The Tokyo Disney parks are huge, and after a full day on your feet the last thing you want is a long, fiddly journey back to bed. A hotel with a free shuttle to the parks solves that, and there are more options than most first-timers realise.
The catch is that “free shuttle” covers everything from a turn-up-and-go bus that runs all day to a single reservation-only trip you can miss if you don’t book ahead.
My guide compares 16 hotels with a free shuttle to Tokyo Disneyland and DisneySea, with typical prices, how each shuttle actually works, and who each one suits.
I’ve left out the on-site Disney Resort and Official Hotels, which command a premium for being inside the gates. The focus here is value: the Partner and Good Neighbour hotels where you get the convenience without the resort price tag.
More of my Japan guides to plan around your Tokyo trip
- Kamakura day trip — One of the most rewarding day trips from Tokyo
- How many days in Osaka — A ready made itinerary for the best things to see in Osaka
- Tokyo 3 day itinerary — A guide to the best sights and hidden gems.
- Kyoto in 2 Days — A guide to everything you will want to do in Kyoto
- Perfect Hakone Loop — What to do and how to get around when you are in Hakone
- Japan Two-Week Itinerary — All my tips to make the most of two weeks in Japan
What is the difference between Disney Resort, Official, Partner and Good Neighbour hotels?
1. Tokyo Disney Resort Hotels (Highest Tier)
- Directly operated by Tokyo Disney Resort
- Located inside or immediately adjacent to the parks
- Benefits:
- Guaranteed park admission
- Early park entry (15 minutes)
- Merchandise delivery to hotel
- Disney character theming throughout
- Direct monorail access
- Priority restaurant reservations
2. Tokyo Disney Official Hotels
- Not operated by Disney but have a formal partnership
- Located on Disney Resort property
- Benefits:
- Guaranteed park admission
- Access to Disney Resort Line monorail
- Official shuttle service
- Can make park reservations through hotel
3. Tokyo Disney Partner Hotels
- Have an official agreement with Tokyo Disney Resort
- Located nearby, mostly around Tokyo Bay
- Include various hotels operated by major Japanese chains
- Benefits:
- Free shuttle to the parks, turn-up, no reservation needed
- Can buy park tickets through the hotel
- Often offer package deals with tickets
4. Tokyo Disney Good Neighbour Hotels
- Part of Disney’s official Good Neighbour programme, spread across wider Tokyo
- Range from budget to high-end
- Located within various distances of the parks
- Benefits:
- Free shuttle to the parks, though you must reserve a seat ahead
- Usually more affordable than staying closer in
- Can buy park tickets through many of them

