7 Best Hotels in Kyoto, Japan

Background Illustration for Hotels

No other Japanese city can compete with Kyoto for style and grace. For the ultimate experience of Kyoto hospitality, stay in a ryokan, a traditional Japanese inn. Though often costly, a night in a ryokan guarantees you beautiful traditional Japanese surroundings, excellent service, and two elegant meals (breakfast and dinner) in most cases. But you don't have to limit yourself to the traditional. Kyoto is a tourist city, so accommodations range from luxurious hotels to small guesthouses. Service in this city is impeccable. The information desks are well stocked, and concierges or guest-relations managers are often available in the lobby to respond to your needs.

Hiiragiya Ryokan

$$$ | Nakahakusan-cho, Kyoto, 604-8094, Japan Fodor's Choice

Founded in 1818 to accommodate provincial lords visiting the capital, this elegant inn is well known for its restrained and subtle beauty. The private hallway leading to each room's doorway makes all the accommodations feel like suites. The seven rooms in the modern wing have private gardens, even on the upper floor, and are equipped with cedar baths. Rooms in the older wing set the standard for quiet elegance, with exquisitely sculpted wooden details and in some cases gold-leaf sliding doors. In traditional ryokan style, meals are served in your room by a kimono-clad attendant. Hiiragiya has an annex a few blocks away with more affordable prices.

Pros

  • Excellent location
  • Multilingual staff
  • Holly-infused soaps and bath oils

Cons

  • Inflexible meal plans
  • Fairly expensive
  • On a busy street
Nakahakusan-cho, Kyoto, 604-8094, Japan
075-221–1136
Hotel Details
28 rooms
All-Inclusive

Quick Facts

Something incorrect in this review?

Tawaraya Ryokan

$$$$ | Nakahakusan-cho, Kyoto, 604-8094, Japan Fodor's Choice

Founded by the Okazaki family more than 300 years ago and now run by the 11th generation, this hotel is justly celebrated for its hospitality, sumptuous but subdued decor, impeccable service, and splendid gardens. Dignitaries, presidents, and royalty have all been guests here. Every room is unique, furnished with superb antiques from the family collection and equipped with a fragrant cedar bath. Other amenities include a library and an elegant gift shop. The kaiseki ryori meals are prepared with skill and style.

Pros

  • Excellent reputation
  • Impeccable service
  • Superb antiques

Cons

  • Extremely expensive
  • Must reserve dinner a day in advance
  • No online reservations
Nakahakusan-cho, Kyoto, 604-8094, Japan
075-211–5566
Hotel Details
18 rooms
Free Breakfast

Quick Facts

Something incorrect in this review?

Yoshikawa

$$$$ | Tomino-koji, Oike-sagaru, Kyoto, 604-8093, Japan Fodor's Choice

This midcentury yet traditional inn is within walking distance of the downtown shopping area and has authentic sukiya-zukuri style (teahouse architecture): the rooms have views of the landscaped garden. Each tastefully decorated room has a cypress-wood bath. As at most ryokan, the room rate includes two excellent meals. Guests are served kaiseki ryori, including the specialty tempura, in their rooms. Custom meals are available for vegetarians and vegans.

Pros

  • Indoor garden
  • Fine food
  • Driver available

Cons

  • Expensive
  • Not the most beautiful part of Kyoto
  • Fixed meal times
Tomino-koji, Oike-sagaru, Kyoto, 604-8093, Japan
075-221–5544
Hotel Details
9 rooms
Free Breakfast

Quick Facts

Something incorrect in this review?

Recommended Fodor's Video

Matsubaya Ryokan

$$ | Kamijuzuya-machi-dori, Kyoto, 600-8150, Japan

This unpretentious ryokan welcomed its first guest, a monk from the nearby Higashi-Hongan-ji Temple, in 1884. The innkeepers are welcoming, the rooms, most of which have private baths, are pleasant, and the temple-facing location provides a special atmosphere. Ask about the studio apartments on the top floor for extended stays. After renovations, the interior has lost some of its 19th-century authenticity, though the improved convenience is worth it.

Pros

  • Friendly staff
  • Plenty of restaurants and convenience stores nearby
  • Tasty breakfast

Cons

  • Bland rooms
  • Thin walls
  • Staff speak little English
Kamijuzuya-machi-dori, Kyoto, 600-8150, Japan
075-351–3727
Hotel Details
8 rooms (7 with bath)
No Meals

Quick Facts

  • $$

Something incorrect in this review?

Nishiyama Ryokan

$$$ | Gokomachi-dori, Kyoto, 604-0933, Japan

In a neighborhood with many traditional buildings, this ryokan that's an easy distance from the city center has a welcoming staff and serves delightful kaiseki (multicourse meals). Dining takes place in a downstairs room, and there's a comfortable lounge with computer terminals and laptop ports. The large Japanese-style public baths (separate areas for men and women) stay open late, so taking a late-night dip is no problem, though Japanese guests generally bathe before the evening meal. The rooms are comfortable but not exceptional.

Pros

  • Helpful concierge and welcoming staff
  • Flexible meal plans
  • Good food

Cons

  • Basic hotel feel
  • Some rooms have tiny bathrooms
  • A little expensive for what it is
Gokomachi-dori, Kyoto, 604-0933, Japan
075-222–1166
Hotel Details
30 rooms
Free Breakfast

Quick Facts

Something incorrect in this review?

Ryokan Seryo

$$$ | 22 Shorinin-cho, Kyoto, 601-1247, Japan

A bit of a miniature miracle, the Ryokan Seryo is in the semirural village of Ohara, near the Sanzen-in Temple. The rooms are spacious with views of beautiful gardens and access to natural hot-spring baths in the rooms. Breakfast and the kaiseki dinner includes mountain vegetables and seasonal specialties like wild boar stew in winter, and is served on a veranda overlooking the koi pond. Two new rooms have outdoor baths with memorable mountain views. The hotel is a 70-minute bus ride from Kyoto Station or from buses leaving from the Kokusai Kaikan subway station, 20 minutes away.

Pros

  • Peaceful atmosphere
  • Great food
  • Rejuvenating hot springs

Cons

  • Far from downtown
  • Service can feel a little cold
  • Communal hot spring is open to the public during business hours
22 Shorinin-cho, Kyoto, 601-1247, Japan
075-744–2301
Hotel Details
8 rooms
All-Inclusive

Quick Facts

Something incorrect in this review?

Yachiyo

$$ | 34 Nanzenji-Fukuchi-cho, Kyoto, 606-8435, Japan

This ryokan feels very "Japanese," and what it lacks in big-hotel amenities it makes up for in atmosphere, albeit with some limitations, including some shared-bath rooms, that may not appeal to all travelers. A traditional ryokan, Yachiyo is in a quiet, verdant part of town close to the Heian Jingu Shrine and the National Museum of Modern Art. The least expensive rooms share bathrooms. If you prefer, you can have breakfast and dinner in your room instead of the restaurant.

Pros

  • Rooms with garden views
  • Quiet surroundings
  • Western-breakfast option

Cons

  • Not all rooms have garden views
  • Staff's English-language skills are spotty
  • Public areas and some rooms look careworn
34 Nanzenji-Fukuchi-cho, Kyoto, 606-8435, Japan
075-771–4148
Hotel Details
25 rooms (20 with bath)
Free Breakfast

Quick Facts

  • $$

Something incorrect in this review?