Ginza / Shimbashi · Upscale Boutique Hotel · Outcall / In-Room Massage

Outcall Massage at Hotel The Celestine Ginza — In-Room Booking Guide

Hotel The Celestine Ginza is a 104-room upscale boutique hotel operated by Mitsui Garden Hotels, occupying a 14-story building at 8-4-22 Ginza, Chuo-ku. Guest rooms start from 23.5 m² and span floors 3 through 13, with the top-floor Italian restaurant GINZA CASITA on 14F offering Tokyo Tower views. The hotel sits 3 minutes on foot from JR Shimbashi Station (Ginza Exit) and 7 minutes from Tokyo Metro Ginza Station (Exit C2) — a compact, single-building property with no tower or annex complications.

This page covers everything you need to book an outcall massage at this hotel: where to meet the therapist, what to message, how hotel access works, and how to pay safely. Whether you need a jet lag recovery session after a long flight, a late-night deep tissue after Ginza dining, or a quick reset between business meetings, the information below is designed to eliminate guesswork and get you booked without friction.

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 If anything looks outdated, please message us here.

Hotel snapshot

Hotel The Celestine Ginza

Address: 8-4-22 Ginza, Chuo-ku, Tokyo 104-0061, Japan

Phone: +81 3-3572-3111

Area: Ginza (walkable to Shimbashi)

Rooms: 104 rooms · 14 floors · Guest rooms on floors 3–13

Smallest room: 23.5 m² (253 sq ft)

Access: JR Shimbashi Station (Ginza Exit) — 3 min walk
Tokyo Metro Ginza Station (Exit C2) — 7 min walk

Building: Single building (no annex or separate tower)

Ginza + Shimbashi gives you strong transit coverage and fast taxi availability late at night. Single-building layout means no confusion about which entrance or tower to specify.

Outcall difficulty level

Usually smooth — As a 104-room boutique hotel, front desk staff tend to notice visitors more than at large properties. Ginza hotels can be stricter with access control at night. The reliable pattern: meet at the lobby or elevator area and escort the therapist upstairs with your keycard.

Assume “direct-to-room” is not guaranteed. Plan for a lobby meet-up and you avoid friction entirely.

Why international visitors choose Hotel The Celestine Ginza

1) Ginza lifestyle + Shimbashi mobility

Ginza gives you premium shopping and dining on your doorstep, while Shimbashi Station (3 min walk) connects you to JR, Metro, and Toei lines. That combination is highly travel-efficient — and makes hotel room massage dispatch fast, since therapists can reach you quickly from central dispatch points.

2) No on-site spa — outcall fills the gap

Unlike larger luxury hotels in Ginza, the Celestine has no fitness center or spa facility. The hotel does have a public bath, but for a professional massage — deep tissue, shiatsu, or oil — an outcall service delivered to your room is the practical solution.

3) Boutique scale = simpler logistics

With only 104 rooms in a single building, there are no tower complications, no annex buildings, and no two-stage elevator systems. You tell the therapist your room number, meet at the lobby, and go upstairs together. That’s it.

4) Good for late-night reset travelers

If you return late from Ginza dining or business events, an in-room massage is the cleanest option. Shimbashi’s late-night taxi availability means therapists can reach you without transit shutdowns being an issue.

Tourist tips (Ginza & Shimbashi)

Airport to hotel

  • From Haneda (HND): ~30 min by monorail + JR to Shimbashi, or ~25 min by taxi.
  • From Narita (NRT): ~60–75 min by Narita Express to Tokyo Station, then taxi or Metro to Shimbashi.
  • If you land late, a post-flight in-room massage is a popular recovery option. Book a 60-minute window to allow for dispatch time.

Late-night navigation tip

  • Ginza streets look similar at night. Use map pins and the exact address, not memory.
  • When booking, provide a 60-minute arrival window (e.g., “9:00–10:00 pm”) for faster dispatch.

Nearby highlights

  • Ginza: premium shopping (Ginza Six, Mitsukoshi), high-end dining, gallery walks.
  • Shimbashi: fast JR/Metro connections, affordable izakaya streets, late-night taxi stands.
  • Tsukiji Outer Market: ~10 min walk — great for morning street food before or after a massage.

Hotel The Celestine Ginza is located steps from Shimbashi Station, making it one of the most accessible hotels in the Ginza area for outcall massage delivery.

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

Taxi line for your phone: “8-4-22 Ginza, Chuo-ku, Tokyo 104-0061 (Hotel The Celestine Ginza)”.

Can you book outcall massage at Hotel The Celestine Ginza?

Yes. In-room massage delivery works well here. The hotel has no spa or massage facility of its own, so external outcall services are the standard option for guests who want a professional massage. The key is managing access control — most Tokyo hotels won’t allow a third-party visitor to ride the elevator to guest floors alone.

How it works (5 steps):

1

Book

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

2

Confirm

Get 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.

