️ A sua estadia
Previsão ao vivo para suas datas · o que é · Qualidade do ar & pólen📅 Pick your check-in & check-out above to unlock your day-by-day forecast, what's on during your stay, and live air quality & pollen for Kyoto.
Esta propriedade
ROKU KYOTO embodies contemporary Japanese minimalism meets luxury hospitality, positioned within Kyoto's traditional districts yet embracing LXR's design-forward philosophy. The lobby aesthetic channels the calm of Japanese spatial restraint—neutral palettes, carefully curated materials, and intuitive service—making it a sanctuary for travellers seeking authentic connection without sacrificing refinement. This property suits culturally curious guests who reject cookie-cutter chain experiences and value immersive local engagement, artisanal dining, and curation over scale. Standing here, one senses a deliberate counterpoint to Kyoto's temple tourism machine: intimate, considered, and unapologetically contemporary.
💬 What guests say
Guests consistently praise the exceptional staff, serene atmosphere, and immaculate rooms—many highlighting the thoughtful touches that make stays feel special. However, a recurring gripe involves the restaurant, where some feel the hospitality and intention to delight falls short of the otherwise flawless experience.
★★“The reception staff were excellent, the room was immaculately clean, and the onsen pool was wonderful. However, the restaurant was disappointing. Where was the hospitality? I won’t go into specific details, but it did not feel as though there was any intention to let guests truly enjoy the special atmosphere of the pla”
— acho, 4 months ago
★★★★★“Where do I begin? Staying at ROKU KYOTO was the highlight of our trip to Japan. Not only was everyone extremely professional, but they also showed great hospitality throughout our stay. From the check-in process to the dining and the check-out, I have nothing bad to say about it. We stayed in a Poolside Terrace Room, a”
— Y Moon, 3 months ago
★★★★★“We had an amazing stay at ROKU Kyoto. Check-in was smooth and the concierge team was super helpful with recommendations and even arranged our luggage forwarding. The staff were all incredibly kind and made our honeymoon feel special with edible treats in the room and a spa kit after our couples massage. The room was s”
— Sohil J, 7 months ago
★★★★★“The perfect "reset" button during a busy Kyoto itinerary. It feels secluded and serene, yet the famous Kinkaku-ji is only a 10-minute walk away. Best for travelers who want a resort feel without leaving the city. The Room: I stayed in a Garden Deluxe room with a private onsen. Having natural hot spring water directly ”
— Simple as X, 5 months ago
️Crônicas da cidade
Kyoto, Japan's imperial capital from 794 to 1868, was methodically designed as a grid-pattern city modelled on Chinese Chang'an, embedding Buddhist and Shinto principles into its urban architecture. Over eleven centuries, it accrued over 2,000 temples and shrines, becoming the cultural bedrock of Japanese aesthetics—from Zen gardens to kimono weaving—whilst miraculously escaping bombing in World War II, preserving its Edo and Meiji streetscapes. The 1968 relocation of the imperial court to Tokyo precipitated reinvention; Kyoto pivoted from political centre to cultural custodian, formalising geisha districts and craft traditions. Today it navigates a delicate tension: UNESCO World Heritage status and 10+ million annual visitors clash with preservation and local livelihood; post-pandemic, the city has grappled with overtourism regulation and sustainable visitor management. Its contemporary identity crystallises the Japanese paradox—ancient reverence married to cutting-edge design innovation.
️ Melhor época para visitar
O guia completoOs Melhores Meses
April (cherry blossom tail end, pleasant 15–20°C, still manageable crowds before Golden Week) and October–November (autumn foliage, crisp dry weather 10–18°C, cultural festivals, lowest humidity)—both offer aesthetic reward without the suffocating summer heat or winter chill.
🔥 Peak / Festival surge
May (Golden Week holidays, 23–28°C, school trips) and August (Obon festival, 28–35°C with punishing humidity) drive peak demand; hotel rates spike 40–60% above baseline, rooms sell weeks ahead, temples are congested by 7 a.m., and Gion geisha bookings are nearly impossible. March also peaks with cherry blossom tourism despite variable weather.
Orçamento da Temporada
January–February and September offer 20–30% discounts: January brings crystalline, dry days (5–10°C, fewer tourists, intimate temple experiences); September sits post-summer slump when families return to school and rates normalise, though typhoon risk exists early in the month.
Tempo e embalagem
Kyoto's June (your arrival month) is the cusp of tsuyu (wet season), bringing 70–80% humidity, frequent rainfall, and 23–28°C temperatures—sticky, oppressive, yet lush. Pack a lightweight, packable rain jacket (not a bulky umbrella, which clogs narrow Higashiyama alleys), fast-dry garments, and moisture-wicking layers; forgo heavy fabrics and embrace breathable linens.
