Overview
Keio Presso Inn Tokyo Station Yaesu is a practical choice if you want easy access to Tokyo Station without booking a full-service luxury hotel. The hotel is on the Yaesu and Kyobashi side of Tokyo Station and Marunouchi, close to Kyobashi Station, with the Ginza Line, Nihonbashi, and Yaesu shopping and dining all nearby.
Rooms
The hotel has 248 rooms, with single, double, twin, and universal twin categories. Comfort Single and Comfort Double rooms are 12 square meters, Comfort Twin rooms are 20 square meters, and Universal Twin rooms are 28 square meters, with space for up to four guests when extra bedding is arranged. Rooms are simple and space-efficient, and include free wired and wireless internet, smart TVs, desks, kettles, refrigerators, hair dryers, and air purifiers with a humidifying function.
Facilities
Facilities focus on the essentials. Guests can use self check-in and check-out machines, guest lockers, vending machines, coin laundry, a microwave, an ice machine, and tourist pamphlets. There is no guest parking, so this hotel is a better match for travelers arriving by rail.
Dining
Breakfast is served as a paid buffet from 6:30 AM to 9:30 AM, with last entry at 9:15 AM. The spread includes Japanese and Western items such as main dishes, small sides, curry, bread, rice, drinks, and desserts, with selections varying by day.
Location and transport
The hotel is about three minutes on foot from Tokyo Station's Yaesu Chuo Exit, about two minutes from Kyobashi Station Exit 8 on the Tokyo Metro Ginza Line, and about six minutes from Takaracho Station Exit A5 on the Toei Asakusa Line. The location works well for Shinkansen departures, JR city routes, Ginza Line trips, and walks around Yaesu, Kyobashi, Nihonbashi, and the east side of Ginza.
Airport access
Narita Airport can be reached via Tokyo Station using the Narita Express. For Haneda Airport, routes usually involve central rail transfers or the Toei Asakusa Line from the Takaracho side of the area. These are rail-based routes rather than hotel-door transfers, so travelers with heavy luggage should choose their arrival station and exit carefully.
Why stay here
Stay here if your priorities are straightforward Tokyo Station access, a simple room, on-site paid breakfast, and nearby Kyobashi subway service. Choose a larger Tokyo Station hotel if room size, full-service dining, or a more polished stay matters more than price-conscious convenience.
Good to know
Rooms are compact, so the hotel is especially well suited to short stays, solo travelers, business trips, and rail-heavy itineraries. Tokyo Station is large, and the Yaesu-side location matters: arriving through the wrong exit can add avoidable walking time, particularly with luggage.

