Four Seasons Hotel Tokyo at Otemachi opened in September 2020 as the brand’s third property in Japan, occupying floors 34–39 of Otemachi One Tower with direct underground access from Otemachi Station Exit C4. The location sits at the heart of Tokyo’s financial and political district, with sweeping views of the Marunouchi skyline, the Imperial Palace, and Tokyo Station. From the 39th-floor reception and lobby, guests can see as far as Mount Fuji on clear days — a backdrop that makes the hotel a memorable choice for guests visiting Tokyo on stays, banquets, or dining occasions alike.

The banquet program is consolidated on the 3rd floor, anchored by the Grand Ballroom (capacity 250) and a Function Room set comprising three small banquet and meeting spaces. The combination of Four Seasons-grade catering and service, direct station access, and convenient airport routing positions the hotel as an ideal venue for quality-over-scale formats — invitation-only VIP seminars, diplomatic receptions, and exclusive product launches with international guests.

This guide covers practical information including how to reach Four Seasons Hotel Tokyo at Otemachi from major airports and train stations, the specifications of its banquet venues, accommodation options nearby, recommended dining in the area, and tips to know before your visit.

Getting to Four Seasons Hotel Tokyo at Otemachi

Four Seasons Hotel Tokyo at Otemachi connects directly to Otemachi Station Exit C4 via underground passage, and is also accessible via an 8-minute covered walk from JR Tokyo Station’s Marunouchi North Exit. Routes from both Narita and Haneda airports are well established, and the fully sheltered underground access makes guest handoffs straightforward even in heavy rain.

From Narita Airport

  • JR Narita Express (N’EX) + walk: Narita Express from Narita Airport Station to JR Tokyo Station (approximately 60 minutes), then an underground passage walk via the Marunouchi North Exit to Otemachi One Tower. Total journey approximately 75 minutes, fare around JPY 3,070. The underground route lets guests with heavy luggage avoid going outdoors.
  • Taxi: Narita Airport via the Bayshore Expressway and Inner Circular Route to the Otemachi exit. Journey time approximately 70 minutes, fare around JPY 30,000–35,000. A practical option for multi-person VIP transfers or late-night arrivals. Travel time varies with expressway traffic.

From Haneda Airport

  • Tokyo Monorail + JR Yamanote Line: Haneda Airport → Hamamatsucho → Tokyo Station, then underground walk to Otemachi. Total approximately 45 minutes, fare around JPY 700. The standard cost-effective route, and the default choice for most business travelers.
  • Taxi: Haneda Airport via the Metropolitan Expressway Route 1 Haneda to the Otemachi exit. Journey time approximately 35 minutes, fare around JPY 7,000–10,000. No transfers required — convenient for guests with heavy luggage or late-night arrivals.

From Nearby Train Stations 🚶

  • Otemachi Station, Exit C4 (Tokyo Metro Marunouchi, Tozai, Chiyoda, Hanzomon Lines / Toei Mita Line): Direct underground connection, approximately 1 minute. Fully sheltered access to the hotel entrance via Otemachi One Tower — the most recommended on-event-day route.
  • JR Tokyo Station, Marunouchi North Exit (all JR lines and Shinkansen): Approximately 8 minutes on foot. The underground passage offers a fully covered route to Otemachi, suitable for Shinkansen arrivals and for guests transferring from other Marunouchi-area facilities.
  • Nijubashimae (Marunouchi) Station (Tokyo Metro Chiyoda Line): Approximately 7 minutes on foot. A convenient route for guests arriving on foot from the Imperial Palace or Marunouchi areas.

Venue Quick Reference

ItemDetail
Full NameFour Seasons Hotel Tokyo at Otemachi
AddressOtemachi One Tower 34F-39F, 1-2-1 Otemachi, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo 100-0004
Nearest StationOtemachi Station Exit C4, direct (1-min walk)
Official Websitefourseasons.com/otemachi
Banquets & EventsVia the official Meetings & Events page
Guest Rooms190 rooms (Floors 34–38)

Banquet and Event Venues

The banquet venues at Four Seasons Hotel Tokyo at Otemachi are compactly grouped on the 3rd floor. Rather than chasing large convention capacity, the program emphasizes quality, service, and technology consistent with Four Seasons standards — making it particularly well suited to invitation-only events for 150–250 attendees, multinational senior executive meetings, and high-end formats focused on a select audience.

