Hotel

DoubleTree by Hilton Kyoto Station

DoubleTree by Hilton Kyoto Station is a 266-room Hilton hotel about five minutes from Kyoto Station's Hachijo Exit, well suited to rail-focused Kyoto stays with on-site dining and executive lounge access for eligible guests.

Mid-rangeShinkansen AccessSubway Access
DoubleTree by Hilton Kyoto Station

Price range

Mid-range

Area highlights

Shinkansen AccessSubway Access

Transport access and hotel guide

Overview

DoubleTree by Hilton Kyoto Station is a strong choice if you want the reliability of a Hilton hotel close to Kyoto Station and care more about smooth transport than being in a traditional sightseeing neighborhood. The hotel is located on the south side of the rail hub, about a five-minute walk from the Hachijo Exit, making it especially convenient for travelers arriving by shinkansen or planning a Kyoto trip built around trains.

This is best understood as a station-area stay. The main appeal is straightforward movement: arrivals are easier with luggage, early departures feel less stressful, and day trips can begin without crossing the city first. The surrounding Kyoto Station area also gives guests plenty of meal and shopping options beyond the hotel, which can be helpful after a long travel day.

Rooms

The hotel has 266 rooms, with categories suited to different comfort levels and group sizes. Room types range from standard guest rooms to deluxe and premium categories, while higher-floor options include executive rooms and suites.

Executive rooms are located on the seventh through ninth floors and include access to the executive lounge. The room mix also includes accessible accommodation and triple-room options, which makes the hotel worth comparing for families or small groups who want to stay together near Kyoto Station rather than split across multiple rooms.

Facilities

Facilities are geared toward travelers who want a comfortable, low-friction stay near the main rail hub. The second floor has a 24-hour fitness gym and self-laundry, two features that are particularly helpful on longer itineraries or when Kyoto is one stop in a wider Japan trip.

The hotel also offers room service, meeting space, and support for guests arriving by car. EV charging and paid self-parking are available, giving the property a broader fit than a simple overnight rail hotel. Eligible guests can use the executive lounge, which adds a quieter place to pause between sightseeing, work, or onward travel.

Dining

Harvest Kitchen is the hotel's all-day dining restaurant. It serves a buffet breakfast and meals built around seasonal local ingredients, so guests do not need to head back into the station area for every meal.

Grove Lounge is the more relaxed venue, better suited to breaks between plans or a slower end to the day. It covers daytime coffee and later drinks, with offerings such as sake tasting and liqueurs in the evening.

Location and transport

Kyoto Station is the hotel's main advantage. From the Hachijo Exit side, guests are well placed for the Tokaido Shinkansen and other JR services, along with the subway and Kintetsu. That makes the location especially convenient for arrivals, departures, and day trips beyond central Kyoto.

Staying here is less about stepping directly into an old Kyoto streetscape and more about keeping logistics simple. It suits early trains, late arrivals, and luggage-heavy travel, as well as itineraries that combine Kyoto sightseeing with onward travel to other cities.

Why stay here

Choose DoubleTree by Hilton Kyoto Station if you want a Hilton stay close to Kyoto Station with comfortable room variety, on-site dining, and practical facilities that support both short visits and longer trips. It works particularly well for rail-focused travelers, business guests, and small groups considering triple rooms.

The main tradeoff is atmosphere. The hotel is highly convenient for transport, but it is not the same kind of stay as a ryokan-style property or a hotel deep inside a historic neighborhood. If station access matters most, the location is a clear strength; if traditional Kyoto surroundings are the priority, it is worth comparing options farther from the rail hub.

Good to know

The hotel does not have a public bath, sauna, or hot spring facility. Travelers specifically looking for a Japanese-style bathing experience should factor that into their decision before booking.

Nearest station

Check the key stations linked to this hotel and its main transport connections.

Kyoto Station
Station access: 5-minute walk

Kyoto Station

Kyoto Station is Kyoto's main rail gateway, bringing together the Shinkansen, JR lines, subway, Kintetsu trains, airport access, buses, shopping, and rail-oriented hotels.

  • Tokaido Shinkansen
  • JR Kyoto Line
  • JR Biwako Line
  • JR Nara Line
  • JR Sagano Line
  • Kyoto Municipal Subway Karasuma Line (K11)
  • Kintetsu Kyoto Line

Surrounding area

See how this area fits into the wider area for hotels, dining, and transport.

Last verified by Maria Fukuda on 27-Jun-2026.