MIMARU SUITES Tokyo Asakusa is an apartment-style hotel in the Asakusa area of Tokyo’s Taito ward. Every room in the property is a two-bedroom suite, making it one of the few hotels in the area designed specifically for families and groups who need more space than a standard hotel room provides.
The hotel offers four room types, ranging from a standard Two-Bedroom Suite to a larger Japanese Suite that sleeps up to six adults with futons and a Premium Suite with a projector. All rooms have four single beds, a kitchen, and a dining area.
All rooms are non-smoking and come equipped with a full kitchen including an IH cooktop, refrigerator, cookware, and tableware. Each room also has its own washer-dryer, which is unusual for a hotel and useful for longer stays. Guests cook their own meals using the in-room kitchen, and the surrounding Asakusa neighborhood has no shortage of places to eat.
Guests can borrow baby beds and bed guards free of charge with advance notice, subject to availability. Other in-room amenities include Wi-Fi, a TV, air purifier with humidifier, toiletries, and a safe box. The front desk has multilingual staff, with English speakers always on staff, and other languages varying depending on who is on duty.
MIMARU SUITES Tokyo Asakusa is a three-minute walk from Asakusa Station on the Tokyo Metro Ginza Line (Exit 7) and about six minutes from Asakusa Station on the Toei Asakusa Line (Exit A5). Haneda Airport is roughly 55 minutes away by train, and Narita Airport about one hour.
Accessibility Features
MIMARU SUITES Tokyo Asakusa is accessible throughout its main areas. Rather than designating specific accessible rooms, the hotel incorporates barrier-free features across its room types. The Two-Bedroom Suite and Two-Bedroom Suite with Living Room Sofa are the recommended options for guests with mobility needs – select these when booking.
The hotel entrance has automatic sliding doors measuring 150cm wide, with a flat, step-free approach. The lobby has seating with tables at 45cm height and an L-shaped sofa, also at 45cm. The front desk counter is 110cm high.
Two elevators serve the building, and one has a wheelchair-accessible control panel. The elevator car measures 135cm by 140cm with a door opening of 135cm, and the elevator lobby provides 184cm by 236cm of waiting space. One priority parking space is available on the first floor – guests should notify the front desk before using it.
The Two-Bedroom Suite (60 square meters) and Two-Bedroom Suite with Living Room Sofa (63 square meters) both have swinging entrance doors measuring 85cm wide with a minimal 0.5cm step at the threshold. Inside, bedside clearance ranges from 60 to 90cm in the standard suite and 60 to 160cm in the living room sofa variant. Each bed is 200cm by 100cm. There is space under the beds for a portable hoist (10cm clearance with leg extensions). The height from the floor to the bottom of the mattress top is 45cm.
The bathroom has a separate bathing area and shower room, meaning guests can use the shower without needing to enter the bathtub. The bathroom entrance is step-free. Grab bars are installed in the shower area. The bathtub rim is 43cm high with a depth of 50cm, and the handheld showerhead adjusts between 87cm and 170cm from the floor.
The hotel offers free rental of freestanding handrails, shower chairs, and bath grips, subject to availability. MIMARU has also prepared a communication sheet listing available rental equipment so guests can indicate what they need.
A multifunctional toilet is located on the first floor, equipped with handrails and an ostomate-compatible wash station. It also has a diaper changing table and baby chair.
The front desk can assist with written communication for deaf or hard-of-hearing guests.
Guide dog accommodation is available and staff can escort guests with visual impairments to their room when possible. Common areas are kept fragrance-free.
The hotel provides a universal design access map with step-by-step directions from Kinshicho Station, noting accessible routes, elevators, and key landmarks along the way. MIMARU has also published an accessible travel guide.



