Grand Ballroom

ConfigurationCapacity
Standing / SeatedUp to 250 guests

The main hall on the 3rd-floor banquet level. Available for full-floor exclusive bookings, supporting gala dinners, product launches, and formal receptions. Catering, A/V, lighting, and interpretation support are all coordinated in-house to Four Seasons standards, minimizing on-site operational burden.

Function Rooms

Three small banquet and meeting rooms adjacent to the Grand Ballroom on the 3rd floor. Flexible enough to accommodate board meetings, invitation-only seminars, deal discussions, and satellite session spaces. Detailed specifications and floor plans are available on the official Grand Ballroom & Function Rooms page.

Where to Stay

With 190 guest rooms across floors 34–38, Four Seasons Hotel Tokyo at Otemachi is itself the most practical accommodation choice for event attendees. The 3rd-floor banquet level, the guest rooms, and the 39th-floor reception are all connected by in-house elevators, simplifying movement between event and accommodation. Room categories range from standard rooms to multiple suite types, supporting flexible allocation by attendee seniority. The skyline view from the lobby — the Imperial Palace, Tokyo Station, and Mount Fuji on clear days — becomes part of the stay experience itself, making this a venue that participants remember.

For occasions when the hotel is fully booked or when participants prefer a different brand or neighborhood, the two luxury hotels below offer the closest viable alternatives within walking distance.

Aman Tokyo

An urban resort occupying floors 33–38 of Otemachi Tower, approximately 3 minutes on foot from Four Seasons Hotel Tokyo at Otemachi and directly connected to the central concourse of the Tokyo Metro Tozai Line. Well suited to cross-brand split bookings — “main venue at Four Seasons, accommodation at Aman” — for multi-day VIP programs. Known for expansive rooms and a Zen-inspired interior design, ideal for guests prioritizing the highest level of privacy.

Palace Hotel Tokyo

A Forbes Five-Star hotel facing the Imperial Palace’s Wadakura Moat, approximately 5 minutes on foot from Four Seasons Hotel Tokyo at Otemachi and directly connected to Otemachi Station Exit C13b. The dining program — including the Japanese restaurant Wadakura and Alain Ducasse’s Michelin-starred ESTERRE — is widely regarded, making it a strong choice for groups seeking to consolidate accommodation and high-end dining in a single property.

From an in-house signature bar to Michelin-starred French and Chinese within walking distance, plus a specialty coffee shop inside Otemachi One itself, the area offers a well-rounded selection for business meals and dining with international guests. Below are six picks across key dining categories, all within a few minutes’ walk of the venue and accessible via underground passages even in rain.

Japanese (High-End)

Wadakura (Palace Hotel Tokyo)

On the 6th floor of Palace Hotel Tokyo, a kaiseki restaurant with nine Japanese- and Western-style private rooms, set against the view of the Imperial Palace’s Wadakura Moat. A versatile choice for official dinners with international dignitaries, corporate anniversary dinners, and post-banquet closing meals — approximately 5 minutes on foot from Four Seasons Hotel Tokyo at Otemachi.

Japanese (Casual)

Washoku En Marunouchi

A Japanese restaurant on the 5th floor of Marunouchi Oazo, delivering ryotei-quality cuisine in a sukiya-modern setting at accessible price points. Available from lunch onward, useful for business lunches before negotiations and for first-meeting dinners with international guests — an option that is not overly formal but consistently refined.

Western

ESTERRE by Alain Ducasse

A one-Michelin-star French restaurant on the 6th floor of Palace Hotel Tokyo (Michelin Guide Tokyo 2026), led by Alain Ducasse. Courses blend the French culinary tradition with Japanese ingredients, suiting multinational VIP dinners, post-launch hospitality dinners, and formal meals with international partners.

