Travel 4 minutes 08 October 2025

The Second Annual MICHELIN Key Hotels: All the Key Hotels in Japan

The MICHELIN Guide announces its selection of the best hotels in Japan for 2025.

On October 8, 2025, the MICHELIN Guide revealed the brand new One, Two, and Three Key distinctions for the most outstanding hotels in Japan.

The MICHELIN Guide now includes over 7,000 hotels across the world, and not a single one is simply a room for the night. These are places that significantly add to your experience as a traveler, each vetted and judged excellent in five categories: architecture and interior design, quality and consistency of service, overall personality and character, value for the price, and a significant contribution to the guest experience in a particular setting.

Which brings us back to the Keys. The culmination of countless hours of evaluation by our team of experts, the Key hotels below represent the highlights of our broader selection. Like the MICHELIN Stars for restaurants, the MICHELIN Keys are our most outstanding hotels.

In total, the 2025 MICHELIN Guide hotel selection in Japan includes 7 Three Key hotels, 20 Two-Key hotels, and 101 One-Key hotels. Want to know more about the MICHELIN Key? Here’s everything you need to know. Or, head below to look at all the Keys.


Gora Kadan — Hakone-machi, Japan
Gora Kadan — Hakone-machi, Japan

Highlights of the Japan 2025 Key Hotel List

Jump straight to the list or take a deeper dive into select Key hotels.


On this page, you’ll find every single one of our new Key distinctions, sorted by number of Keys and location in Japan. Click on any hotel to go straight to the hotel page to learn more about the nuts and bolts of each property. Alternatively, you can read any number of in-depth pieces about the aspects of the special craft that make up a Key hotel over in our magazine. While our anonymous selection team spends every day scouring the earth to vet favorite hotels and unearth hidden gems, our editorial team delves into the hotel craft by speaking directly to hoteliers.

Take a peek at a Two Key ryokan that seeks to embody the lost charm of the past.

Or, look inside a One Key ryokan that embraces modernity and modern art.

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Aman Tokyo — Tokyo, Japan
Aman Tokyo — Tokyo, Japan

Tokyo: Skyscrapers and Design Gems

Out of 7 Three Key hotels in Japan, 3 make their home in towers in Tokyo. At Bvlgari Hotel Tokyo, Four Seasons Hotel Tokyo at Otemachi, and the Palace Hotel Tokyo, expect the lavish spas, restaurants, and faultless service that have long made Tokyo among the luxury-hotel capitals of the world. Other Key hotels that stand tall over the megapolis: Andaz Tokyo, Aman Tokyo, and Fairmont Tokyo.

But the city is home too to less intimidating masterpieces. Look to the contemporary Swedish design of K5 for perhaps the quintessential example of boutique personality in the capital, or to TRUNK (HOTEL) YOYOGI PARK for a small, Japanese and Danish-inspired accommodation wonderfully placed on the edge of an urban forest.

Worth a mention: ESPACIO The Hakone Geihinkan Rin-Poh-Ki-Ryu, a One Key hotel just outside Tokyo, set against the backdrop of Mount Fuji.

See More: The Architecture and Interior Design of Tokyo's Three-Key Hotels


Asaba Ryokan — Izu, Japan
Asaba Ryokan — Izu, Japan

Two Types of Ryokan: Deeply Traditional and Imaginatively Reinvented

We’re thrilled to celebrate many ryokan hotels in our list of Keys in Japan. Among the oldest forms of hospitality in history, the ryokan has no official, legal definition — it is simply a traditional Japanese inn, typically sporting tatami floors, shoji screens, kaiseki dinners and onsen hot spring baths.

Our list of Key hotels features ryokan across the country, and you might split them into two categories. The first are the hyper-traditional ryokan, those with centuries-old roots like Ochiairo, Hiiragiya and Asaba, that preserve the most traditional forms and customs of these storied inns.