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| Hotel Type | Location | Perks | Theme Level | Park ticket Guarantee |
| Disney Resort Hotels | Within Resort | Early access, Disney-themed rooms, Monorail passes | High (Disney-themed) | Yes |
| Disney Official Hotels | Resort Grounds | Shuttle to parks, Baggage Delivery | Moderate | Yes |
| Disney Partner Hotels | Around Tokyo Bay | Free shuttle, turn up no booking | Low | No |
| Good Neighbour Hotels | Various | Shuttle to parks (with reservation) | None | No |
Disclaimer: This article features affiliate links. If you click these links, and choose to book with that hotel or company, I will earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. I appreciate the support that allows me to continue providing this information
Get prepared for your Japan trip with my first-timer starter kit
- Break down the language barrier: key phrases and tech for an easy first trip
- How to stay connected: the cheapest data and easiest setup
- Avoid currency fees: the best cards for spending and cash
- 25 apps that make your trip easier: the best free downloads
- Save 30 to 90 minutes at the airport: the free Visit Japan Web QR code
- Etiquette do’s and don’ts: what to know on your first visit
Buy Discounted Disney tickets online ahead of your visit
Buy your park tickets before you fly. They sell out on peak dates, and turning up without one is the quickest way to lose a morning. Klook is a reliable option and the one we’ve used in Japan for tickets and transport.
The best Tokyo hotels with shuttles to Disneyland and DisneySea
Before you pick, one piece of advice I give every first-timer. If you’re doing two or more days at the parks, split your stay: one of these hotels for the Disney days, then somewhere more central for the rest of your trip. You see more of Tokyo, you skip the long daily commute, and you get to experience two different sides of the city. More on that below.
Here are all 16 at a glance, closest to the parks first. Prices are a typical nightly midpoint for two, so check your own dates. The shuttle column is the one to read carefully: the Partner hotels run turn-up buses, but every Good Neighbour shuttle needs a reservation and the seats can get booked up.
Best Tokyo shuttle hotels at a glance
| Hotel | Indicative price per night | Shuttle time | Booking required? | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Henn na Maihama | ~¥18,500 (£96) | ~5 min to Maihama Stn | No | Novelty, closest, walkable to the station |
| Mitsui Garden Prana | ~¥24,000 (£125) | 15–20 min | No | Families, a rooftop bath |
| Hotel Emion | ~¥26,500 (£138) | ~15 min | No | Hot-spring soak after the parks |
| Urayasu Brighton | ~¥26,000 (£135) | 15–20 min | No | A bit of luxury, station on the door |
| Oriental Hotel | ~¥32,500 (£169) | ~15 min | No | Dining variety, fussy eaters |
| Ibis Styles | ~¥16,500 (£86) | 15–25 min | No | Budget families |
| La’Gent | ~¥18,500 (£96) | 15–20 min | Confirm times | Budget, bunk-bed family rooms |
| New Otani Makuhari | ~¥22,000 (£114) | 25–35 min | Yes | Resort-style stay for relaxing |
| Hotel East 21 | ~¥22,000 (£114) | ~30 min | Yes | Pools and leisure |
| Sotetsu Grand Fresa Ariake | ~¥19,500 (£101) | 30–40 min | Yes | Mid-budget, near Ariake and Big Sight |
| Tokyo Bay Ariake Washington | ~¥18,500 (£96) | 30–40 min | Yes | No-frills, low cost |
| Daiichi Hotel Ryogoku | ~¥13,500 (£70) | 30–40 min | Yes | Cheapest, Skytree sightseeing combo |
| Tobu Hotel Levant | ~¥20,500 (£107) | 30–40 min | Yes | Families, Kinshicho access |
| Hilton Tokyo Odaiba | ~¥32,500 (£169) | 35–45 min | Yes, 1 trip/day | Odaiba sightseeing plus Disney |
| Keisei Hotel Miramare | ~¥15,000 (£78) | 40–50 min | Yes | Chiba side, flexible |
| Keio Plaza | ~¥42,500 (£221) | ~60 min | Yes | One base for Disney and central Tokyo |
Which should you pick?
These are my views based on the below scenarios, but it depends on what matters to you and your group:
- Closest, and the most fun with kids: Henn na Hotel Maihama. You check in with a robot dinosaur and it’s the nearest of the lot.
- Best guest ratings: Urayasu Brighton (9.0) and Hotel Emion (8.9) come out top.
- Best shuttle deal: any of the Partner hotels (Mitsui Prana, Emion, Brighton, Oriental). Their buses run all day with no booking.
- Cheapest bed near a shuttle: Daiichi Hotel Ryogoku, if you’re happy with a 30 to 40 minute ride.
A couple to think carefully about. Hilton Odaiba’s free shuttle is only one trip a day, so it suits sightseers more than people doing full days in the parks. And Keio Plaza and Keisei Miramare are an hour or close to it from the gates, which is a long haul with tired children even if the room is cheap.
The Mitsui Garden Prana Tokyo Bay

- Typical price: around ¥24,000 (£125) a night for two
- Free shuttle: Yes, direct to the park terminals, turn-up (no booking)
- Shuttle time: about 15 to 20 minutes
- Rating: 8.6
- Partner Hotel
- CHECK AVAILABILITY
A safe family choice about 4 km out. The rooftop public bath is the real reason to book, ideal for soaking off a day of walking, and there’s a convenience store on site for late snack runs. As a Partner Hotel the bus is first-come, so on a busy morning head down early rather than count on a seat.
Hotel Emion Tokyo Bay

- Typical price: around ¥26,500 (£138) a night for two
- Free shuttle: Yes, turn-up (no booking)
- Shuttle time: about 15 minutes
- Rating: 8.9
- Partner Hotel
- CHECK AVAILABILITY
Emion’s biggest selling point is its natural hot-spring baths, a proper soak rather than the usual hotel tub, which is wonderful after a long park day. Family rooms are roomy and some come in Japanese style, if you want the experience. Two restaurants on site, Italian and Japanese, so you’re not hunting for dinner when everyone’s flagging.
TOP TIP! Are you landing into Haneda or Narita? I have reviewed the best transport options to get you into central Tokyo, how long they take, how much they cost and a step by step guide
Urayasu Brighton Hotel Tokyo Bay

- Typical price: around ¥26,000 (£135) a night for two
- Free shuttle: Yes, direct to both park terminals, turn-up
- Shuttle time: about 15 to 20 minutes
- Rating: 9.0
- Partner Hotel
- CHECK AVAILABILITY
The pick if you want a step up in comfort without going full resort price. Rooms are smarter than most on this list, there’s an indoor pool and sauna, and Shin-Urayasu Station is two minutes from the door, so getting into central Tokyo is easy. Dining options are diverse with Japanese and French.
Ibis Styles Tokyo Bay

