Home Tokyo Hotels for Outcall Massage Ginza / Nihonbashi / Yurakucho Mitsui Garden Hotels (Group Guide)

Ginza / Nihonbashi / Tokyo Station · Hotel Group Guide · Outcall / In-Room Massage

Outcall Massage at Mitsui Garden Hotels (Ginza & Nihonbashi) — In-Room Booking Guide

Mitsui Garden Hotels operates 8 properties across the Ginza, Nihonbashi, Kyobashi, Otemachi, and Shiodome corridor — ranging from the 361-room, 25-story Ginza PREMIER to compact city hotels like the Ginza Tsukiji and Ginza-gochome. Room sizes start from approximately 18–22 m² at standard properties, with PREMIER-grade rooms reaching 40 m² or more. All properties are within walking distance of major Metro and JR stations (Shimbashi, Ginza, Higashi-Ginza, Nihonbashi, Kyobashi, Tokyo, Otemachi), making this corridor one of the most dispatch-efficient zones in Tokyo for outcall massage.

This page is the practical playbook for booking an in-room massage at any Mitsui Garden Hotel in this area: where to meet the therapist, what to message, how elevator access and keycards work, and how to pay safely. Whether you need jet lag recovery after a long-haul flight, a late-night session after Ginza dining, or a pre-Shinkansen reset before heading to Kyoto, the information below covers every scenario.

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 If anything looks outdated, please message us here.

Group snapshot

Mitsui Garden Hotels (brand group)

Operator: Mitsui Fudosan Hotel Management Co., Ltd.

Sister brands: HOTEL THE CELESTINE, sequence

Properties in this area: 8 hotels (Ginza/Nihonbashi/Kyobashi/Otemachi/Shiodome)

Room count range: ~150–361 rooms per property

Room size range: ~18–40+ m² (varies by property and grade)

Properties are concentrated along the Ginza–Nihonbashi–Tokyo Station corridor, which makes logistics predictable when you book an in-room massage service.

Outcall difficulty level

Usually smooth — but assume normal city-hotel access control. Some properties use keycard-restricted elevators (guest floors require card scan). The reliable pattern: meet at the lobby or elevator area, then escort the therapist to your room with your keycard.

Special note — Ginza PREMIER: This property has a two-stage elevator system (1F entrance → 16F lobby → guest floors above 16F). Therapists cannot navigate this alone. You must meet them at the 1F entrance or 16F lobby.

Don’t assume “direct-to-room” is possible at any property. Plan for a quick meet-up.

Hotels in this area (quick reference)

Mitsui Garden Hotels properties in and around Ginza, Nihonbashi, and Tokyo Station:

Hotel Area Rooms Key note Official site
Mitsui Garden Hotel Ginza PREMIER Ginza / Shimbashi 361 25F · Two-stage elevator (1F→16F→rooms) Site
Millennium Mitsui Garden Hotel Tokyo Ginza / Higashi-Ginza 329 Has in-house massage · Keycard elevators Site
Mitsui Garden Hotel Nihonbashi PREMIER Nihonbashi Muromachi Near Mitsukoshimae Station · Kaga cuisine restaurant Site
Mitsui Garden Hotel Kyobashi Kyobashi / Tokyo Station 2 min from Kyobashi Station · Near Tokyo Station Site
Mitsui Garden Hotel Otemachi Otemachi / Tokyo Station Near Otemachi Station · Business district core Site
Mitsui Garden Hotel Ginza-gochome Ginza 5-chome Central Ginza location Site
Mitsui Garden Hotel Ginza Tsukiji Ginza / Tsukiji side Near Tsukiji Outer Market Site
Mitsui Garden Hotel Shiodome Italia-gai Shiodome / Shimbashi side Walkable to Ginza · Italian-themed district Site

Group official site: gardenhotels.co.jp/eng/

Reference address — Ginza PREMIER

8-13-1 Ginza, Chuo-ku, Tokyo 104-0061

Phone: +81 3-3543-1131

Access: JR Shimbashi Station ~4 min walk

Reference address — Nihonbashi PREMIER

3-4-4 Nihonbashi Muromachi, Chuo-ku, Tokyo 103-0022

Phone: +81 3-3270-1131

Access: Nihonbashi Station (B12) ~8 min walk

Why international visitors choose Mitsui Garden Hotels in this area

1) Location efficiency (Ginza × Nihonbashi × Tokyo Station)

This corridor reduces “station maze fatigue.” Shorter transfers and more predictable taxi routes are a real advantage when you plan evening in-room time. For hotel room massage dispatch, this area is one of the fastest in Tokyo — most services treat Ginza/Nihonbashi as a core zone.

2) Translation systems + multilingual support

All Mitsui Garden Hotels in this area advertise built-in translation systems for front desk communication. This reduces friction for non-Japanese-speaking visitors — both for general hotel questions and for coordinating things like massage therapist meet-ups at the lobby.

