Bar in Tokyo, Japan
Punch Room
145ptsJapanese-Inflected Punch Format

About Punch Room
Positioned against Tokyo's serious craft-cocktail bars, Punch Room at The Tokyo Edition, Ginza takes a different route: a hotel bar built around the punch bowl tradition, reinterpreted through Japanese botanicals and seasonal ingredients. Named to the Tatler Best Bars Asia-Pacific 2025 list, it sits on the second floor of one of Ginza's newer luxury addresses, offering a quieter alternative to the neighbourhood's counter-focused drinking culture.
The Hotel Bar Reimagined: Punch Room in Ginza's Cocktail Ecosystem
Tokyo's serious drinking culture has long been organised around the standalone bar. Ginza alone holds a dense cluster of counter-driven rooms, from the methodical whisky service at Bar High Five to the botanist-bartender intensity of Bar Benfiddich. These are bars where the bartender's craft is the architecture of the evening, and the room itself is often secondary. Punch Room at The Tokyo Edition, Ginza represents a different model: the hotel bar executed with enough conviction to compete on the same shortlist as its standalone neighbours. Its inclusion in the Tatler Leading Bars Asia-Pacific 2025 list is the clearest signal that the gap between hotel drinking and specialist drinking in Tokyo has narrowed.
The bar occupies the second floor of The Tokyo Edition, Ginza, at 2-8-13 Ginza, Chuo-ku. Edition hotels as a brand sit in the design-forward tier of the Marriott portfolio, and the Ginza property carries that DNA into its bar program. Where many hotel bars in Tokyo function as lobby amenities, Punch Room is built around a specific conceptual premise: the punch, as a shared-bowl tradition with roots in colonial-era British drinking culture, reinterpreted through Japanese ingredients and technique. That narrowness of focus is what separates it from the catch-all hotel lounge format common across the city's five-star addresses.
What the Punch Format Actually Means at This Address
The punch bowl tradition predates the cocktail by roughly two centuries. At its core, it is a communal format: large-batch preparation, shared serving, and an emphasis on balance across spirit, citrus, sweetener, water, and spice rather than the precision individualism of a shaken or stirred single-serve drink. Most contemporary bars that engage with the format treat it as a novelty or a tableside theatrical moment. The more serious approach, which Punch Room represents, uses the format as a genuine structural constraint, pushing the bar team toward large-scale flavour calibration that a single-serve program doesn't demand.
Japanese ingredient layer adds a specific register to that tradition. Japan's depth in fermented and botanical ingredients, from yuzu and shiso through to sake-derived acids and local herbal distillates, maps onto the punch formula with more precision than most Western ingredient sets would allow. The result, in concept at least, is a program that isn't simply swapping British gin for Japanese gin but rethinking the underlying balance equations with a different ingredient vocabulary. For context on how Japanese bars outside Tokyo approach ingredient sourcing and local botanicals, Bar Nayuta in Osaka, Bee's Knees in Kyoto, and Lamp Bar in Nara each represent different local approaches to the same question.
Daytime and Evening: How the Room Changes
Editorial angle on Punch Room that matters most to a visitor making a booking decision is the difference between daytime and evening service. Hotel bars in Ginza during daylight hours operate in a quieter register. The foot traffic from the shopping corridor between Ginza and Higashi-Ginza feeds a lunch and mid-afternoon crowd that tends toward lighter drinking, tea service, and small plates, if the bar offers food adjacency from the hotel kitchen. The atmosphere in that window is closer to a European hotel salon than a Tokyo drinking establishment, and the pacing is unhurried.
By evening, particularly from 18:00 onward, the character shifts. Ginza's business dining culture generates a post-dinner drinking crowd, and The Edition's design positioning draws a younger, internationally mobile clientele that doesn't necessarily fit the older-guard Ginza bar prototype. This is when the punch format performs most naturally: the shared-bowl ritual has an inherent social logic that suits a table of four unwinding after a long dinner at one of Ginza's kaiseki rooms or tasting-menu addresses. The same format feels less necessary for a solo drinker at the counter, which is worth considering when planning how you'll use the room.
For comparison within Ginza's range, Bar Orchard Ginza and Bar Libre each sit in the neighbourhood's standalone tier, with formats better suited to solo or two-person visiting. Punch Room's communal logic makes it a stronger choice when the group dynamic is already in place.
