Hotel

JR Kyushu Hotel Nagasaki

Located beside Nagasaki Station and Amu Plaza Nagasaki, JR Kyushu Hotel Nagasaki gives guests a 3- to 5-minute East Exit walk plus convenient access to breakfast, shopping, rail services, and airport buses.

Mid-rangeAirport AccessShinkansen Access

Price range

Mid-range

Area highlights

Airport AccessShinkansen AccessShopping AreaBusiness FriendlyStation-Adjacent

Transport access and hotel guide

Overview

JR Kyushu Hotel Nagasaki is located beside Nagasaki Station and the Amu Plaza Nagasaki complex, making it an easy choice for travelers arriving by train, planning airport-bus transfers, or wanting shopping and dining close by. From the station's East Exit, the official walking route takes about three to five minutes, with reception reached from the Kamome Square side on the second floor.

This is a stay built around convenience rather than old-port atmosphere at the doorstep. In the Nagasaki Station Area, it keeps Shinkansen and JR access simple, while trams, buses, and taxis connect guests to the city's main sightseeing districts.

Rooms

The hotel has 144 rooms in double, twin, deluxe twin, and universal twin categories. Standard Double rooms are compact at 15 sq m, while larger twin rooms range from 25 to 28 sq m, with some able to accommodate a third guest on a sofa bed.

Rooms include Nagasaki-inspired design accents, writing desks, Simmons beds, Wi-Fi, wired LAN, and humidifying air purifiers. The setup is well suited to travelers who want a comfortable place to rest between sightseeing, rail travel, or work, rather than a resort-style stay.

Facilities

Facilities focus on everyday convenience. A self-service baggage area on the lobby floor helps before check-in or after checkout, and the sixth floor has a 24-hour coin laundry, vending machines, an ice machine, and a smoking booth.

Reception is on the second floor, so arrivals should follow the station-side route toward Kamome Square instead of looking only for a street-level lobby. Check-in starts at 2:00 pm, and check-out is by 11:00 am.

Dining

Breakfast is served at Umaya Nagasaki on the fifth floor of the Amu Plaza Nagasaki main building, directly connected by the hotel elevator. Hotel guests receive a Japanese or Western main dish with a half buffet featuring local Nagasaki ingredients.

For lunch and dinner, the Amu Plaza restaurant floor offers plenty of station-complex dining without a separate trip across town. The direct indoor connection is especially helpful in bad weather, with card-key access used along the hotel route during access hours.

Location and transport

Nagasaki Station is the key transport point here, bringing together Nishi Kyushu Shinkansen services, JR local trains, trams, buses, airport-bus access, shopping, and nearby hotel entrances in a compact area.

The tradeoff is that major sightseeing areas are not all just outside the door. Dejima, Chinatown, Glover Garden, Oura Church, Peace Park, and the Atomic Bomb Museum generally require a tram, bus, taxi, or a planned walk.

Airport access

Nagasaki Airport is reached by airport bus to the Nagasaki Station side of the city, rather than by direct rail or a hotel-door shuttle. From the station bus area, continue through the station-side route toward Kamome Square and the second-floor reception.

Why stay here

Choose JR Kyushu Hotel Nagasaki if smooth transport matters more than having the historic districts immediately outside. It is a strong fit for Shinkansen arrivals, airport-bus users, early train departures, and travelers who want meals and shopping close to the hotel.

Its appeal is the overall ease: a short walk from the station, direct access to Amu Plaza dining, practical room features, and straightforward connections around Nagasaki.

Good to know

Before arrival, check the East Exit and Kamome Square route, especially if you are carrying luggage. Parking is available through the Amu Plaza Nagasaki main building and new building parking lots, with hotel guest fees handled at the front desk.

Surrounding area

See how this area fits into the wider area for hotels, dining, and transport.

Last verified by Maria Fukuda on 01-Jul-2026.