Unlike hotel-operated spas, outcall services come to you — no need to go to a separate floor or facility. For the wider overview, see: Tokyo Hotels for Outcall Massage (parent guide).

Where to meet your massage therapist

Recommended meet-up point

Best default: meet at the lobby area (ground floor), then walk to the elevator together and go to your room. With only 104 rooms, front desk staff will likely notice your guest — the lobby meet-up keeps things transparent and smooth.

Single-building layout means there is only one lobby entrance and one set of guest elevators. No “which tower?” confusion.

If staff asks questions

Keep it simple and boring: “I’m meeting a guest in the lobby and bringing them up.” Or: “I booked a massage service — the therapist is here.” No elaborate explanations needed. Staff at boutique hotels are accustomed to this.

Choosing a massage therapist

A note on photos

Full-face “perfect” photos on service websites are often heavily edited or not current. The risk is straightforward: you request someone based on a photo, but someone different arrives. Reliable services often protect therapist privacy and avoid full-face portraits.

Better approach: request by “type”

Instead of fixating on a specific photo, tell the service what matters to you: pressure strength, massage style (shiatsu vs. oil), personality (calm and quiet vs. conversational), or body type preference. Then confirm the assigned therapist’s name before dispatch. This produces better results and fewer surprises.

Booking message template (copy/paste)

Send this message (English):

Hi, I’m staying at Hotel The Celestine Ginza (8-4-22 Ginza, Chuo-ku — single building, no annex). I’d like to book an outcall / in-room massage today. • Room number: [your room number, e.g., Room 1105] • 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 (ground floor) and escort you to my room via elevator. • Payment: [cash / card / online] Please confirm: 1. Total price (including any late-night surcharge) 2. Assigned therapist name 3. Estimated arrival time

Tip: Including your room number and a time window (not an exact minute) speeds up coordination significantly.

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 a request to meet somewhere other than the hotel.

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.

FAQ

Can the therapist go straight to my room?

Sometimes — but don’t count on it. Hotel The Celestine Ginza is a 104-room boutique property where front desk staff are attentive to visitor access. The reliable approach is to meet the therapist at the lobby and escort them to your room. If you plan for this, you avoid any delays.

Is there a specific building or tower I need to tell the therapist about?

No. The Celestine Ginza is a single building with no annex, separate tower, or multiple entrances. Just give the hotel name and your room number — that’s all the therapist needs.

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

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

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

Absolutely. A post-flight massage is one of the most popular reasons for outcall bookings. Check-in is at 3:00 pm; if you arrive later than that, you can message the service while still in transit and have a therapist dispatched shortly after you settle into your room. Provide a 60-minute arrival window to account for dispatch time.

Can I get a couples massage delivered to my hotel room?

It depends on the service. Some outcall providers can dispatch two therapists simultaneously for a couples session, but availability is more limited and needs to be confirmed in advance. Room size is a factor — the Celestine’s smallest rooms are 23.5 m², which is workable for one therapist but tight for two working side by side. If you have an upgrade (corner room or executive twin), it becomes more comfortable.

What types of massage can I get delivered?

Most outcall services in Tokyo 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 or floor — no oil, no sheets, easy cleanup. Oil massage requires a towel or sheet setup and is a bit more involved. The Celestine rooms have good bathrooms for washing off oil afterward, so either option is practical here.

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. Prices vary by service, massage type, and time of day. Always confirm the total fee before dispatch.

How far in advance should I book?

Same-day booking is common and usually works fine in Ginza, since it’s a core area with good therapist coverage. For peak hours (8:00–11:00 pm) or weekends, booking 2–3 hours in advance increases your chances of getting your preferred time slot.

Is Ginza convenient for outcall dispatch?

Very. Ginza is one of the most central and well-connected areas in Tokyo. Most outcall massage services consider Ginza a core coverage zone, which means shorter dispatch times and better therapist availability compared to outlying areas.

The hotel doesn’t have a spa — why book external instead of just using the public bath?

The Celestine Ginza has a public bath (大浴場) for soaking, but no massage or bodywork facility. If you want a professional massage — targeted deep tissue, shiatsu pressure work, or a full oil session — an outcall service delivered to your room is the only option at this hotel. Many guests combine both: soak in the bath first, then have a massage delivered to their room afterward.

My room is 23.5 m² — is that big enough for an in-room massage?

Yes. 23.5 m² is workable for a single-therapist session. The therapist will use the bed or a small floor space. If you want extra comfort, move luggage to one side and let the therapist know it’s a compact room — experienced outcall therapists handle this routinely in Tokyo hotels.

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

You don’t need to pre-notify the hotel, but the meet-up approach naturally makes it visible. When you go to the lobby to bring someone upstairs, staff may ask a simple question. A brief, matter-of-fact answer is all that’s needed: “I booked a massage service — they’re here.” This is normal and nothing to worry about.

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