On the other end, find the modern ryokan — less tied to tradition, they sport updated or even radical forms of design, architecture, and luxuries; even if, at their core, they take their appeal from the same onsen baths, kaiseki dinners and connection with the countryside that have drawn travelers for generations. Look to Sekitei, Beniya Mukayu, and Amanemu for some of the most superlative examples.

See More: The Reinvention of the Ryokan


Benesse House — Naoshima, Japan
Benesse House — Naoshima, Japan

The Most Unique Japanese Key Hotels That Defy Categorization

It’s easy enough to put Japanese hotels into neat buckets. We’ve already given Tokyo credit for its luxury skyscrapers, and the countryside for its sublime ryokan. But amongst the Key hotels of Japan, we see plenty of gems with no such easy categorization.

In Oyama, the Fuji Speedway Hotel takes the famed race track and builds a hotel around it; guests are treated to views of the mountain and the speedway, and a dedicated motorsports museum. In Kumura, Izumo Hotel The Cliff carves eight room-like bunkers into the cliffside over the ocean. And in Naoshima, Benesse House is an art museum-hotel on a tiny, isolated island with installations by Jackson Pollock and James Turrell.

See More: The Most Unique Key Hotels in Japan

Fuji Speedway Hotel — Shizuoka, Japan
Fuji Speedway Hotel — Shizuoka, Japan

Click below to jump to each distinction: 


The Three Key Hotels

Amanemu — Mie, Japan
Amanemu — Mie, Japan

The Two Key Hotels

JANU Tokyo — Tokyo, Japan
JANU Tokyo — Tokyo, Japan

Fujikawaguchiko: Fufu Kawaguchiko 
Hatsukaichi-shi: Sekitei
Hokkaido: Zaborin
Ishigaki city: Jusandi
Kagoshima: GAJOEN
Kyoto: Aman Kyoto
Kyoto: The Shinmonzen
Miyakojima: Rosewood Miyakojima (New)
Miyota: The Hiramatsu Karuizawa Miyota
Naoshima: Benesse House
Nikko: Fufu Nikko
Nikko: The Ritz-Carlton, Nikko
Onna: Halekulani Okinawa
Takeo: Onyado Chikurintei (New)
Tokyo: Aman Tokyo
Tokyo: JANU Tokyo
Tokyo: The Capitol Hotel Tokyu
Toyooka: Nishimuraya Honkan
Yufu: ENOWA Yufu
Yufu: Kamenoi Besso