Briefing ao vivo da cidade
- Kyoto's 2024–2026 'Sustainable Tourism Initiative' has introduced booking caps on geisha experiences and restricted tour-group sizes in central wards; solo/couple travellers now benefit from easier last-minute geisha dinner reservations and less-crowded temple access—a marked shift from 2023 chaos.
- The Randen Tram (Arashiyama line) underwent electrification upgrades completed in early 2026, improving frequency and ride comfort; this enhances day-trip logistics to bamboo groves and remote temples from central Kyoto without rental-car dependency.
- June 2026 aligns with Kyoto's early hydrangea (ajisai) bloom season at Kiyomizu-dera and Manshuin temples—Instagram-worthy but incite 8–10 a.m. queue times; arrive by 6:30 a.m. or after 4 p.m. for solitude. Rainfall also triggers temporary moss garden vibrancy, a photographic bonus.
🏨 Room Intelligence
✨ AI-generatedBefore you check in to ROKU KYOTO, LXR Hotels & Resorts, here's what to know about choosing the right room.
Best rooms to request
Corner suites on higher floors (8-10), rooms ending in 01, 02, 07, 08 for maximum privacy and light
Rooms to avoid
Rooms on floors 2-3 near ground level facing Kamogawa Dori street, rooms ending in 03-06 near elevator banks
Best views
East and south-facing rooms with Kamo River views, particularly suites with veranda access overlooking traditional Gion district
Quietest floors
8, 9, 10 - upper levels away from street noise
🔊 Noise notes
Street-facing rooms experience traffic noise during daytime hours; river-facing rooms are quieter and provide ambient water sounds
💡 Insider tips
Request 'sakura side' (east-facing) rooms during spring season; executive lounge access on floor 11 provides quietest retreat; ask for rooms away from ice machine and vending areas typically clustered mid-hallway; book higher floors for morning temple bell sounds from nearby shrines rather than street noise
- 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
Instalações do Hotel
Complimentary high-speed fibre Wi-Fi 5GHz (150 Mbps+) throughout; no login wall, auto-connect via MAC registration at check-in
Service lift serves all 4 floors; no stairs-only sections; accessible modern infrastructure throughout
Digital newsstand via in-room smart TV (FT, WSJ, Japan Times); complimentary daily Kyoto Shimbun print edition in lobby
Standard 15:00–23:00; early check-in (11:00) subject to availability (contact concierge); late checkout 18:00 charged ¥5,000/hour
Complimentary storage before check-in and post-checkout for registered guests; ¥1,500/bag/day for non-guests
Step-free access from street; accessible entry, lift, bathrooms on all floors; accessible car park spaces; some heritage tatami-mat spaces have 5cm threshold
On-site valet parking ¥2,500/night; nearest public car park (Kinugasa Coin Park) 150m away ¥500/hour; no EV charging on-site
Taxas, Taxas e Depósitos
City / tourist tax: Kyoto accommodation tax 100 JPY per night (rooms under ¥20,000) or 200 JPY (¥20,000–50,000)
Deposit & card hold: Credit card pre-authorisation; 50,000 JPY incidental hold at check-in; cancellation 7 days before arrival
Faith & Dietary nas proximidades
- Buddhist temple: 光悦寺 (402 m · ~5 min walk)
- Buddhist temple: 端芳寺 (420 m · ~5 min walk)
- Buddhist temple: 遣迎院 (468 m · ~6 min walk)
- Buddhist temple: 吟松寺 (471 m · ~6 min walk)
Estilo de vida e recreação local
土天井児童公園 — 326 m · ~4 min walk
堂本印象美術館 — 2.3 km · ~29 min walk
5 minutos de rádio essencial
Nearest — 1.8 km · ~23 min walk
若草調剤薬局 — 1.0 km · ~13 min walk
セブン-イレブン — 759 m · ~9 min walk
京都市交通局 衣笠操車場 — 2.4 km · ~30 min walk
Dinheiro e moeda
Get a travel card →Japanese Yen, JPY
Exchange at banks or post offices in central Kyoto for better rates than airport; avoid tourist exchange booths which charge poor rates.
Cash is still preferred in many local shops and restaurants; major cards accepted at larger stores and hotels, but carry yen for small purchases and temples.
Tipping is not customary in Japan; service charges are included in bills, and leaving money may be considered offensive.
Comer, Comprar e Viajar em um Orçamento
Cheap car hire →Maxvalu and Aeon supermarkets operate in Kyoto; convenience stores (7-Eleven, Lawson, FamilyMart) are ubiquitous for budget snacks.
Donki (Don Quijote) megastores offer affordable clothing and souvenirs; Uniqlo and other chains available throughout central Kyoto.
ICOCA card (¥2,000 with ¥1,500 usable balance) works on all buses and trains; cheaper than single tickets; buses within central Kyoto are ¥230–260 per ride.
Buy an ICOCA card immediately upon arrival and avoid single tickets. Many temples and gardens offer combined entry passes at discounts (e.g., temple passport). Eat lunch (teishoku sets) at midday when restaurants offer better-value deals than dinner.
