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Outcall Massage at Hotel GrandBach Tokyo Ginza — In-Room Booking Guide

Hotel GrandBach Tokyo Ginza is a 144-room boutique wellness hotel in its own 15-storey building in Ginza 5-chome, Chuo-ku. Built around the concept of J.S. Bach’s music and wellness cuisine, guest rooms span floors 3–15 with an Executive Floor on the top two floors (14F–15F). The lobby is at street level (1F). The smallest rooms start at 23 m² (Double A), with Twin rooms at 27–30 m² and Suites at 83 m². The hotel is a 1-minute walk from Higashi-Ginza Station and 4 minutes from Ginza Station.

This page covers everything you need to arrange an in-room massage at Hotel GrandBach Tokyo Ginza: where to meet your therapist, how the hotel’s access works, what to message, and how to pay safely. Whether you’re recovering from jet lag, unwinding after a Ginza shopping day, or booking a late-night hotel room massage, this guide gives you the practical steps.

Hotel visitor rules can change. If anything looks outdated, please message us here.

Hotel snapshot

Hotel GrandBach Tokyo Ginza

Address: 5-13-12 Ginza, Chuo-ku, Tokyo 104-0061, Japan

Phone: +81 3-5550-2222

Area: Ginza 5-chome / Higashi-Ginza

Rooms: 144 rooms (own 15-storey building; guest rooms on floors 3–15)

Smallest room: 23 m² (Double A). Twin: 27–30 m². Suite: 83 m²

Lobby: 1st floor (street level)

Access: Higashi-Ginza Station ~1 min walk. Ginza Station ~4 min walk. Kabuki-za Theatre ~3 min walk.

Taxi line for your phone: “5-13-12 Ginza, Chuo-ku, Tokyo 104-0061 (Hotel GrandBach Tokyo Ginza)”

Outcall difficulty level

Usually smooth — this is a compact 144-room boutique hotel in its own building with a street-level lobby. Meet at the 1F lobby, then escort your therapist to your room.

Key advantage: Smaller boutique hotels tend to have quieter lobbies and less rigid security than large tower hotels. The 1F street-level lobby makes meet-ups fast and straightforward.

Why international visitors choose Hotel GrandBach Tokyo Ginza

1) Wellness concept meets in-room massage

The hotel is built around relaxation: J.S. Bach’s music plays throughout, rooms have YAMAHA soundbar speakers, and the restaurant serves wellness-focused French cuisine. An in-room massage is a natural extension of this philosophy — the room is already designed for recovery.

2) Spacious rooms for a Ginza hotel

Rooms are praised by guests as “very spacious for Tokyo.” Even the entry-level Double A at 23 m² uses warm wood design and efficient layout to feel larger. Twin rooms at 27–30 m² give comfortable space for an in-room massage setup.

3) Prime Ginza location, quiet street

1 minute from Higashi-Ginza Station and 4 minutes from Ginza Station, but on a quieter side street rather than the main Chuo-dori. Guests describe the location as “off the beaten path but close to everything.” This suits discreet in-room massage logistics.

4) Evening wellness routine built into the hotel

Executive Floor guests get complimentary evening drinks at the 2F bar/lounge Magdalena (19:00–23:00). Pair a drink downstairs with an outcall massage in your room afterward — the hotel’s own wellness philosophy supports this kind of evening recovery.

Hotel GrandBach Tokyo Ginza is a wellness-oriented boutique hotel with a street-level lobby, quiet Ginza side-street location, and rooms designed for relaxation — a natural fit for outcall massage.

Tourist tips (airport & nearby)

Airport to hotel

  • From Haneda: about 30–50 min by car or train to Ginza.
  • From Narita: about 60–90 min. The Access Narita bus stops within walking distance.

Pro move: message an outcall service during your airport transfer so a therapist can arrive soon after check-in.

Nearby highlights

  • Kabuki-za Theatre: 3-minute walk for kabuki performances.
  • Ginza Chuo-dori / Ginza Six: 4–5 minute walk for flagship shopping.
  • Tsukiji Outer Market: 8–10 minute walk for seafood and street food.
  • Hibiya / Yurakucho: 10-minute walk for dining and theatres.

For area-level hotel logistics, see: Ginza / Nihonbashi / Yurakucho hotels guide.

Taxi tip: The hotel is on a quieter side street off the main Ginza avenue. Tell the driver “Hotel GrandBach, Ginza 5-chome” or show the address “5-13-12 Ginza.” Ginza taxis are plentiful even late at night.

Can you book outcall massage at Hotel GrandBach Tokyo Ginza?

Yes. Hotel GrandBach is a compact boutique hotel in its own building with a street-level lobby. The hotel’s smaller size and wellness-oriented atmosphere make it one of the more comfortable settings for in-room massage in the Ginza area. Here’s the typical process:

1

Book

Send your hotel name, time window, and massage type.

2

Confirm

Get total price (incl. surcharges) and ETA before dispatch.

3

Meet

Go to the 1F lobby (street level) and meet your therapist.

4

Session

Escort them to your room. The massage happens in your room.

5

Pay

Cash or card/online — confirm the method when you book.

Note about in-house facilities: Hotel GrandBach does not have its own spa or massage facility. The hotel focuses on wellness cuisine and ambient music rather than bodywork services. This makes outcall massage the natural option for guests who want a massage during their stay.

For the wider “how outcall works in Tokyo hotels” overview, see: Tokyo Hotels for Outcall Massage (parent guide).

Where to meet your massage therapist

Recommended meet-up point

Best default: meet at the 1F lobby (street level), then take the elevator together. The lobby is compact and quiet — typical of a 144-room boutique hotel — so you’ll spot your therapist immediately.