Asian

Amber Palace (Chuugoku Hanten Kohakukyu)

A one-Michelin-star Cantonese and Shanghai cuisine restaurant on the 5th floor of Palace Hotel Tokyo. Authentic dishes such as Peking duck and shark-fin specialties are served in a space with Imperial Palace-side views. A solid choice for dining with Asian-region guests or for senior team appreciation dinners, with private room options available.

Café

Horiguchi Coffee Otemachi One

A specialty coffee shop on the 1st floor of Otemachi One — the same building as Four Seasons Hotel Tokyo at Otemachi. Opens at 7:00 a.m. on weekdays, making it ideal for early-morning meeting preparation, a pre-negotiation pause, or short informal meetings with international guests outside the hotel.

Bar

VIRTÙ

A signature bar on the 39th floor of Four Seasons Hotel Tokyo at Otemachi, adjacent to the reception. A regular on Asia’s 50 Best Bars and available without a reservation. Well suited to post-banquet drinks, deal-closing conversations, and informal networking with international guests — networking scenes that benefit from quality but should remain relaxed.

Tips Before You Visit

🚉 Otemachi Station Exit C4 Connects Directly to Otemachi One Tower

Otemachi Station Exit C4 connects directly to Otemachi One Tower via an underground passage, allowing guests to reach the hotel entrance without stepping outside even in rain. The specific route: from B2F, take the left-side escalator up to the 1st floor, turn right at the Masakado Mound, and proceed past the Venchi store on your right to the hotel entrance. Including these directions in pre-event guidance helps international guests arrive without getting lost.

🚇 Otemachi Station Is a Major Five-Line Interchange — Plan for Concourse Walking Time

Otemachi Station handles four Tokyo Metro lines (Marunouchi, Tozai, Chiyoda, Hanzomon) plus the Toei Mita Line, and the walk from platform to exit alone can take 5–10 minutes. Calculate arrival times to include underground walking time, and brief first-time guests to plan with extra buffer.

☔ Use the Marunouchi Underground Passage Network in Rain

Otemachi One, Marunouchi Oazo, Marunouchi Building, and Tokyo Station are all connected via underground passages. In rainy weather, the 8-minute covered route from Tokyo Station’s Marunouchi North Exit reaches the hotel without exposure. Including this route in pre-event guidance for Shinkansen and Narita Express guests supports smoother arrivals.

🚕 Watch for Weekday Morning Taxi Congestion

Taxi waits and traffic congestion build up around the Otemachi intersection and Eitai-dori on weekday mornings from 8:00 to 9:00. When dispatching cars after airport limousine arrivals or arranging corporate vehicles from the hotel, allow at least 30 minutes of buffer. The subway is also a reliable alternative in this area.

🚧 Ongoing Construction in the Tokiwabashi / Otemachi 2-chome District

As of 2026, construction continues in the Tokiwabashi and Otemachi 2-chome redevelopment district (TOKYO TORCH / formerly the Otemachi 2-chome Tokiwabashi Project), with worksite fencing and detours toward Tokyo Station’s Nihombashi Exit. When walking from the Nihombashi direction, including a reminder to verify routes on the latest Google Maps in pre-event guidance is a useful precaution.

🛗 The Main Entrance Is on the 1st Floor; Reception Is on the 39th

The hotel’s main entrance is on the 1st floor, but the reception is on the 39th. Elevator congestion is possible during peak check-in times, so guests arriving in large groups in particular should plan for extra time. Four Seasons staff also coordinate from the lobby level, so first-time visitors will not get lost.

📅 Many Surrounding Office-Building Shops Close on Weekends

Reflecting the area’s business-district character, many shops in the surrounding office buildings (including Horiguchi Coffee) close on weekends and public holidays. For weekend events, confirm operating calendars in advance and lean on in-house dining options such as VIRTÙ as the core of the dining program. The set of viable restaurants here shifts substantially between weekdays and weekends.


This guide is based on official sources and publicly available information as of its publication date. Access routes, operating hours, and venue details are subject to change. Please verify the latest information via the official links provided.