Your stay — Comfort Hotel Meiekiminami
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The Property — Comfort Hotel Meiekiminami
Comfort Hotel Meiekiminami is a no-frills, business-oriented stay two stops from Nagoya Station on the Higashiyama Line. The lobby feels clean, efficient and a bit generic — think polished tile floors, automatic check-in kiosks and a complimentary breakfast buffet with bread and miso soup. Rooms are compact but well kept, with good soundproofing and strong WiFi. It suits budget-conscious solo travellers or couples who want a reliable place to sleep near the city centre without the price tag of a station-front hotel.
Chronicles of Nagoya
Nagoya grew from a castle town founded by Tokugawa Ieyasu in 1610 to become Japan’s fourth-largest city, a heavy-industry powerhouse for textiles, ceramics and later, automotive manufacturing. The city was firebombed heavily in 1945, so today’s skyline is largely post-war concrete and glass, anchored by the reconstructed Nagoya Castle and the soaring Mode Gakuen Spiral Towers. Culturally, it’s the birthplace of pachinko and home to the Nagoya dialect, known for its brusque, direct tone. In contemporary terms, it’s a transport and business hub with a strong local food scene — hitsumabushi and miso katsu are staples — but it lacks the tourist gloss of Tokyo or Kyoto.
Best Time to Visit
Full Nagoya guide →Best months
October and November; crisp, dry weather with autumn foliage at Nagoya Castle and the Higashiyama Zoo. May is also excellent — mild temperatures and clear skies, though Golden Week crowds can be heavy.
Peak / festival surge
March–April for cherry blossom season (Nagoya Castle’s grounds are a hotspot) and July–August for summer festivals, especially the Nagoya Gion Matsuri in July. Hotel prices jump 30–50% during these periods; book early if attending.
Budget shoulder season
June and September are solid shoulder months. June is rainy season (humid but quieter), September sees fewer tourists and lower rates, though typhoons can disrupt outdoor plans.
Weather & packing
Nagoya summers are swampy — July averages 28°C with 80% humidity and frequent rain. Pack a portable fan and breathable, quick-dry clothing; bring a compact umbrella because afternoon showers are sudden and common.
Live City Briefing — Nagoya
- Nagoya’s subway system added contactless IC card support for foreign visitors via Welcome Suica at major stations in 2025 – check at Nagoya Station information counters.
- A new observation deck opened atop the Midland Square building in late 2025, offering views of the Suzuka mountains – advance tickets recommended for clear-sky days.
- The city introduced timed-entry reservations for the Tokugawa Art Museum and Nagoya Castle’s main keep from January 2026; book ahead online to avoid queueing.
Your Perfect Room
✨ AI-generated · Jul 2026Before you check in to Comfort Hotel Meiekiminami, here's what to know about choosing the right room.
Best rooms to request
Request a room on floors 4 to 6, facing the inner courtyard or the side street rather than the main road. Higher floors here are quieter as they sit above street-level bustle.
Rooms to avoid
Avoid rooms on floor 2 (directly above the lobby and breakfast area, can get noise from guests and kitchen prep) and rooms at the front of the building facing the main road – traffic noise from Nagoya’s arterial streets can be noticeable, especially on low floors.
Best views
The hotel is in central Nagoya, so front-facing upper floors offer a cityscape view – you'll see nearby office buildings and the Nagoya skyline, but nothing spectacular. Side- or rear-facing rooms look onto neighbouring buildings but are calmer.
Quietest floors
Floors 4–7 are generally quietest, as they're above most street-level noise and below any rooftop plant or lift machinery (check with reception about the lift shaft location).
🔊 Noise notes
Street noise from the main road and occasional emergency sirens (Nagoya has a busy fire/ambulance service). Breakfast prep starts around 6:30am on floor 2 – if you're a light sleeper, stay above floor 3. Also, the hotel's location near commercial blocks means occasional late-night foot traffic and pachinko parlour sounds.
Insider tips
1. If you drive, the hotel's car park fills quickly – arrive by 4pm to guarantee a spot, or use the nearby 24-hour coin park on the side street. 2. At check-in, politely ask for a room on floors 5 or 6 away from the lift – staff are often willing to assign those if available. The free breakfast starts at 7am; get there by 7:30am to avoid the queue.