Guest floor elevators likely require keycard access, so you need to escort your therapist personally.

If staff asks questions

Keep it simple: “I’m meeting a guest and bringing them up.” You don’t need to mention “massage.” You’re the registered guest — escorting a visitor is normal.

If the service specifies a different meet-up point, follow their instruction.

Boutique hotel advantage: With only 144 rooms and a quiet lobby, the meet-up is more relaxed than at large-scale tower hotels. No crowd, no confusion — your therapist walks in and you’re on your way up.

Choosing a massage therapist

Many guests — especially male guests — care about a therapist’s age and appearance. That’s normal. The mistake is trusting services that show full-face “model-like” photos as if they are guaranteed.

Be careful with services that display clear full-face portraits. Those photos are often heavily edited, or sometimes not even the real therapist. In the worst cases, someone completely different shows up.

Most reliable services avoid full-face photos for privacy and safety. They may show partial-face or lifestyle photos. If you feel uneasy about “no full face,” flip your logic: that restraint is often a trust signal.

Practical tip: If you want a certain “type,” describe it with words (friendly, calm, strong pressure, athletic, etc.) instead of demanding a specific face photo. You’ll get a better match and fewer problems.

Booking message template (copy & paste)

Send this message (English):

Hi, I’m staying at Hotel GrandBach Tokyo Ginza (5-13-12 Ginza, Chuo-ku, near Higashi-Ginza Station). I’d like an outcall / in-room massage today. • Start time: (e.g., 9:00–10:00 pm window) • Duration: (e.g., 90 minutes) • Massage type: (shiatsu / oil / deep tissue) • Pressure: (light / medium / strong) • Focus: (shoulders / lower back / legs, etc.) • Meet-up: I can meet you at the 1st floor lobby (street level) and escort you to my room. • Payment: (cash / card / online) Please confirm total price (including any late-night surcharge) and estimated arrival time.

If you’re flexible on timing, you’ll get faster dispatch. Ultra-precise start times reduce your options.

Paying safely (quick sanity check)

Good signs: clear total price confirmed before dispatch, normal payment processor (Stripe, PayPal, or standard Japanese payment service), and a professional booking flow.

Red flags: vague pricing, pressure to pay first without confirmation, or “too-good-to-be-true” claims. If something feels off, don’t proceed.

General price range for an in-room massage session in Tokyo (as a reference):

60 min: ¥15,000–¥25,000  |  90 min: ¥20,000–¥35,000

Late-night surcharge (after midnight): typically ¥1,000–¥2,000. Prices vary by service, massage type, and time of day.

FAQ

Can the therapist go straight to my room?

Unlikely without escort. Guest floor elevators likely require keycard access. The reliable path is: meet at the 1F lobby (street level) and escort your therapist up. Since it’s a compact 144-room hotel, the lobby is quiet and the process is fast.

The hotel has a “wellness” concept — does it have its own spa or massage?

No. The wellness concept focuses on J.S. Bach’s music, YAMAHA soundbar speakers in rooms, and wellness-oriented French cuisine at the restaurant. There is no in-house spa or massage facility. Outcall massage is the natural and only practical option for bodywork.

Can I book a late-night massage? (after midnight)

Yes, many outcall services in central Tokyo operate until late (some until 4:00 AM or later). Expect a late-night surcharge of ¥1,000–¥2,000. Ginza is a core service area with fast dispatch times.

Can I book right after checking in? (jet lag recovery)

Absolutely. If you message the service during your airport transfer, you can often have a therapist arrive within 60–90 minutes of check-in. The hotel’s proximity to Higashi-Ginza Station (1 min walk) means therapists can reach you quickly.

Can I get a couples massage delivered to my room?

The 23 m² Double rooms are tight for two therapists. Twin rooms (27–30 m²) work with careful planning. The 83 m² Suite is ideal for couples massage with ample space for both setups.

What types of massage can I get delivered?

Most outcall services offer oil massage, deep tissue, shiatsu (Japanese pressure-point), Thai-style, and sports/remedial massage. The most common request is oil massage or deep tissue for jet lag and travel fatigue.

Shiatsu or oil — which works better in this hotel?

Both work well. The warm wood interiors and ambient Bach music make oil massage particularly relaxing. In the 23 m² Double rooms, shiatsu on a futon mat is more space-efficient. Twin rooms and above fit either setup comfortably.

How much does an outcall massage cost in Tokyo?

As a general reference: 60 min costs ¥15,000–¥25,000, and 90 min costs ¥20,000–¥35,000. Late-night surcharge is typically ¥1,000–¥2,000. Always confirm the total before dispatch.

How far in advance should I book?

Same-day booking works for most services in Ginza. Weekend nights and holidays can be busier — booking a few hours ahead helps.

Is this hotel convenient for outcall massage dispatch?

Very. The hotel is 1 minute from Higashi-Ginza Station and 4 minutes from Ginza Station. Ginza is one of the most central areas in Tokyo with multiple subway lines and abundant taxis, making dispatch times among the fastest.

What’s the Executive Floor? Is it different for outcall?

The Executive Floor occupies the 14th and 15th floors (top floors) and includes perks like a free minibar and evening drinks at the 2F lounge. For outcall purposes, the meet-up process is the same: 1F lobby, escort to your room. The Executive Floor does not change the access logistics.

Do I need to tell the hotel I’m booking an external massage?

No. You’re meeting a visitor at the 1F lobby and escorting them to your room — that’s normal guest behavior. Keep it simple and polite.

© 2026 Tokyo Hotel Massage Guide. Practical information for international visitors booking outcall and in-room massage at hotels in Tokyo.