- Typical price: around ¥16,500 (£86) a night for two
- Free shuttle: Yes, turn-up (no booking)
- Shuttle time: about 15 to 25 minutes
- Rating: 8.3
- CHECK AVAILABILITY
Good value for families watching the budget. The nautical-themed rooms are cheerful, the breakfast buffet does both Western and Japanese, and there’s a kids’ area in the lobby. One thing to know: the bus is first-come and it can fill up, so get there early.
Henn na Hotel Maihama

- Typical price: around ¥18,500 (£96) a night for two
- Free shuttle: Yes, to Maihama Station, the resort gateway. You can then get the Disney Monorail.
- Shuttle time: about 5 minutes
- Rating: 8.3
- CHECK AVAILABILITY
The most fun stay on the list and the closest to the parks. You’re checked in by a robot velociraptor, there’s a T-rex in the lobby and a little communication robot in every room. Something kids and big kids alike will enjoy. Rooms are clean and minimalist with not much in the way of extras, so book it for the novelty and the location, not the facilities. Great with kids.
La’Gent Hotel Tokyo Bay

- Typical price: around ¥18,500 (£96) a night for two
- Free shuttle: Yes, but the timetable shifts with park hours, so confirm times with the hotel
- Shuttle time: about 15 to 20 minutes
- Rating: 8.2
- CHECK AVAILABILITY
Budget-friendly and built with families in mind, with bunk-bed rooms the kids will like and a self-service laundrette that helps on a longer stay. Worth noting an exterior renovation is on 10 April to 15 July 2026; the hotel stays open as normal, but check if that’s when you’re travelling.
Oriental Hotel Tokyo Bay

- Typical price: around ¥32,500 (£169) a night for two
- Free shuttle: Yes, direct to the parks, turn-up
- Shuttle time: about 15 minutes
- Rating: 8.8
- Partner Hotel
- CHECK AVAILABILITY
A strong all-rounder connected to Shin-Urayasu Station. The reason to pick it over the other Partner hotels is its dining: Japanese, Chinese and a buffet on site, which is a relief if anyone in your party is a fussy eater. There’s a nursery and a kids’ playroom too.
Sotetsu Grand Fresa Ariake

- Typical price: around ¥19,500 (£101) a night for two
- Free shuttle: Yes, reservation required (book from two months ahead, by 10pm the day before)
- Shuttle time: about 30 to 40 minutes
- Rating: 8.3
- Good Neighbour
- CHECK AVAILABILITY
Sensible mid-budget option over in Ariake, handy if you’re pairing Disney with the shopping and Big Sight side of the bay. Rooms are compact but fine. Like all the Good Neighbour hotels, the shuttle needs booking and the seats are limited, so reserve as soon as your dates are set.
Keio Plaza Hotel Tokyo

- Typical price: around ¥42,500 (£221) a night for two
- Free shuttle: Yes, reservation required via the concierge
- Shuttle time: about 60 minutes
- Rating: 8.8
- Good Neighbour
- CHECK AVAILABILITY
The choice if you’d rather not change hotels: it’s in Shinjuku, so you can do Disney one day and central Tokyo the next from one base, with a seasonal sky pool and plenty of dining. The honest trade-off is the shuttle, around an hour each way, which is a long ride with tired kids. Pick it for the convenience of one base, or consider two hotels for your stay instead.
Hilton Tokyo Odaiba

- Typical price: around ¥32,500 (£169) a night for two
- Free shuttle: Yes, but only one trip per day, reserved via the front desk
- Shuttle time: about 35 to 45 minutes
- Rating: 8.2
- Good Neighbour
- CHECK AVAILABILITY
A comfortable bay-side hotel with rooms looking over Tokyo Bay and the Rainbow Bridge, well placed for Odaiba’s shops and museums. Read the shuttle line carefully though: it runs once a day, so it works far better if you’re treating this as an Odaiba stay with a Disney day bolted on than as a base for multiple back-and-forth park trips.
Tokyo Bay Ariake Washington Hotel

- Typical price: around ¥18,500 (£96) a night for two
- Free shuttle: Yes, reservation required (from one month ahead)
- Shuttle time: about 30 to 40 minutes
- Rating: 7.5
- Good Neighbour
- CHECK AVAILABILITY
A no-frills, lower-cost option near Big Sight. You get the essentials, free Wi-Fi, in-house laundry, a few places to eat, and family room layouts, without much beyond that. Fine if you only need a clean bed near a shuttle and want to spend your money in the parks rather than the hotel.
Daiichi Hotel Ryogoku

- Typical price: around ¥13,500 (£70) a night for two
- Free shuttle: Yes, reservation required (book in advance)
- Shuttle time: about 30 to 40 minutes
- Rating: 8.0
- Good Neighbour
- CHECK AVAILABILITY
The cheapest on the list and a clever pick if you want to mix Disney with sightseeing, sitting near the Sumida Aquarium and Tokyo Skytree. Rooms are spacious, several with city or river views, and there are in-room massages if your legs need it after the parks, which is a lovely touch.
Tobu Hotel Levant Tokyo

