open
🕗 opening times
Sunday | open 24 hours | |||||
Monday | open 24 hours | |||||
Tuesday | open 24 hours | |||||
Wednesday | open 24 hours | |||||
Thursday | open 24 hours | |||||
Friday | open 24 hours | |||||
Saturday | open 24 hours |
7-chōme-2-16 Ueno, Taito City, Tokyo 110-0005, Japan
contacts phone: +81 3-3845-8000
website: www.saunahokuou.com
larger map & directionsLatitude: 35.713043, Longitude: 139.777746
Daniel Salinas
::If you’re looking for a capsule hotel experience then I highly recommend this one. The capsule is roomy, well maintained and has loads of features. Has both indoor and outdoor bath with sauna. The in house restaurant offers lots of food options and drinks and vending machines can be used with your key card. The relaxation room has recliners and manga to read. The staff also speak English. Overall the price was super affordable for all the amenities.
Paul Callaly
::Clean and comfortable for the price, convenient location. I think must be the best capsule hotel/bath in Ueno. It's not really for tourists, since all signs are in Japanese.
Jupiter
::A great capsule hotel with good facilities, towels and a public bath, and an open public bath is free. There are reviews that says this is not "tourist friendly", but they speak English and you even have a power outlet and a TV in your capsule. It's very close to Ueno station. Go to the 6th floor for check in, put your shoe in the shoebox, they'll give a key for your locker in your floor for valuables.
Christopher Innes
::This is a capsule hotel that is geared towards locals, not tourists. If you want to understand what capsule hotels are really all about, it might be worth staying a night here. But there are plenty of tourist-friendly capsule hotels as alternatives to this. I had to keep my suitcase at the reception desk (I couldn't take it to my "room"). I resented this, but again, this place is not really meant for travelers, it is meant for men who, for example, have been out too late and missed the last train home.
BC Land
::Don't go here if you are a foreigner. They don't allow tattoos (I have a very small one of a flower on my forearm). But this is just to say, it's not about the tattoo, it's an excuse to turn away foreigners according to my Japanese friends. I am very clean cut and was wearing slacks and a suit so it wasn't my appearance. Take your business elsewhere.