Where It Sits in the Asia-Pacific Bar Conversation
Tatler's Leading Bars Asia-Pacific 2025 list positions Punch Room within a regional peer set rather than a purely Tokyo one. That matters because the hotel bar format, executed at this level, is more common across Hong Kong, Singapore, and Bangkok than it is in Tokyo, where the standalone room has traditionally held prestige. Tokyo's inclusion of a hotel bar on a regional list alongside bars from those cities reflects how the city's drinking culture is evolving, absorbing international format references without abandoning its own craft standards.
For reference points outside Japan, Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu operates in a comparable hotel-adjacent space, with a similarly focused program that has earned regional recognition. The pattern, a small, concept-led bar inside or attached to a design hotel, is becoming a credible alternative to the standalone model in several Pacific cities simultaneously.
Within Japan, the regional bar scenes worth tracking alongside Tokyo's include Yakoboku in Kumamoto and anchovy butter in Osaka, both of which demonstrate how Japan's bar culture has developed strong local identities outside the capital. Punch Room's Tokyo placement, and specifically its Ginza placement, means it operates at the leading end of that national conversation in terms of address and hotel infrastructure, even as the program itself stays conceptually narrow.
Planning Your Visit
Punch Room is on the second floor of The Tokyo Edition, Ginza, at 2-8-13 Ginza, Chuo-ku, Tokyo 104-0061. The hotel is accessible from Ginza Station on the Tokyo Metro Ginza, Marunouchi, and Hibiya lines. For groups of three or more planning to engage with the punch bowl format properly, an advance reservation through the hotel is the sensible approach, particularly on weekend evenings when Edition properties across Asia tend to run at capacity from 20:00 onward. Walk-in availability during weekday afternoons is more realistic, and the quieter daytime register of the room may suit visitors who want to assess the space before committing to a fuller evening. The hotel phone line is reachable at +81 3 6228 7400.
Punch Room's Tatler recognition places it inside a tier of Tokyo bars worth serious attention, but it is a different kind of evening than you'd spend at the counter-focused rooms elsewhere in Ginza. The program rewards visitors who arrive with a group, an appetite for the communal format, and some familiarity with what Japanese botanical ingredients actually contribute to a long, balanced drink. For broader context on where Punch Room fits within Tokyo's drinking and dining scene, our full Tokyo restaurants and bars guide maps the city's key addresses by neighbourhood and format. Similarly, Kyoto Tower Sando in Kyoto illustrates how Japan's hospitality sector is integrating bar programming into larger multi-use spaces, a format shift Punch Room's hotel context mirrors at a higher price point.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What drink is Punch Room famous for?
- The program is built around the punch bowl tradition, reimagined with Japanese botanicals and seasonal ingredients. Rather than a single signature cocktail, the format centres on large-batch, shared punches that draw on Japanese fermented and botanical ingredients, placing it in the Tatler Leading Bars Asia-Pacific 2025 list on the strength of that conceptual focus and execution.
- What's the defining thing about Punch Room?
- In a Tokyo bar scene dominated by standalone counter-format rooms, Punch Room is a hotel bar in Ginza that has earned regional recognition by taking a specific historical format, the communal punch bowl, seriously rather than using it as a decorative gesture. Its Tatler Asia-Pacific 2025 placement puts it in a peer set that cuts across city and country lines. Pricing reflects The Tokyo Edition's luxury positioning.
- Can I walk in to Punch Room?
- Walk-in access is more realistic during weekday daytime hours, when the room operates at a quieter pace. For evening visits, particularly on weekends, advance reservations through the hotel are advisable given the bar's Tatler recognition and the Edition brand's draw in Ginza. Contact the hotel directly at +81 3 6228 7400, or through the Edition Hotels website for the Ginza property.
Recognized By
More bars in Tokyo
- 8bit Cafe8bit Cafe in Shinjuku is Tokyo's retro gaming bar — a fun, low-pressure stop that works best as an early-evening warm-up rather than a serious cocktail destination. Walk-ins are easy and the crowd is casual and young. Go for the atmosphere, not the bar program, and plan to move on to somewhere like Bar Benfiddich for the serious drinking.
- A10A10 is a basement bar in Ebisu West, Shibuya — a neighbourhood that signals a drinks-serious crowd over a nightlife-first one. Booking difficulty is low, making it accessible for first-timers, but confirm capacity and hours directly before visiting. Best suited to small groups of two to four looking for a considered, low-noise drinking environment in one of Tokyo's more relaxed upscale pockets.
- Ahiru StoreAhiru Store is a relaxed neighbourhood wine bar in Tomigaya, Shibuya, suited to unhurried evenings and easy to book when busier Tokyo bars are full. The atmosphere stays calm and conversational, making it a practical choice for explorers who want a quieter, more residential side of Tokyo's drinking scene rather than a polished Ginza experience.
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