Do hotels in Japan always have manual baths in their rooms?

10/12/2019 6:55:08 AM

All the love hotels that I have been to have had manual western bathtubs which is a real pain so I don’t think even Japanese hotels (the ones that can’t have sento or onsen) have Japanese style bathtubs.

8/5/2014 6:16:21 PM

If you want to have a Japanese bathtub, it’s best to stay in a Japanese-style hotel!

Yes, Western-style hotels and business hotels generally have more western bathtubs. Remember, in Japan, baths are for bathing, not washing. In general, showers are better at washing your body.

Many Japanese consider it gross to sit in a bathtub of your own body’s dirtwater and will either shower after or before starting a bath-tub anyhow. Some hotels will have a Sento (public bathing area) which is much preferable for many Japanese anyhow. If you’ve been to a Japanese home, you’ll know that toilets and baths are separate rooms and bathrooms are usually wetrooms with a shower unit outside the bath. These are fantastic but can take up more room and are more expensive to construct. As such, hotels generally use Western baths.

The MOST expensive hotels in Japan are usually built on an onsen (hot spring) or at LEAST have a nice Sento, a much more preferable arrangement for actual bathing.

If your clientelle is mostly just needing to wash, then western shower-tubs are preferable… which is why even expensive hotels are decked out western-style.

7/2/2014 12:50:39 PM

Bathtubs of any kind aren’t actually all that common in Japanese hotels. The cheaper ones, especially business hotels and the like, tend to have only showers, and most minshuku/ryokan and all capsule hotels don’t have any in-room bathing facilities at all, only large communal and/or reservable onsen baths.

If you’re staying in branded Western chain hotels, though, you’ll probably get the Western-style bathtub, because that’s what non-Japanese clientele expect: a room in a Hilton in Tokyo isn’t too different from one in New York. Even Japanese-operated luxury hotels (random example: Okura Huis Ten Bosch) will often feature these, because like the faux-French furniture in the room and the exorbitantly priced Italian restaurant downstairs, they’re a bit foreign and exotic.

The one place I have seen the home-style fully automated deep ofuro baths is apartment hotels intended for longer stays, like the Tokyu Stay chain. Which makes sense: these are designed as a replacement for a Japanese home, so they have to offer the facilities of a Japanese home.

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Hello,My name is Aparna Patel,I’m a Travel Blogger and Photographer who travel the world full-time with my hubby.I like to share my travel experience.

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