Side-by-side
The Peninsula Tokyo vs Aman Tokyo
A direct comparison across five dimensions: Service, Design, Location, Dining, and Wellness. Scored from signals across luxury travel communities, editorial publications, and verified guests.
Scoreboard
| Dimension | The Peninsula Tokyo | Aman Tokyo |
|---|---|---|
| Overall Fat Score | 8.2 | 8.2 |
| Service | 8.7 | 7.6 |
| Design | 7.4 | 9.1 |
| Location | 9.2 | 8.4 |
| Dining | 7.8 | 8.0 |
| Wellness | 8.3 | 8.3 |
The Verdicts
The Peninsula Tokyo
The Peninsula Tokyo remains Tokyo's most reliable luxury choice, trading cutting-edge design for unmatched service consistency and an unbeatable location. While the rooms show their age with dated carpets and 1990s tech, the spacious layouts—enormous by Tokyo standards—and that prime Ginza-Imperial Palace position keep drawing savvy travelers back. The service is legendary Peninsula: staff remember names, anticipate needs, and deliver the kind of intuitive hospitality that puts competitors to shame. Yes, you'll pay premium rates for rooms that need refreshing, but when you want guaranteed excellence in the heart of Tokyo, few hotels deliver with such dependable grace.
Aman Tokyo
Kerry Hill's architectural masterpiece creates Tokyo's most serene luxury refuge, with soaring 33rd-floor arrivals and rooms that feel like floating sanctuaries above the Imperial Gardens. The hard product is genuinely spectacular — among the largest hotel rooms in Tokyo with floor-to-ceiling windows that frame the city like living art. Yet the service, while polite, lacks the intuitive anticipation that justifies the $3,000+ nightly rate. Staff frequently fail to recognize guests, and the concierge struggles with top-tier restaurant reservations that competitors handle effortlessly. It's undeniably beautiful, but Peninsula Tokyo delivers warmer hospitality for half the price.
Strengths & trade-offs
The Peninsula Tokyo
Strengths
- Exceptional service with genuine warmth and name recognition
- Prime Ginza location with Imperial Palace views
- Spacious rooms by Tokyo standards with large closets
- Flexible check-in/out policies including Peninsula Time
- Outstanding concierge for restaurant reservations
Trade-offs
- Rooms feel dated with 1990s tech and worn furnishings
- Breakfast served in busy lobby lacks intimacy
- Premium pricing despite aging hard product
Aman Tokyo
Strengths
- Kerry Hill's soaring 33rd-floor architectural drama
- Largest hotel rooms in Tokyo with imperial garden views
- Genuinely peaceful urban sanctuary atmosphere
- Outstanding spa and wellness facilities
Trade-offs
- Service lacks guest recognition and personalization
- Concierge struggles with premium restaurant bookings
- Pricing doesn't match service delivery
- Afternoon tea experience disappoints

