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On the 45th floor of Tokyo Midtown, The Bar at the Ritz-Carlton Tokyo sits among Asia-Pacific's recognized hotel bar programs, earning a place on the Tatler Best Bars Asia-Pacific 2025 list. Bartender Kentaro Wada's signature approach to classic cocktails gives the program a distinct identity within the crowded field of Tokyo luxury hotel bars. The elevation, the city panorama, and the precision behind the counter make this a serious address.

Where Tokyo Sits at Its Highest
Hotel bars at altitude are a specific genre of drinking. The promise is panoramic, but the execution usually disappoints: the view carries the room, and the liquid in the glass arrives as an afterthought. Tokyo's luxury hotel bar circuit has spent years working against that reputation, and the 45th floor of Tokyo Midtown has become one of the addresses where the drink matters as much as the window. The Bar at the Ritz-Carlton Tokyo operates in that revised register, where the skyline is context rather than the full argument.
Akasaka's Midtown tower cluster sits between the corporate density of Roppongi and the quieter residential fabric of Minami-Azabu. That location places it inside Tokyo's high-end hotel corridor, where the Ritz-Carlton, Andaz, and a cluster of international brands compete for the same guest with different propositions. The Bar's position on this list is not determined by geography alone.
The Craft Behind the Counter
Tokyo's serious bar culture has historically concentrated in basement and ground-floor rooms in Ginza and Shinjuku. Bar High Five in Ginza represents one pole of that tradition: a compact, counter-led space where the bartender's technique is the undivided subject. Bar Benfiddich in Shinjuku occupies another position in that ecosystem, with a botanical and herb-forward program that draws a specific kind of drinker. Both operate on a small-room logic where distractions are minimal and concentration is high.
Hotel bars at altitude operate under different physics. The room is larger, the guest mix is broader, and the view competes with the glass at every moment. Executing a technically serious cocktail program inside that format requires a different kind of discipline. Kentaro Wada's presence at The Bar, and his recognition on the Tatler Leading Bars Asia-Pacific 2025 list, signals that The Bar is attempting exactly that. The Tatler list functions as a regional credential, positioning the program alongside hotel and standalone bars across a competitive Asia-Pacific field rather than only within the narrower Tokyo hotel subcategory.
The signature cocktail approach attributed to Wada follows the logic that has defined Tokyo's better cocktail programs over the past decade: start from classics, then modify through technique or local ingredient rather than through spectacle. That approach sits in contrast to the theatrical garnish and dry-ice aesthetic that defines some hotel bar programs across Southeast Asia. Tokyo's craft bar identity has generally resisted showmanship in favour of precision, and The Bar appears to carry that preference into a hotel setting.
Reading the Room Against Its Peers
Within Tokyo's hotel bar segment, The Bar sits alongside programs at properties like the Four Seasons Marunouchi and the Park Hyatt's New York Bar, which carries its own long-established altitude reputation after decades of cultural placement in the city's consciousness. The difference in positioning comes down to what the bar prioritizes: the Park Hyatt's 52nd-floor bar trades on accumulated cultural weight; The Bar's Tatler recognition in 2025 reads as a merit-based credential for the current program's quality rather than legacy.
Among standalone bars, comparisons with Bar Libre and Bar Orchard Ginza are instructive. Those addresses draw a largely local and industry-facing clientele; The Bar at the Ritz-Carlton draws an international hotel guest base alongside Tokyo residents who seek out the hotel bar format specifically. That mixed room is both the challenge and the opportunity: a program that works for both constituencies simultaneously is harder to build, and more durable when it succeeds.
Japan's broader bar culture provides useful context for anyone approaching The Bar from outside Tokyo. Bar Nayuta in Osaka and Lamp Bar in Nara represent the depth of Japan's non-Tokyo bar circuit, while Bee's Knees in Kyoto and Yakoboku in Kumamoto illustrate how the country's craft tradition extends well beyond the capital's hotel towers. Anchovy butter in Osaka Shi and Kyoto Tower Sando in Kyoto Shi operate at the intersection of food and drink programming that is reshaping how bars in Japan's secondary cities build their identity. Against that national backdrop, Tokyo's hotel bars occupy a specific tier: international in guest profile, high in price point, and now increasingly serious in program quality. Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu offers a regional comparison for how Pacific-facing hotel bar programs carry Japanese craft influence into non-Japanese settings, which clarifies what is distinctive about experiencing that craft at its source.
The Tokyo Midtown Setting
Tokyo Midtown as a complex skews toward quiet money rather than tourist density. The Suntory Museum of Art occupies the lower floors; the retail component runs toward established Japanese brands rather than fast luxury. At night, the tower's upper floors shed the daytime business traffic and the bar becomes one of the district's primary reasons to be at altitude in Akasaka rather than further south in Roppongi or further east in Ginza. That shift in evening character matters for how the bar reads: it is less tourist-facing than its address might suggest and more embedded in the rhythms of the city's after-work and late-dinner circuits.
For a full orientation to Tokyo's eating and drinking options across price points and neighborhoods, the EP Club Tokyo guide maps the city's current scene with the same critical framework applied here.
Know Before You Go
- Location: 45th floor, Tokyo Midtown Tower, 9-7-1 Akasaka, Minato-ku, Tokyo
- Recognition: Tatler Leading Bars Asia-Pacific 2025
- Lead bartender: Kentaro Wada (signature cocktail program)
- Access: Tokyo Midtown is directly connected to Roppongi Station (Hibiya and Toei Oedo lines)
- Booking: Contact via the Ritz-Carlton Tokyo directly; hotel bar reservations in Tokyo's luxury tier are advisable for weekend evenings
- Website: bar.ritzcarltontokyo.com
- Phone: +81-3-6434-8711
Just the Basics
Comparable venues for orientation, based on our database fields.
| Venue | Notes | Price |
|---|---|---|
| The Bar | This venue | |
| Bar Benfiddich | ||
| Bulgari Ginza Bar | ||
| Star Bar Ginza | ||
| The Bellwood | ||
| Tender Bar |
At a Glance
- Elegant
- Sophisticated
- Date Night
- Late Night
- Special Occasion
- Rooftop
- Panoramic View
- Hotel Bar
- Seated Bar
- Lounge Seating
- Classic Cocktails
- Whiskey
- Skyline
Clean, beautiful atmosphere with breathtaking city views, dramatic lighting, and an elegant hotel bar setting.














