Four Seasons Hotel Tokyo at Marunouchi will reopen in spring 2026 following a comprehensive property renovation, the operator confirmed this week. The 57-key property sits seven floors above Tokyo Station in the Pacific Century Place tower, occupying floors 34 through 39 of the Marunouchi financial district's most transited address. The closure began in late 2024, with the renovation timeline extending roughly sixteen months.
The move arrives as Japan Tourism Agency data shows inbound arrivals climbing toward 36 million annually, up from 25.1 million in 2019. Tokyo captures 18% of that volume. Average daily rates for luxury properties in Marunouchi and Ginza districts now exceed ¥128,000 in peak months, according to STR January figures, with occupancy running at 82% across the five-star segment. Four Seasons is spending an estimated ¥15 billion on the full gut-and-rebuild, though the operator has not disclosed the exact figure. The property originally opened in 2002, making this its first full renovation in twenty-three years.
The timing matters. Japan's hotel development pipeline includes 47 luxury-tier projects scheduled to open between now and 2027, concentrated in Tokyo, Kyoto, and Niseko. Aman, Rosewood, and Capella are all entering Tokyo for the first time, while LVMH's Cheval Blanc opened its Ginza property in November 2024. The competition is no longer for tourist overflow—it's for the $2,100-per-night average booking value that family offices and corporate travel desks allocate to Tokyo stays. Four Seasons' Marunouchi site offers a structural advantage: direct internal access to Tokyo Station's Shinkansen platforms and Narita Express terminal, meaning zero ground transport for inbound guests. That saves 40 minutes on the Narita run and eliminates the coordination tax for multi-city Japan itineraries.
Operators should track three follow-on signals. First, whether Four Seasons adjusts its Japan portfolio strategy—it currently operates three properties in-country, with the Kyoto ryokan-style property and Otemachi tower hotel both performing above brand averages. Second, whether Marunouchi landlords push for additional luxury conversions in the district's older office towers, where occupancy rates have softened to 78% as hybrid work models take hold. Third, how quickly the renovated property fills its spring 2026 forward bookings—advance reservations for Tokyo luxury hotels are now extending eleven months out, up from six months pre-pandemic.
The spring 2026 opening puts Four Seasons back in Tokyo inventory exactly as Japan's revised tourism target of 60 million annual arrivals by 2030 begins pulling forward. The government is already expanding Haneda's international gates by 20% to meet the load.