The Westin Yokohama is a new-build wellness-focused hotel that opened in June 2022 in Yokohama’s Minato Mirai 21 district, offering 373 rooms along with extensive spa, fitness, and dining facilities.
Bookable with Marriott Bonvoy points. Award pricing varies by date and category, so we link straight to the official Marriott Bonvoy award chart for current rates rather than publishing a number that can go stale. Cash rates below are our own observed rack rates, not what the program charges in points.
“The Westin Yokohama is a new-build wellness-focused hotel that opened in June 2022 in Yokohama’s Minato Mirai 21 district, offering 373 rooms along with extensive spa, fitness, and dining facilities.”
Located at 4-2-8 Minatomirai, Nishi-ku, Yokohama, the property sits in the waterfront Minato Mirai 21 business and leisure district. Guests can reach Sakuragicho Station on foot in about 10 minutes, with Shin-Takashima and Minatomirai stations also nearby. The hotel is roughly 45 minutes by train from Tokyo Station and 25 minutes by car from Haneda Airport, providing convenient access for both business and sightseeing. The hotel emphasizes a natural, health-oriented concept with nature-inspired design. All rooms feature the Westin Heavenly Bed, and standard rooms measure approximately 42 m² while suites are about 84 m². Amenities include air conditioning, wireless internet, in-room safes, refrigerators, and coffeemakers. Wellness facilities comprise an indoor pool open 08:00–20:00, a WestinWORKOUT fitness studio available 24 hours, spa services, hot tub, and massage options, plus the Run Westin outdoor running program. Five restaurants and bars on site include Kissui-sen for modern Japanese cuisine, Brasserie du Quai for French dishes, Iron Bay grill on the 23rd floor, Code Bar with Mt. Fuji views on clear days, and the Lobby Lounge/Sugar Merchant for pastries and light fare.
Tokyo is typically most comfortable in spring and autumn, with cherry blossoms and mild temperatures in late March to May and pleasant, less hot weather in October to November; these are described as main shoulder seasons for sightseeing.
These months overlap with Tokyo’s hot, humid summer and the Pacific typhoon season; travel guides warn that summer crowds, heat, and storm risk make redemptions less comfortable and potentially more expensive.
Cash rates are re-checked by hand; live award pricing comes straight from the program rather than a number we publish here — see methodology.