double Bed Internet - Free WiFi Entertainment - 40-inch flat-screen TV with digital channels and pay movies…

Economy Double Room, Smoking
1x Double Up to 3

1 Double Bed Internet - Free WiFi Entertainment - 40-inch flat-screen TV with digital channels and pay movies…

Standard Single Room, Smoking
1x Double Up to 2

1 Double Bed Internet - Free WiFi Entertainment - 40-inch flat-screen TV with digital channels and pay movies…

Standard Double Room, Smoking
1x Double Up to 3

1 Double Bed Internet - Free WiFi Entertainment - 40-inch flat-screen TV with digital channels and pay movies…

T2 · Official booking system. Actual features may vary.

Restaurants nearby

  • Pierre★ Michelin Freshness is number one with the chef of Pierre, so he focuses on ingredients grown and raised in Japan. The menu only lists the ingredients, encouraging guests to give their imaginations free rein. Japanese seasonings such as mustard and chilli peppers mixed with yuzu zest lend a distinctive accent. French cooking techniques are married with Japanese ingredients, which are then prepared with a light touch. Spellbinding views from the spacious dining room high in a tall building add to the ambience.390m
  • Numata★★ Michelin The tempura fried by the chef as his heart dictates comes out refined. To bring the flavour of carefully selected ingredients, the main oil of choice is Taihaku sesame oil. The coating is infused with bubbles, giving it a light texture. In a distinctive presentation style, seafood and vegetables that work well together are served in alternating pairs. The final dish is the guest’s choice of tendon, tempura over rice; tencha, tendon steeped in roasted green tea; or tenmusu, onigiri filled with shrimp tempura. The chef does not neglect training the next generation, either, entrusting understudie1.3km
  • Kamigatachuka SHINTANI★ Michelin Weave Kansai food culture and Chinese tradition together and you get Kamigatachuka. Ingredients from the Kinki region are prepared using Chinese and Japanese techniques; continuing the theme, items are served on Chinese and Japanese plates and bowls. Vegetarian cuisine, dubbed ‘Naniwa’ (‘vegetable garden’), brings to mind the Kawachi Plain’s fame as a vegetable-producing region. The fare is the self-expression of a chef who was born in Osaka and grew up in a family that ran a Chinese restaurant.909m
  • Higashichaya Nakamura★ Michelin The star of the menu is the bounty of the Hokuriku region. Seafood is delivered from the chef’s native Ishikawa Prefecture; seafood from every part of Ishikawa express the shifting seasons: Noto abalone, Nanao egg cockles, Chirihama oysters, and Kanaiwa male snow crab. As he cooks on an earthen charcoal brazier, the chef holds forth on their particular qualities and the passion of the fishermen with whom he does business. The restaurant name derives from the historic Higashi Chaya district of Kanazawa. From behind the counter, the chef waxes eloquent on the charms of his birthplace.966m
  • KAHALA★★ Michelin Over half a century since he opened his restaurant, Yoshifumi Mori remains vigorously engaged in food preparation. His passion seems unquenchable: with rice flour and salt, he created a seasoning that melts away like snow. He makes wine and even grows rice. Scouring every region of Japan, the chef seeks out unknown ingredients and introduces them to the world. All this has led to Mori being honoured by the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries. Like a steel plate polished until gleaming, he continues to sharpen his culinary sensibilities.1.4km
  • Ukitacho Ima★ Michelin The chef spent years fine-tuning his skills in a Japanese restaurant in Hozenji Yokocho. While treasuring the lessons he learned there, he now blazes his own culinary trail. Mindful of how knife technique can affect the flavour of sashimi, he practises daily and his grounded approach to cooking is reassuring to watch. Bringing together everything he has learned over his career, he expresses it in cuisine of the ‘here and now’. Rather than just copy his mentor, the chef treads his own path in the gastronomic world.983m
  • Tenjimbashi Aoki★★ Michelin Scrupulous attention is paid to the ceremonial space, cuisine, serving vessels and sense of the seasons. The chef learned his guiding principles at a restaurant in Hozenji Alley. Entrusted with preparing the appetiser platters, he became schooled in the knowledge and aesthetics of Japanese cuisine. Aiming for artistic beauty in all aspects, he grows his own flowers to decorate the sukiya interior and collects seasonal serving vessels to delight guests. Technique, experience and sensibility all merge to create assortments of dishes that celebrate the seasons and their festivals.1.4km
  • 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.1.1km
  • Oimatsu Hisano★★ Michelin The chef interprets the seasons through kaiseki, adding twists and tricks that make the cuisine his own. To express each season, appetisers are accompanied by leaves collected on hill and dale and a slim strip of paper is inscribed with a seasonal phrase. White rice, cooked in clay pots, is specially selected and treated. Rice grown in serpentinite soil, with its rich mineral content, is seasoned with salt and soy sauce to bring out umami and flavour. In a unique touch, scorched rice is served like a rice cracker. The basics of Japanese cuisine are safely guarded, yet imagination has room to r1.5km
  • KushinGarando★ Michelin The restaurant aspires to cheerful Chinese fare that delights with fun and surprises. The appetiser assortment offers a tour of China’s regions, each inspired by hometown cooking. A touch of variation appears in every dish: beef and green pepper stir-fry is cooked over low heat; crispy pork is wrapped in crepe. The word ‘Garan’ in the name means ‘a place where monks gather’, reflecting the house’s practice of serving everyone at once. After dinner, the guests assemble around a table to relax over Chinese tea and share the warmth of the moment together.1.3km

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

Attractions nearby

  • Osaka Castle Japanese castle in Chūō-ku, Osaka, Japan3.6km
  • Museum of Oriental Ceramics, Osaka art museum in Osaka, Japan2.0km
  • National Museum of Art, Osaka museum in Japan2.0km
  • Ōsaka Tenmangū Shinto shrine in Osaka Prefecture, Japan2.1km
  • Osaka Science Museum science museum2.1km
  • Ishiyama Hongan-ji historical Buddhist temple located in Osaka, Japan3.6km
  • Osaka Castle Park park3.6km
  • Kyocera Dome Osaka baseball stadium in Osaka, Japan4.9km

Attraction data from Wikidata (CC0) — reference only.

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