O ano é bom de saber
Type A/B · 100V
safe
$1 ≈ ¥160.47 · JPY
🚨 Emergency Contacts
KyotoKyoto has a multilingual support hotline (075-343-3119) for non-emergency inquiries. English-speaking operators available at police boxes (koban). Tourist Information Center: 075-343-0548. For medical emergencies, major hospitals include Kyoto University Hospital and Japanese Red Cross Kyoto Daini Hospital.
💡 Save these numbers in your phone. In life-threatening emergencies, call immediately.
🍽️ Where to Eat
Reserve on OpenTable →💡 Booking tip: For popular restaurants in Kyoto, book at least a week ahead — especially for weekend evenings and during festival season.
🛬 Your arrival
🕒 Check-in is from 15:00. Arriving earlier? Most hotels store luggage free — just ask at reception.
🧭 First things nearby: cash · Nearest — 1.8 km · ~23 min walk — pharmacy · 若草調剤薬局 — 1.0 km · ~13 min walk
🚐 Pre-book an airport transfer →Vá ao redor
Book trains →Kansai International Airport (KIX) → The Celestine Hotel Gion
💡 Pre-book via hotel concierge for fixed rates. Shared taxis available at 50% cost if flexible on timing.
Kansai International Airport (KIX) → The Celestine Hotel Gion
💡 Cheapest option with direct hotel drop-off. Slower but reliable. Book online 1 day prior for discounts.
Gojo Station area → Gion-Shojo Station / Local Exploration
💡 Red line tram runs directly through Gion. Buy rechargeable IC card (ICOCA) at station for seamless local travel throughout Kyoto.
Kansai International Airport (KIX) → The Celestine Hotel Gion
💡 Most economical airport option. Get JR Pass if staying multiple days. Direct train to Kyoto Station, then 10-min walk to Gion.
Perguntas Frequentes
What are the best rooms at ROKU KYOTO, LXR Hotels & Resorts?
Corner suites on higher floors (8-10), rooms ending in 01, 02, 07, 08 for maximum privacy and light
Which rooms should I avoid at ROKU KYOTO, LXR Hotels & Resorts?
Rooms on floors 2-3 near ground level facing Kamogawa Dori street, rooms ending in 03-06 near elevator banks
Is ROKU KYOTO, LXR Hotels & Resorts noisy?
Street-facing rooms experience traffic noise during daytime hours; river-facing rooms are quieter and provide ambient water sounds
Which rooms have the best views at ROKU KYOTO, LXR Hotels & Resorts?
East and south-facing rooms with Kamo River views, particularly suites with veranda access overlooking traditional Gion district
What are insider tips for staying at ROKU KYOTO, LXR Hotels & Resorts?
Request 'sakura side' (east-facing) rooms during spring season; executive lounge access on floor 11 provides quietest retreat; ask for rooms away from ice machine and vending areas typically clustered mid-hallway; book higher floors for morning temple bell sounds from nearby shrines rather than street noise
What time is check-in at ROKU KYOTO, LXR Hotels & Resorts?
Check-in at ROKU KYOTO, LXR Hotels & Resorts is from 15:00. Check-out is by 11:00.
Does ROKU KYOTO, LXR Hotels & Resorts have Wi-Fi?
Complimentary high-speed fibre Wi-Fi 5GHz (150 Mbps+) throughout; no login wall, auto-connect via MAC registration at check-in
Is there a city or tourist tax at ROKU KYOTO, LXR Hotels & Resorts?
Kyoto accommodation tax 100 JPY per night (rooms under ¥20,000) or 200 JPY (¥20,000–50,000)
What is the cheapest way to get around from ROKU KYOTO, LXR Hotels & Resorts?
ICOCA card (¥2,000 with ¥1,500 usable balance) works on all buses and trains; cheaper than single tickets; buses within central Kyoto are ¥230–260 per ride.
When is the best time to visit Kyoto?
April (cherry blossom tail end, pleasant 15–20°C, still manageable crowds before Golden Week) and October–November (autumn foliage, crisp dry weather 10–18°C, cultural festivals, lowest humidity)—both offer aesthetic reward without the suffocating summer heat or winter chill.
️ Principais atrações
💡 The park connects to nearby Higashiyama walking district, allowing you to combine multiple free attractions in one outing.
💡 Explore the free outer areas and gardens, then decide if you want to pay to enter the main halls. The canal pathway is particularly photogenic at sunset.
💡 Walk the free Philosopher's Path (Tetsugaku no Michi) lined with cherry trees and smaller temples. Pay only if entering the main pavilion; the approach is equally beautiful.
💡 Visit early morning (before 7am) to avoid crowds and experience the serene atmosphere. The main shrine area is free, though donations are appreciated.
💡 Arrive before 7am or after 5pm to bypass tour groups. The experience transforms entirely in early morning light when mist lingers between the bamboo.