3) Room as recovery zone

After long flights and heavy walking days, in-room massage is the simplest recovery option — especially in winter or rain. PREMIER-grade rooms are spacious enough for comfortable sessions; even standard rooms at compact properties work well for a single-therapist setup.

4) Most properties have no spa — outcall fills the gap

With the notable exception of the Millennium (which offers in-house shiatsu/aroma), most Mitsui Garden Hotels in this area do not have a spa or massage facility. If you want a professional massage, an outcall service delivered to your room is the practical solution.

Tourist tips (airport access & nearby highlights)

Airport to hotel

  • From Haneda (HND): ~30–45 min by monorail/train to Shimbashi or Tokyo Station, or ~25–40 min by taxi depending on traffic.
  • From Narita (NRT): ~60–90 min by Narita Express to Tokyo Station, then taxi or Metro to your specific hotel.
  • Post-flight massage tip: book a 60-minute arrival window so the therapist can be dispatched shortly after you check in.

Nearby highlights

  • Ginza: flagship shopping (Ginza Six, Mitsukoshi), high-end dining, gallery walks.
  • Nihonbashi: Edo-era heritage district, long-established shops (Ninben, Yamamoto Noriten).
  • Tokyo Station: Shinkansen hub, day trips to Hakone/Nikko/Kamakura, great ekiben (station bento).
  • Tsukiji Outer Market: ~5–10 min from Ginza-side hotels — street food and fresh seafood.

This corridor is one of the most accessible areas in Tokyo for outcall massage delivery, with multiple dispatch routes available.

Area-level logistics: Ginza / Nihonbashi / Yurakucho hotels guide.

Late-night tip: If you go out, return earlier than the “last train” mindset — stations are large and confusing when tired. Keep your hotel address screenshot ready and use a taxi if needed. Ginza/Shimbashi area has excellent late-night taxi availability.

Can you book outcall massage at Mitsui Garden Hotels?

Yes — at all properties in this group. In-room massage delivery works well across the Mitsui Garden Hotels corridor. The key is understanding elevator access control: many properties use keycard-restricted elevators, so a third-party visitor cannot ride to guest floors alone.

How it works (5 steps):

1

Book

Send your hotel name (specific property), time window, and massage type.

2

Confirm

Get assigned therapist name, total price, and estimated arrival.

3

Meet

Go to the lobby or elevator area and meet your therapist.

4

Session

Escort them to your room. Enjoy your in-room massage.

5

Pay

Pay the confirmed amount. No surprises.

Millennium Mitsui Garden Hotel note: This property offers an in-house massage service (shiatsu from ¥7,800/60min, aroma from ¥12,600/60min, available 4:00 pm–2:00 am). You can compare this with external outcall options — external services often offer more variety in massage types and scheduling flexibility.

For the wider overview, see: Tokyo Hotels for Outcall Massage (parent guide).

Where to meet your massage therapist

Recommended meet-up point

Default: meet at the main lobby or elevator area, then go to your room together. At properties with keycard elevators, the therapist physically cannot reach your floor without you.

This keeps the process fast, transparent, and friction-free.

Ginza PREMIER special note

The Ginza PREMIER has a two-stage elevator: you take one elevator from 1F to the 16F lobby, then switch to a separate elevator for guest floors (17F+). The therapist cannot navigate this system alone. Meet at either the 1F ground entrance or the 16F lobby and ride together.

If staff asks questions

Keep it simple and polite: “I booked a massage service — the therapist is here.” If the hotel requires visitor registration, follow their process. Each property may handle this slightly differently depending on time of day and staff.

Choosing a massage therapist

A note on photos

Full-face “model-like” photos on service websites are often heavily edited, outdated, or not the actual therapist. The risk is simple: you request someone based on a photo, but someone completely different arrives. Reliable services often protect therapist privacy by avoiding full-face portraits — that restraint is typically a trust signal, not a red flag.

Better approach: request by “type”

Instead of fixating on a specific photo, describe what matters: pressure strength (strong/medium/light), massage style (shiatsu, oil, deep tissue), personality (calm and quiet vs. conversational), or physique preference. Then confirm the assigned therapist’s name before dispatch. This approach produces better matches and fewer problems.

Booking message template (copy/paste)

Send this message (English):

Hi, I’m staying at [FULL HOTEL NAME — e.g., Mitsui Garden Hotel Ginza PREMIER] in the Ginza / Nihonbashi area. I’d like to book an outcall / in-room massage today. • Room number: [your room number, e.g., Room 2205] • 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] • Meet-up: I can meet you at the lobby (or 1F entrance if Ginza PREMIER) and escort you to my room. • Payment: [cash / card / online] Please confirm: 1. Total price (including any late-night surcharge) 2. Assigned therapist name 3. Estimated arrival time

Important: Specify the exact property name — there are 8 Mitsui Garden Hotels in this area. “Mitsui Garden” alone will cause confusion and delays.