The One Key Hotels

K5 — Tokyo, Japan
K5 — Tokyo, Japan

Atami: Atami Izusan Karaku
Awara: Beniya Kofuyuden
Beppu: ANA InterContinental Beppu Resort & Spa
Fukuoka: The Ritz-Carlton Fukuoka
Ginoza: The Hiramatsu Hotels & Resorts Ginoza
Goto: GOTO RETREAT by Onko Chishin
Hachimantai: ANA InterContinental Appi Kogen Resort
Hakone: ESPACIO The Hakone Geihinkan Rin-Poh-Ki-Ryu (New)
Hakone: Fufu Hakone
Hakone: Hakone Gora Karaku
Hakone: The Hiramatsu Hotels & Resorts Sengokuhara
Izu: Fugaku Gunjo (New)
Izu City: Arcana Izu
Izu City: Ochiairo
Kaga-Onsen: Beniya Mukayu
Kaga-shi: Araya Totoan
Kami-Amakusa: TAYUTA amakusa (New)
Karuizawa: Fufu Karuizawa Wind in the Sunshine
Karuizawa: Fufu Kyu-Karuizawa Restful Forest
Karuizawa: SHISHI-IWA-HOUSE Karuizawa
Kirishima: Myoken Ishiharaso (New)
Kōda: Hitotsu Notojima (New)
Kuba: Simose Art Garden Villa (New)
Kumura: Izumo Hotel The Cliff
Kutchan: Sansui Niseko
Kutchan: SHIGUCHI (New)
Kyoto: Ace Hotel Kyoto
Kyoto: Banyan Tree Higashiyama Kyoto (New)
Kyoto: Dusit Thani Kyoto
Kyoto: Four Seasons Hotel Kyoto
Kyoto: Fufu Kyoto
Kyoto: Garrya Nijo Castle Kyoto
Kyoto: Genji Kyoto
Kyoto: Hiiragiya
Kyoto: Hoshinoya Kyoto (New)
Kyoto: Hotel The Celestine Kyoto Gion
Kyoto: Kanamean Nishitomiya
Kyoto: MUNI KYOTO by Onko Chishin
Kyoto: Park Hyatt Kyoto
Kyoto: ROKU KYOTO, LXR Hotels & Resorts
Kyoto: Six Senses Kyoto
Kyoto: Suiran, a Luxury Collection Hotel, Kyoto
Kyoto: The Hotel Seiryu Kyoto Kiyomizu
Kyoto: The Ritz-Carlton, Kyoto
Kyoto: Kifune Ugenta
Matsuyama: SETOUCHI RETREAT by Onko Chishin
Minakami: Bettei Senjuan
Nagato: Bettei Otozure
Nago: The Ritz-Carlton, Okinawa
Nagoya: The Tower Hotel Nagoya
Nagoya: TIAD, Autograph Collection
Nakijin: One Suite THE GRAND
Nanjo: Hyakuna Garan
Nanyo: Osteria Sincerita (New)
Nanyo: Yamagata The Takinami (New)
Naoshima: Naoshima Ryokan Roka
Nara: Fufu Nara
Nara: JW Marriott Hotel Nara
Narai: BYAKU Narai
Nasu: Nasu Mukunone
Niigata: Satoyama-Jujo
Nikko: Kinugawa Keisui
Niseko: Higashiyama Niseko Village, a Ritz-Carlton Reserve
Niseko: Muwa Niseko
Niseko: Park Hyatt Niseko Hanazono
Niseko: Setsu Niseko
Numazu: Numazu Club
Onomichi: Ryokan Onomichi Nishiyama
Onomichi: Azumi Setoda
Osaka: Conrad Osaka
Osaka: Four Seasons Hotel Osaka (New)
Osaka: InterContinental Osaka
Osaka: Patina Osaka (New)
Osaka: The Ritz-Carlton, Osaka
Osaka: W Osaka
Oyama-cho: Fuji Speedway Hotel (New)
Shima: The Hiramatsu Hotels & Resorts Kashikojima
Tachikawa: Auberge TOKITO (New)
Takayama-shi: Wanosato
Toba-shi: Oyado The Earth
Tokyo: Andaz Tokyo
Tokyo: Bellustar Tokyo, A Pan Pacific Hotel
Tokyo: Fairmont Tokyo (New)
Tokyo: Four Seasons Hotel Tokyo at Marunouchi
Tokyo: Hotel New Otani Tokyo - Executive House ZEN
Tokyo: K5
Tokyo: Mandarin Oriental Tokyo
Tokyo: Shangri-La Tokyo
Tokyo: The Aoyama Grand Hotel
Tokyo: The Okura Tokyo
Tokyo: The Peninsula Tokyo
Tokyo: The Prince Gallery Tokyo Kioicho, a Luxury Collection Hotel
Tokyo: The Ritz-Carlton, Tokyo
Tokyo: The Tokyo Station Hotel
Tokyo: Trunk Hotel Yoyogi Park
Unzen: RYOTEI HANZUIRYO
Yakushima: Sankara Hotel & Spa Yakushima
Yamanouchi: Shoraiso (New)
Yokohama: InterContinental Yokohama Pier 8
Yokohama: The Kahala Hotel & Resort Yokohama
Yufu: Yufuin Tamanoyu (New)

Hero image: Aman Tokyo

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