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illi Tas Shinjuku

★★★★★TokyoCity view
8.9/ 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
8.93/10FlyerKey composite · 2 sources

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Rooms & Views

Superior Apartment
2x Double 51 Up to 6
City view

This apartment comes with 1 living room, 1 separate bedroom and 1 bathroom with a shower and free toiletries. The well-e…

Deluxe Apartment
1x Double 31 Up to 3

This apartment includes 1 living room, 1 separate bedroom and 1 bathroom with a shower and free toiletries. Boasting a b…

T2 · Official booking system. Actual features may vary.

Restaurants nearby

  • Takumi Tatsuhiro★ Michelin The counter spreads like a fan, so guests surround the kitchen. Chef and apprentice serve snacks and nigiri in turn, moving in perfect harmony. The house snack is iwashi-isobemaki, bite-sized pieces of pilchard wrapped in nori. Old-school sushi craftsmanship is woven in, such as spring sea bream topped with sweetened egg yolk flakes and lean tuna paired with mustard. In mutual support between restaurateur and farmers, sushi rice comes from the chef’s native Noto Peninsula. The team keeps the sushi smoothly flowing with deft motions, serving each guest with just the right intervals. ‘Takumi’ me352m
  • Ubuka★ Michelin Love of shellfish above all else led the chef of Ubuka to tread the culinary path. He has done his homework, and the results show in a menu filled with crab and prawn suggestions. Some items follow kaiseki style, while others are Western in influence. Terrine of hair crab is an idea borrowed from French cuisine; fried prawns are immersed in sauce américaine. The meal concludes with crab and vegetables on rice cooked in an earthenware pot. Portions are generous to ensure guests can fully appreciate their shellfish. No wonder this restaurant is so busy.1.1km
  • Sharikimon Onozawa★ Michelin Makoto Onozawa finds inventive ways to break the mould while respecting tradition. Soup dishes and sashimi uphold the basics, reassuring the diner. Broiled unagi seasoned in soy-based sweet sauce is served together with broiled unseasoned unagi for a special treat. Rolled sushi of tuna and pickled daikon radish are served in the intervals, bringing satisfaction. The meal concludes on two comfort-food notes: soba and curry. Breaking tradition, after all, is about seeing the job to completion.1.2km
  • Yotsuya Minemura★ Michelin Down a narrow blind alley in a corner of Arakicho known for its dining spots, a traditional lantern casts a soft glow. Inside, the intimate space offers counter seating only, where the chef demonstrates the refined techniques of kappo. The menu favours individuality over formality. With the first toast in mind, fried dishes appear early in the meal. Steamed sushi seasoned with red vinegar is paired with seasonal seafood, and house-made soba is another highlight. The generosity of each portion adds to the satisfaction.1.2km
  • Shokudo WataBib Putting to work his experience studying authentic Japanese cuisine, the chef opened this restaurant as an izakaya where people will drop in as part of their daily lives. A warm and gentle light spreads through the restaurant and into the street through wood-framed windows. Conceived to be enjoyed casually, the flavours in the simple fare are deep and complex. In the unassuming interior, one dish follows another, each prepared with painstaking attention to detail. Maybe this is the meaning of luxury within the everyday.292m
  • Jingumae Higuchi★★ Michelin The chef’s grandparents’ house once stood on this land. He harboured a lifelong dream of becoming a sushi artisan; the first knife he ever held was a gift from his grandfather. Never forgetting the spirit of the novice, the chef takes an honest, no-nonsense approach to his ingredients. “Letting the ingredients do the talking is not the same as doing nothing,” he says—and indeed, the chef devotes great time and effort to food preparation. As an apprentice, he learned from his mentor that cooking means thinking for yourself. The work of the old days inspires today’s creativity.1.9km
  • Den★★ MichelinWorld's 50 Best #8Tabelog SilverLa Liste 96.5 The team at Den welcomes guests with bright smiles and easy conversation. A playful, inventive menu brings a fresh perspective to Japanese cuisine. The omakase menu begins with monaka, a wafer sandwich filled with foie gras seasoned with miso, along with fruits and vegetables. Fried chicken wing tips are stuffed with iimushi, mochi rice steamed with seasonal toppings. The delight of his guests is what drives the chef. Original thinking gives rise to the sort of fun dining experience only Den can offer.2.0km
  • Sincère★ Michelin Chef Shinsuke Ishii brings the passion of the producers to your table with his unique recipes. Using underutilised fish species and local ingredients, he passionately conveys human connections. The fish wrapped in pie pastry, resembling taiyaki, hides a playful twist within its sophistication. The chef personally serves his creations, and the whole team unites to engage with guests. The dining experience is filled with energy and a sense of togetherness.1.6km
  • RAMEN MATSUIBib The husband boils the noodles; the wife garnishes them with spring onion and fermented bamboo shoots. Between them, they bring alpha and omega together to complete each bowl of ramen. Flavours are based on soy sauce, salt and dried sardines. To bring out the aroma, pure rice sake is added to chicken or seafood dashi soup stock. Several types of fragrant oil are used, deepening the flavour experience. Kombu kelp, scallops and wheat flour, all from Hokkaido, infuse the husband’s love of his homeland.529m
  • NARISAWA★★ MichelinWorld's 50 Best #14Tabelog Silver Narisawa celebrates the culture of Japan’s ‘satoyama’, rural hillscapes, through the genre of ‘innovative satoyama cuisine’. The Japanese islands form a long arc from north to south, and most of the land is satoyama. In this geographical backdrop from foothills to plains, people have found ways to live harmoniously and sustainably with nature. This image of the satoyama informs the imagination of Narisawa’s cuisine. The restaurant uses traditional craftworks such as lacquerware and washi paper, harmonising diverse people and culture.2.4km

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

Attractions nearby

  • Mode Gakuen Cocoon Tower building in Tokyo, Japan1.2km
  • Shinjuku Gyoen park and garden in Shinjuku and Shibuya, Tokyo, Japan388m
  • Meiji Jingū Shinto shrine in Tokyo, Japan1.9km
  • Yasukuni Shrine Shinto shrine in Tokyo, Japan3.0km
  • Yoyogi Park park2.4km
  • Chichibunomiya Rugby Stadium rugby stadium in Tokyo, Japan2.1km
  • St. Mary's Cathedral seat of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Tokyo3.0km
  • National Art Center, Tokyo art museum in Tokyo, Japan3.2km

Attraction data from Wikidata (CC0) — reference only.

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