Imperial Hotel Tokyo – Tokyo’s Landmark 128-year-old Luxury Hotel
- Company Name: Imperial Hotel, Ltd.
- State/Prefecture: Tokyo Prefecture
- City/Town/Village: Chiyoda-Ku
- Street: 1-1-1, Uchisaiwai-Cho
- Country: Japan
- Zip/Postal Code: 100-8558
- Phone: +81-3-3504-1111
- Reservation: Check the rooms and rates
- Listed: 04/27/2018 9:01 pm
- Expires: This ad has expired
Tokyo’s Imperial was founded by the Japanese aristocracy in 1890 on the same site it occupies today and opened as a venue to receive an increasing number of foreign dignitaries visiting Japan in the Meiji Period (1868-1912). It initiated many new services and facilities which have since become standard services for major Japanese hotels, such as all-inclusive Shinto and Christian wedding services, shopping arcades, and in-house laundry service, and introduced diverse Western cuisine to the Japanese public. For its range of classical Japanese hospitality, The Imperial is the traditional favorite of dignitaries and celebrities from abroad visiting the Japanese capital.
Check the rooms and rates, and make a reservation!
Check the rooms and rates, and make a reservation!
J. D. Power’s Ranking Sees Tokyo’s Imperial Hotel Highest in Customer Satisfaction for Second Consecutive Year
Date: Apr 20, 2018
Source: Imperial Hotel, Ltd.
For the second year in a row, Tokyo’s landmark 128-year-old Imperial Hotel has been ranked the best hotel in Japan for customer satisfaction in J. D. Power’s “Japan Hotel Guest Satisfaction Index Survey, 2017.” Out of 25 of the hotel brands surveyed, The Imperial was ranked top in the segment of guestroom rates of 35,000 yen or more per night, receiving a score of 773 points out of a possible 1,000 points.
The Imperial’s high ranking was based on high scores received in the areas of Reservation, Check-In/Check-Out, Guestroom, Food & Beverages, Hotel Services, Hotel Facilities, and Cost & Fees. Replies were received from 26,729 respondents to the August, 2017, internet survey of 166 hotel brand chains and groups throughout Japan. The respondents, aged 18 and above, were asked about their degree of satisfaction with their experiences and services at hotels they had stayed at during the preceding one-year period.