- Call the hotel directly 24–48 hours before arrival and ask for a specific room type
- Add a note in your booking comments field
- Ask at check-in — front desk staff can often accommodate if a room is available
Hotel Facilities — Comfort Hotel Meiekiminami
Free in all rooms and public areas; typical speed 20 Mbps download; no login required, just accept terms
One passenger lift serves all 10 floors; no stairs-only sections
Complimentary digital newsstand via tablet in lobby; no physical papers
15:00–00:00, early bag drop allowed from 10:00; late check-out until 12:00 for ¥1,000 per hour
Free, at front desk; drop-off before check-in and after check-out all day
Step-free from street to lobby via ramp; no wheelchair-accessible guest rooms; lift is standard width
No on-site parking; nearest public car park is Nagoya Station West Parking (¥1,500 per night, 5 min walk); no EV charging
Fees, Taxes & Deposits
City / tourist tax: ¥200 per person per night for stays over ¥10,000 accommodation cost
Deposit & card hold: Pay in full at check-in; hold ¥1,000 for incidentals
Faith & Dietary Nearby
- Buddhist temple: 長圓寺 (104 m · ~1 min walk)
- Buddhist temple: 八角堂 (184 m · ~2 min walk)
- Place of worship: 津島神社 (404 m · ~5 min walk)
- Buddhist temple: 永林寺 (423 m · ~5 min walk)
Local Lifestyle & Recreation
水曜日のアリス 名古屋 — 1.4 km · ~17 min walk
ギャラリー A・C・S — 491 m · ~6 min walk
御園座 — 708 m · ~9 min walk
どんぐりひろば — 1.0 km · ~13 min walk
5-Minute Radius Essentials
愛知銀行 — 908 m · ~11 min walk
ファーコス薬局 — 363 m · ~5 min walk
ファミリーマート — 291 m · ~4 min walk
伏見 — 874 m · ~11 min walk
Money & Currency
Get a travel card →Japanese Yen, JPY
Use ATMs at convenience stores (7-Eleven, FamilyMart) for the best rates; airport exchange counters give poor rates.
Major credit cards accepted in most shops and restaurants, but small eateries and markets may be cash-only; contactless (Suica, Pasmo, Apple Pay) works on transport and in many stores.
Tipping is not practiced in Japan; do not leave extra money at restaurants, in taxis, or for hotel staff.
Eat, Shop & Travel on a Budget
Cheap car hire →Canned coffee from a vending machine is about ¥120, or a hot coffee from a convenience store like 7-Eleven for around ¥100.
A bowl of ramen or a teishoku (set meal) at a casual restaurant costs around ¥700–¥900.
A main dish at an izakaya or a okonomiyaki place runs about ¥800–¥1,200.
Nagoya Station’s underground shopping arcades and Osu Kannon area have stalls selling takoyaki, yakitori, and taiyaki for ¥200–¥500 each.
Budget supermarkets like Gyomu Super, Top Value, and Aichi Co-op are common in residential areas.
UNIQLO, GU, and Aeon Mall provide affordable high-street fashion, plus second-hand shops like Book Off and Hard Off for bargains.
Cheapest way around is the subway/bus combo day pass for ¥640 (weekdays); from Chubu Centrair Airport, take the Meitetsu Limited Express train to Nagoya Station for ¥1,230.
Eat at conveyor-belt sushi or ramen shops near the station for filling meals under ¥1,000. Buy a rechargeable IC card (Manaca) for seamless transit and small purchases. Visit free attractions like Nagoya Castle’s outer grounds and Osu Kannon temple.
Good to know — Nagoya
Type A/B · 100V
safe
$1 ≈ ¥162.52 · JPY
Where to Eat
💡 Booking tip: For popular restaurants in Nagoya, book at least a week ahead — especially for weekend evenings and during festival season.
Your arrival at Comfort Hotel Meiekiminami
🕒 Check-in is from . Arriving earlier? Most hotels store luggage free — just ask at reception.
🧭 First things nearby: cash · 愛知銀行 — 908 m · ~11 min walk — pharmacy · ファーコス薬局 — 363 m · ~5 min walk
🚐 Pre-book an airport transfer →Getting Around
Chubu Centrair International Airport (NGO) → Nagoya Station (then taxi/walk to LIMOUSINE HOTEL)
💡 The μSky is faster and has luggage racks—pay the extra ¥360 for a reserved seat to avoid standing. From Nagoya Station, it's a 10-minute walk or ¥1,000 taxi to the hotel.
