Most travelers coming to Tokyo start with the same assumption: book a hotel, keep it simple, and move on. And to be fair, that works—especially for short trips. Hotels are convenient, predictable, and everywhere. But that logic starts to fall apart the moment your trip gets longer. What happens when you’re not staying for three nights… but for three weeks or even a full month? This is where the conversation shifts—and where a place like Nana House Ekoda enters the picture in a completely different way.
First, let’s clear something up: Nana House Ekoda isn’t competing with hotels on a nightly basis. It’s not designed for short-term stays at all. Instead, it’s available as a monthly rental, with a minimum stay of 30 days.
That alone changes everything.
You’re no longer choosing between two places to sleep. You’re choosing between:
temporary accommodation, and
a place you can actually live in
Anyone who has stayed in a Tokyo hotel knows the reality—rooms are compact. Efficient, yes. Comfortable, mostly. But built for short-term use.
A typical hotel room offers just enough space to rest, store a suitcase, and recharge before heading out again. It’s designed around the idea that you won’t be inside for long.
Now stretch that experience over 30 days.
Suddenly, the limitations become more obvious:
limited storage
no real separation between sleeping and living space
no kitchen
no room to fully unpack and settle in
It starts to feel less like a base… and more like a holding area.
By contrast, Nana House Ekoda offers around 51 square meters of space, with multiple bedrooms, a living area, a kitchen, and laundry facilities. The difference isn’t just size—it’s function. You can cook your own meals, do your laundry on your own schedule, and move around without constantly adjusting to a confined space.
In other words, you’re not just staying—you’re living.
Now let’s talk about cost, because this is where the gap becomes hard to ignore.
A mid-range hotel in Tokyo might cost around ¥10,000 per night per person. For a short trip, that’s manageable. But over a full month, the numbers add up quickly.
¥10,000 × 30 nights = ¥300,000 per person
And that’s a conservative estimate.
Now compare that with a monthly rental like Nana House Ekoda:
Around ¥300,000 per month total
If that cost is shared among even three or four people, the difference becomes dramatic:
¥75,000–¥100,000 per person per month
You’re looking at a completely different level of affordability—not because it’s “cheap,” but because it’s structured for long-term use.
Hotels are optimized for short stays. The pricing, the layout, the services—they all assume you’re coming and going quickly.
But extend that stay, and the model starts to show its limits.
You’re paying a premium:
to eat every meal outside
to live out of a suitcase
to function in a space that was never meant for long-term living
At some point, convenience stops being convenient.
If your trip to Tokyo is short—two, three, even five nights—a hotel is still the easiest choice. No setup, no planning, no responsibilities.
But if you’re staying for a month or longer, the equation changes completely.
A place like Nana House Ekoda offers:
more space
lower cost per person
and a living experience that actually matches the length of your stay
And that’s the key point: the longer you stay, the more important it becomes to choose a place designed for living—not just sleeping.
Because at some point, travel stops being about where you visit…
…and starts being about how you live while you’re there.
If you’re still exploring places to stay in Tokyo, you might want to take a look at Nana House. We offer both short-term and long-term stays in quiet, livable neighborhoods like Sakae-cho, and Nerima.
Nana House Sakae-cho
Nana House Nerima
Browse monthly rental properties → tokyotravel.jp/room/
Check your dates → tokyotravel.jp/calendar/