- Typical price: around ¥20,500 (£107) a night for two
- Free shuttle: Yes, reservation required (book in advance)
- Shuttle time: about 30 to 40 minutes
- Rating: 8.8
- Good Neighbour
- CHECK AVAILABILITY
The top-rated hotel here and a genuine family favourite, near Kinshicho Station with good links to both Disney and the rest of Tokyo. There’s a buffet breakfast and a restaurant with wide views, plus small touches like kids’ pyjamas and a play area.
Hotel East 21 Tokyo

- Typical price: around ¥22,000 (£114) a night for two
- Free shuttle: Yes, reservation required (from two months ahead, up to two days before)
- Shuttle time: about 30 minutes
- Rating: 8.4
- Good Neighbour
- CHECK AVAILABILITY
A quieter, slightly classic-feeling hotel with indoor and outdoor pools and a fitness centre, which is more than most on this list offer for downtime between park days. Dining covers Japanese, Chinese and European. Good if you want a bit of resort feel without the resort price.
Keisei Hotel Miramare

- Typical price: around ¥15,000 (£78) a night for two
- Free shuttle: Yes, reservation required (book in advance)
- Shuttle time: about 40 to 50 minutes
- Rating: 8.5
- Good Neighbour
- CHECK AVAILABILITY
Over on the Chiba side, near central Chiba’s shops and restaurants, with bright rooms and a buffet on site. It’s good value, but be conscious about the distance: the shuttle is among the longest here, so it suits travellers happy to trade a longer ride for a lower priced stay.
Hotel New Otani Makuhari

- Typical price: around ¥22,000 (£114) a night for two
- Free shuttle: Yes, reservation required (from two months ahead, by 6pm the day before)
- Shuttle time: about 25 to 35 minutes
- Rating: 8.4
- Good Neighbour
- CHECK AVAILABILITY
The most resort-like stay on the list, with gardens, space and elegant rooms, some with sea views, plus an outdoor pool and spa. A good pick if you want the parks by day and somewhere genuinely relaxing to come back to, rather than just a bed near a bus.
Map of hotels with shuttle to Disney
FAQ’s about Tokyo Disney hotels and the parks
While you can see the main attractions in one day, 2 days is recommended to fully experience Tokyo Disneysea or Disneyland without rushing. The park is large and often crowded, and having 2 days allows you to enjoy shows, parades, and attractions at a comfortable pace. It all depends on how you and your party feel about Disney!
No, the regular bus service to Tokyo Disneyland isn’t free, but all the hotels listed above include a free shuttle with your stay. If you’re staying somewhere without one, you can take a paid bus from the main Tokyo stations, or get the train to Maihama Station, which is right by the resort entrance.
Yes, Tokyo Disney Resort has several hotels it operates directly: the Disney Ambassador Hotel, the Tokyo Disneyland Hotel, Tokyo DisneySea Hotel MiraCosta, and the Tokyo Disney Celebration Hotel. There are also several Official and Partner hotels nearby, which aren’t run by Disney but offer their own perks for guests.
Yes, it’s possible with a “Park Hopper” ticket, but it’s not recommended. Both parks are massive with unique attractions, and trying to do both in one day would be extremely rushed. You’d miss many experiences and wouldn’t get full value from your tickets.
You’ve got a few options. Resellers like Klook are often a little cheaper than the gate, and that’s what I’d use (tickets here). Many Partner and Good Neighbour hotels sell package deals with tickets included.
If you only want an evening at the parks, Disney’s own cheaper passports are worth knowing about: the Weeknight Passport gets you in from 5pm on weekdays for around ¥4,500 to ¥6,200, while the Early Evening Passport runs from 3pm at weekends and holidays for around ¥6,500 to ¥8,700.
Whilst you are here, have you planned your full itinerary yet? Need data when you land, take a look at this guide to the best eSIM and SIM card options in Narita airport
Final thoughts when booking your hotel near Tokyo Disneyland Japan
So, back to splitting your stay, because it’s the thing I’d most want a first-timer to take from this. For two or more park days, do it: a hotel near Disney for the parks, then somewhere more central for the rest. Yes, you pack up and move once. You get far more out of the trip for it, more of the parks without the long evening commute, and two different parts of Tokyo to call home, which is a big part of what makes the city such a good place to visit.
The one time I’d skip it is a single park day. If Disney’s a one-day thing for you, the faff of changing hotels isn’t worth it, so pick one base and stay put.
On budget, staying closer to Disney and further from the centre is usually better value, so if money’s tight that part of the decision makes itself. And whichever way you go, a free shuttle takes the one real headache out of a Disney trip: getting back to bed at the end of a long, happy, exhausting day.







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