Overview
Onyado Nono Asakusa places you in the heart of one of Tokyo’s most historic neighbourhoods. Tsukuba Express Asakusa Station is about four minutes away on foot, while the main hall of Sensoji Temple is only around 200 metres from the hotel. Asakusa Hanayashiki, Japan’s oldest amusement park, stands directly nearby.
Japanese-style flooring, wood details, soft lighting, and Asakusa-inspired artwork give the hotel a ryokan-like atmosphere without taking you away from the city. You can spend the day exploring temples, shopping streets, restaurants, and the Sumida River area, then return for a natural hot spring bath and a complimentary bowl of late-night ramen.
The hotel opened in July 2019 and has 152 rooms. Its central setting and compact room choices work particularly well for solo trips, couples, sightseeing breaks, and shorter stays in Tokyo.
Accommodation
You can choose from Single, Semi-Double, Double, Queen, and Twin Rooms. Every category uses a Serta mattress and includes Japanese-style flooring, giving you a softer and more traditional atmosphere than a standard city hotel.
The Single Room measures between 14.06 and 15 square metres and includes one 110- or 120-centimetre-wide bed. It gives you a practical space when you travel alone and plan to spend most of your time exploring Asakusa.
The Semi-Double Room measures between 14.78 and 15.06 square metres and includes one 120-centimetre-wide bed. The Double Room ranges from 14.06 to 17.7 square metres and gives you a wider 140-centimetre bed.
The Queen Room measures 17.78 square metres and includes a 160-centimetre-wide bed. It provides a little more sleeping space while keeping the room compact. The 19.35-square-metre Twin Room includes one 120-centimetre bed and one 110-centimetre bed, making it the most spacious standard choice.
Your room includes free internet access, air conditioning, television, refrigerator, safe, hair dryer, washlet toilet, towels, indoor clothing, shampoo, conditioner, body soap, and a private shower booth. Rooms do not include a bathtub, since the main bathing experience takes place in the basement hot spring area.
Dining
Breakfast is served as a Japanese and Western buffet on the first floor. The main local speciality is an okonomi seafood bowl, which lets you choose your preferred seafood and arrange it over rice. The exact toppings can change with the season.
You can also enjoy beef hot pot, tofu and yuba sourced from a long-established Asakusa business, freshly prepared egg dishes, bread, rice, soup, vegetables, and small portions from the hotel’s kobachi counter. The small-bowl format makes it easy to try several dishes without filling your plate with large servings.
Breakfast runs from 6:15 AM to 10:00 AM, with final entry at 9:30 AM. Allergy information covers nine major ingredients, but the same kitchen equipment and cooking oil may also handle other allergens.
A full dinner service is not provided. Asakusa’s restaurant and street-food areas are close by, giving you many choices before you return to the hotel.
From 9:30 PM to 11:00 PM, you can enjoy complimentary Yonaki Soba in the first-floor dining area. This light soy-sauce ramen has become one of Dormy Inn’s best-known evening services and gives you a warm final meal after sightseeing or bathing.
Onsen and Wellness
Ryoun no Yu occupies the basement floor and uses dark natural hot spring water drawn from the hotel’s own source. The colour gives the bath its most distinctive feature, while the water itself has little scent and a light, smooth feel.
The spring is classified as a sodium bicarbonate and chloride cold mineral spring. Traditional bathing indications include support for neuralgia, stiff muscles, frozen shoulder, joint discomfort, and recovery from tiredness. Enjoy these as recognised hot spring indications rather than medical treatment.
Both the men’s and women’s areas include an indoor hot spring bath, two semi-open-air urn baths, washing stations, and outdoor-air resting spaces. Asakusa-themed artwork adds a sense of place to the bathing area.
The men’s side includes a high-temperature dry sauna with a television and a pottery-style cold-water bath with temperature control. The women’s side includes a spacious mist sauna with a television but does not have a cold plunge.
The baths open from 3:00 PM until 10:00 AM the following morning. The saunas close between 1:00 AM and 5:00 AM. This long schedule gives you time to bathe after arrival, late at night, or before breakfast.
Complimentary ice treats are available near the baths from 3:00 PM to 1:00 AM. In the morning, you can pick up a complimentary probiotic drink between 5:00 AM and 10:00 AM.
Guests with Tattoos
If you have a tattoo, you can use the shared baths only when it is completely hidden beneath the hotel’s approved cover sticker. The property lists an 8-by-10-centimetre concealment sticker, and the tattoo must remain fully covered while you use the bathing area.
Sticker supplies are limited. Tattoos that cannot be completely covered are not permitted in the hot spring, sauna, or shared bathing facilities. The hotel does not have a reservable private bath, and your room contains a shower rather than an onsen bath.
Facilities
Onyado Nono Asakusa includes a 24-hour front desk, first-floor breakfast room, basement hot spring baths, sauna facilities, laundry corner, vending machines, elevators, luggage storage, delivery support, and complimentary loan items.
Vending machines are available on the basement, first, and seventh floors. Smoking booths are provided on the first and seventh floors, keeping smoking separate from the main accommodation areas.
Loan items include irons, ironing boards, trouser presses, international plug adapters, mobile chargers, desk lamps, and hair irons. You can leave luggage before check-in and again after check-out until later on your departure day.
A welcome drink is available from 3:00 PM to 9:00 PM. The complimentary evening ramen, after-bath ice treats, and morning probiotic drink add useful extras without requiring you to leave the hotel.
Activities
Sensoji Temple is close enough for you to visit early in the morning before the main sightseeing crowds arrive. You can walk through the temple grounds, see the five-storey pagoda, and continue toward Nakamise and Kaminarimon.
Asakusa Hanayashiki stands directly nearby, while Asakusa Engei Hall, Shin-Nakamise, traditional sweet shops, restaurants, and smaller shopping streets are all easy to explore on foot.
You can also walk toward the Sumida River, Sumida Park, and the bridges overlooking Tokyo Skytree. The Asakusa Culture Tourist Information Center near Kaminarimon provides local guidance and an upper-floor observation area.
After returning, you can change into the hotel’s indoor clothing, soak in the black-water onsen, enjoy an ice treat, and finish your evening with Yonaki Soba.
Additional Features
Onyado Nono Asakusa is located at 2-7-20 Asakusa, Taito City, Tokyo. Tsukuba Express Asakusa Station is around four minutes away through the elevator-equipped A1 exit. Tokyo Metro Ginza Line Asakusa Station is approximately eight minutes away through Exit 1.
Check-in begins at 3:00 PM, and check-out is at 11:00 AM. Contact the hotel before arrival when you expect to check in after 10:00 PM.
Onyado Nono Asakusa suits you when you want a Japanese-style city stay close to Sensoji, natural black-water bathing, a strong breakfast, and useful complimentary services. You can explore Asakusa on foot and still return to tatami surroundings, warm mineral water, and a quiet place to rest.



















