Please remember to review Japanese house etiquette before staying at a ryokan! This is especially important for the tatami mat flooring since the reeds retain moisture and odors easily. Our room sadly had some rough patches and stains. Outdoor shoes stay on the concrete. You may wear socks or go barefoot when on the tatami mats. The provided slippers are for the bathroom. Make sure your luggage wheels dont touch the mats. Carry your luggage to the closets, instead. Step on the center of the tatami mats, not the edges, which are fragile. Open the outdoor vent before leaving the room, which helps the tatami mats stay dry. It was a lovely little room. The futons...
Read moreI will rate this accomodation as the worst 3 places to stay. Non existent staff Lack or no cleaning at all. Purposely left a popcorn on the floor before leaving for the day as an experiment and it was still there when we returned at night. Only cleared rubbish and replenished clean towels. Hair and dirt weren't cleared. No one to assist with check in n out, fully DIY. Not value for money and what u u see in the pictures is not what u get in real life. Weird smell tt lingers the room. I am 1.81m and slightly above avg built so the shower area is too cramped for me. Kept banging knees and elbows against the...
Read moreStayed 1 night here last June 10 with my family. We arrived from Osaka via Narita and it was raining hard when we got out of the Tokyo City Air Terminal station in Ningyocho. Had a hard time finding the Inn because of the rain but we finally did. Reception area is small but cozy. There was a note with our room number and key so we just let ourselves in. The room itself was very clean and spacious. Enough for the 4 of us. The only thing I wish they had was more places to hang your stuff. Wish we had more than 1 night here, but we enjoyed the ryokan atmosphere. The price per night though is a bit high compared to other...
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