Overview
Keio Presso Inn Akasaka is best for travelers who want a compact, straightforward stay in Akasaka with strong subway access, rather than a large full-service hotel or a room beside a major JR terminal. It is located in Tokyo-Akasaka, a central Tokyo neighborhood that works well for business trips, dining, and subway-based sightseeing.
The nearest stop is Tokyo Akasaka Station on the Chiyoda Line, about three minutes on foot from Exit 3a. Akasaka-mitsuke Station and Tameike-sanno Station are also within walking distance, adding Ginza, Marunouchi, and Namboku Line options. That mix makes the hotel more convenient for moving around Tokyo by subway than for trips centered on Shinkansen departures or direct airport rail.
Rooms
The hotel has 157 rooms in renovated double, twin, and universal layouts. Published room sizes are compact: renovated doubles are 12 square meters, renovated twins are 16 square meters, and the universal room is 24 square meters. The universal room can accommodate up to three guests with an added stacking bed.
Those dimensions are important when choosing whether the hotel fits your trip. It is well suited to solo travelers, couples, short business stays, and visitors who expect to spend most of the day out in the city. The twin and universal rooms provide a little more flexibility, but guests who want generous luggage space or a more spacious place to unwind should compare larger hotels in Akasaka or elsewhere in central Tokyo.
Facilities
Facilities are practical and geared toward independent city stays. The hotel has a 24-hour front desk, self check-in and check-out machines, guest lockers, vending machines, coin laundry, a microwave, and an ice machine. There is no guest parking, so it is a better match for subway, taxi, and walking plans than for travelers arriving by car.
In-room features cover the basics for a compact Tokyo hotel stay, including free wired and wireless internet, a refrigerator, kettle, humidifying air purifier, desk light, and simple work surface. The appeal is not an extensive resort-style facility list, but a set of conveniences that help keep a short stay in Akasaka easy to manage.
Dining
Breakfast is available as a paid morning buffet. The hotel describes a selection that includes hot dishes, lighter items, breads, drinks, and Japanese-style sides, making it a convenient option before meetings, sightseeing, or a day of subway travel.
The surrounding Akasaka area also gives guests plenty of meal options beyond the hotel. The neighborhood has restaurants, office-worker lunch spots, evening dining, and hotel bars, so it is easy to keep meals flexible throughout the day.
Location and transport
The closest rail access is Tokyo Akasaka Station on the Chiyoda Line, about three minutes away on foot from Exit 3a. Akasaka-mitsuke Station is about eight minutes away from Exit 11 and serves the Ginza and Marunouchi lines. Tameike-sanno Station is about seven minutes away from Exit 11 and serves the Ginza and Namboku lines.
This three-stop pattern is the hotel's main transport advantage. Use Tokyo Akasaka for Chiyoda Line trips, Akasaka-mitsuke for subway routes toward Ginza, Shinjuku, Ikebukuro, or Tokyo Station, and Tameike-sanno for the eastern side of Akasaka or Namboku Line travel. For JR trains, Shinkansen services, or airport express trains, expect to transfer through another Tokyo hub.
Airport access
Airport access is transfer-based rather than direct from the hotel. For Haneda Airport, most travelers combine nearby subway routes with a transfer to an airport rail line, or choose a taxi depending on luggage, time of day, and budget. For Narita Airport, rail and limousine-bus options generally work through larger stations or bus stops elsewhere in central Tokyo.
This is worth factoring in on arrival and departure days. Keio Presso Inn Akasaka becomes convenient once you are inside the Tokyo subway network, but it is not an airport-door hotel. If the simplest possible airport transfer is the priority, compare areas such as Hamamatsucho, Shinagawa, Ueno, or Tokyo Station.
Why stay here
Choose Keio Presso Inn Akasaka if you want a no-fuss Akasaka hotel with several subway lines nearby, breakfast available on site, and enough self-service support to keep a short Tokyo stay simple. It is strongest for travelers who value the neighborhood and subway flexibility more than large rooms, extensive facilities, or direct JR access.
Good to know
Akasaka has several similarly named stops on different lines, so check both the line and exit before you arrive. Tokyo Akasaka is closest for the Chiyoda Line, Akasaka-mitsuke is better for the Ginza and Marunouchi lines, and Tameike-sanno is better for Ginza and Namboku Line routes on the eastern side of the area.