Chubu Centrair International Airport (NGO) → LIMOUSINE HOTEL (via Nagoya Station, then 5-min taxi or 10-min walk)
💡 Get off at Nagoya Station, then catch a 5-minute taxi to the hotel—don't bother with local buses; the walk is doable if you're light, but it's a bit of a maze underground.
Chubu Centrair International Airport (NGO) → LIMOUSINE HOTEL
💡 Use the fixed-rate taxi counter at the arrivals hall—avoid metered cabs as they can cost 30% more. Good for late arrivals or heavy luggage, but book ahead during peak hours.
Nagoya Station (Meijo Line platform) → LIMOUSINE HOTEL (nearest station: Yagoto Nisseki)
💡 From Nagoya Station, take the Meijo Line to Yagoto Nisseki—it's a 3-minute walk from Exit 5. Buy an IC card (Manaca) at any ticket machine; it saves fumbling for coins and works on buses too.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the best rooms at Comfort Hotel Meiekiminami?
Request a room on floors 4 to 6, facing the inner courtyard or the side street rather than the main road. Higher floors here are quieter as they sit above street-level bustle.
Which rooms should I avoid at Comfort Hotel Meiekiminami?
Avoid rooms on floor 2 (directly above the lobby and breakfast area, can get noise from guests and kitchen prep) and rooms at the front of the building facing the main road – traffic noise from Nagoya’s arterial streets can be noticeable, especially on low floors.
Is Comfort Hotel Meiekiminami noisy?
Street noise from the main road and occasional emergency sirens (Nagoya has a busy fire/ambulance service). Breakfast prep starts around 6:30am on floor 2 – if you're a light sleeper, stay above floor 3. Also, the hotel's location near commercial blocks means occasional late-night foot traffic and pachinko parlour sounds.
Which rooms have the best views at Comfort Hotel Meiekiminami?
The hotel is in central Nagoya, so front-facing upper floors offer a cityscape view – you'll see nearby office buildings and the Nagoya skyline, but nothing spectacular. Side- or rear-facing rooms look onto neighbouring buildings but are calmer.
What are insider tips for staying at Comfort Hotel Meiekiminami?
1. If you drive, the hotel's car park fills quickly – arrive by 4pm to guarantee a spot, or use the nearby 24-hour coin park on the side street. 2. At check-in, politely ask for a room on floors 5 or 6 away from the lift – staff are often willing to assign those if available. The free breakfast starts at 7am; get there by 7:30am to avoid the queue.
What time is check-in at Comfort Hotel Meiekiminami?
Check-in at Comfort Hotel Meiekiminami is from null. Check-out is by null.
Does Comfort Hotel Meiekiminami have Wi-Fi?
Free in all rooms and public areas; typical speed 20 Mbps download; no login required, just accept terms
Is there a city or tourist tax at Comfort Hotel Meiekiminami?
¥200 per person per night for stays over ¥10,000 accommodation cost
Where can I eat cheaply near Comfort Hotel Meiekiminami?
A bowl of ramen or a teishoku (set meal) at a casual restaurant costs around ¥700–¥900.
What is the cheapest way to get around from Comfort Hotel Meiekiminami?
Cheapest way around is the subway/bus combo day pass for ¥640 (weekdays); from Chubu Centrair Airport, take the Meitetsu Limited Express train to Nagoya Station for ¥1,230.
When is the best time to visit Nagoya?
October and November; crisp, dry weather with autumn foliage at Nagoya Castle and the Higashiyama Zoo. May is also excellent — mild temperatures and clear skies, though Golden Week crowds can be heavy.
Top Attractions in Nagoya
💡 The temple is free, but the arcade's second-hand shops are the real draw. Try the local miso skewers from street vendors for 100 yen.
💡 The inner keep costs 500 yen, but you can see the stone walls and moat for free. Visit early morning to avoid crowds.
💡 The inner garden costs 300 yen, but the outer paths give you 90% of the experience. Bring a snack for the benches by the koi pond.
💡 Stick to the free outdoor section—see the old looms and early Toyota cars. The indoor part is worth it only if you're an engineering buff.
💡 The treasury museum costs 500 yen, but skip it—the main shrine grounds are the highlight. Go at noon for the daily Shinto ceremony.