Paying safely (quick sanity check)

Good signs: clear total price confirmed before dispatch, a normal payment processor (Stripe, PayPal, or standard card terminal), and a professional booking flow with a named therapist.

Red flags: vague pricing, pressure to pay the full amount upfront without confirmation, refusal to name the therapist, or “too-good-to-be-true” claims. If something feels off, don’t proceed.

Typical price range (as a general reference)

60 min: ¥15,000–¥25,000

90 min: ¥20,000–¥35,000

Late-night surcharge: ¥1,000–¥2,000 (typically after 11:00 pm or midnight)

Prices vary by service, massage type, and time of day. Always confirm the total — including any surcharges — before the therapist is dispatched for your in-room massage session.

Millennium in-house comparison: The Millennium Mitsui Garden Hotel offers in-house shiatsu from ¥7,800/60min and aroma from ¥12,600/60min (available 4:00 pm–2:00 am). External outcall services cost more but typically offer wider massage type selection and more flexible scheduling.

FAQ

Can the therapist go straight to my room?

Usually not. Most Mitsui Garden Hotels use keycard-restricted elevators — the therapist physically cannot reach guest floors without your card. The reliable approach: meet at the lobby and escort them to your room.

There are 8 Mitsui Garden Hotels here — do I need to specify which one?

Absolutely. Saying “Mitsui Garden Hotel in Ginza” is not enough — there are at least 4 properties with “Ginza” in the name. Always use the full property name (e.g., “Mitsui Garden Hotel Ginza PREMIER”) and include your room number.

The Ginza PREMIER has a two-stage elevator — how does the therapist get to my room?

The Ginza PREMIER uses a split elevator system: one elevator goes from 1F to the 16F lobby, then a separate elevator goes from 16F to guest floors (17F+). The therapist cannot navigate this alone. Meet them at the 1F entrance or the 16F lobby and ride together.

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

Yes. Most outcall services in central Tokyo operate until 3:00–5:00 am. Ginza/Nihonbashi is a core dispatch area, so late-night availability is generally good. Expect a surcharge of ¥1,000–¥2,000. Confirm timing and total price before dispatch.

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

Yes — post-flight massage is one of the most common use cases. Check-in at Mitsui Garden Hotels is typically 3:00 pm. Message the service while in transit and provide a 60-minute arrival window to allow for dispatch time.

Can I get a couples massage delivered to my room?

Some outcall services can dispatch two therapists, but availability is limited and room size matters. Standard rooms at compact Mitsui Garden properties (18–22 m²) are tight for two therapists working simultaneously. PREMIER-grade rooms (30–40+ m²) are more comfortable. Confirm with the service in advance.

What types of massage can I get delivered?

Most outcall services offer shiatsu, oil massage, deep tissue, Thai-style, and sports massage. Some also offer aromatherapy or reflexology. Specify your preferred type in your booking message to avoid back-and-forth.

Shiatsu or oil — which works better in a hotel room?

Both work well. Shiatsu is done through clothing on the bed — no oil, no sheets, easy cleanup. Oil massage requires towel/sheet setup and shower access afterward. Mitsui Garden rooms have private bathrooms with good shower facilities, so either option is practical.

How much does an outcall massage cost in Tokyo?

As a general reference: ¥15,000–¥25,000 for 60 minutes, ¥20,000–¥35,000 for 90 minutes. Late-night surcharges of ¥1,000–¥2,000 are common. For comparison, the Millennium’s in-house massage starts at ¥7,800/60min but offers fewer options.

How far in advance should I book?

Same-day booking is common and usually works in Ginza/Nihonbashi, since it’s a core dispatch zone. For peak hours (8:00–11:00 pm) or weekends, booking 2–3 hours in advance improves your chances.

The Millennium has its own massage — why book external?

The Millennium’s in-house service offers shiatsu, aroma, body stretch, and oil foot massage at competitive rates (from ¥7,800/60min). If that menu suits you, it’s a convenient option. External outcall services offer wider variety (deep tissue, Thai, sports massage), more scheduling flexibility, and sometimes different quality tiers. Comparing both before booking is the smart approach.

Do hotel rules differ between Mitsui Garden properties?

Yes. Even within the same hotel group, access rules can vary by building layout, time of day, and staff discretion. Elevator keycard requirements differ, lobby configurations differ, and some properties are stricter at night. If you want zero friction, always plan for a lobby meet-up regardless of which property you’re at.

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

You don’t need to pre-notify, but the lobby meet-up naturally makes it visible. When you go downstairs to bring someone to your room, staff may ask a simple question. A brief answer works: “I booked a massage service — they’re here.” This is normal at city hotels and nothing to worry about.

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