← Top 20 Anniversary · Rank #7 · Kyoto

Why Aman Kyoto is #7 for anniversaries

Aman Kyoto ranks #7 on our 2026 list of the best anniversary hotels in the world. The case below explains why, the hotel itself, what it does specifically for milestone celebrations, and the alternatives we measured it against.

“Twenty-six suites and two villas across 32 acres of secret garden at the foot of Hidari Daimonji. The most secluded city Aman in the world, discovered through unmarked gates.”

The hotel itself

Twenty-six suites and pavilions across 80 acres of forest and gardens at the foot of Hidari Daimonji, in the Takagamine district north of central Kyoto. The most secluded city Aman in the world, discovered through unmarked gates.

"Twenty-six suites and two villas across 32 acres of secret garden at the foot of Hidari Daimonji. The most secluded city Aman in the world, discovered through unmarked gates."

Aman Kyoto opened on 1 November 2019 on a 32-hectare (80-acre) parcel in the Takagamine foothills of northern Kyoto, at the foot of Hidari Daimonji, the western of the two mountains where the Gozan no Okuribi fires are lit each August during Obon. The site comprises 72 acres of permanent moss-and-cedar forest and 8 acres of formal Japanese gardens originally laid out for a kimono-merchant's collection of textiles and paintings that was never built; Aman acquired the abandoned site in 2014 and commissioned Australian architect Kerry Hill (Aman Tokyo, Aman Sveti Stefan, the Datai Langkawi) to design a hotel that would integrate the existing gardens, mountain spring, and forest pathways. Hill died in August 2018, and the hotel opened a year later as one of his final completed projects, the most architecturally considered urban resort in the Aman portfolio and, by every reading, the most considered hotel arrival in Kyoto in a generation.

Aman Kyoto, interior Aman Kyoto, view

Why it works for an anniversary

Anniversary trips to great cities live or die on the dinner of the trip. The hotel must do the celebration without the city having to do the work, a private room in a Michelin restaurant inside the building, a bar where the right toast is poured, a turn-down service that knows tonight is the one. The cities that do this best, Paris, London, New York, Tokyo, Vienna, have grand-dame hotels measured in centuries, not decades.

An Aman is a particular kind of hotel. The architecture is local material, basalt in Bhutan, raw stone in Italy, bleached oak in New York, and the service philosophy refuses to perform. For an anniversary the case is structural: Aman's signature is suite-only inventory in many properties, deep-discount-free pricing, and the kind of pre-arrival communication that means the cake is on the bed before you ask. The brand exists to upgrade discreetly.

There are 24 guest rooms across four guest pavilions and two two-bedroom villas, 26 keys total. The pavilions, all single-storey blackened-cedar buildings set into the gardens at different elevations, are connected by stone paths and viewing platforms; each pavilion houses six guest rooms. The standard Suite runs to 70 square metres with a separate sitting area, a private terrace facing the forest, a deep stone soaking tub, and floor-to-ceiling windows facing the moss garden. The Takagamine Suite, the property's signature room, runs to 226 square metres with two bedrooms (one Western, one tatami), a private dining room with kitchen and wine cellar, and a private terrace overlooking the central pond. The two two-bedroom Villas, Heian and Hidari, are stand-alone buildings with their own gardens, private onsen, and two-bedroom configurations sized for multi-generational families. The interior register, by Hill, leans monastic-Japanese: hand-loomed beige textiles, charcoal-black timber floors, hand-shaped ceramics, and natural Hinoki cypress in every bathroom.

The Aman Kyoto Living Pavilion, the property's central public space, runs the breakfast-and-lunch programme with an open kitchen and views over the central pond. The Taka-an restaurant, set into a separate sub-pavilion, runs the property's signature multi-course Japanese kaiseki dinner programme under a chef trained at the two-Michelin-starred Sojiki Nakahigashi. The Sushi Bar Nama, opened in 2022, runs the property's intimate omakase counter, 8 seats only. The Aman Spa, set into the property's own bathing pavilion, runs the property's onsen circuit drawn from a local spring (one of the only true urban onsen in Kyoto, reactivated by Aman from a long-dormant traditional spring) plus six treatment rooms with the brand's signature programme. The hot spring pools, separate male and female, are the property's quietest hour at sunset.

Where it ranks against rivals

For a 2026 milestone anniversary at this level, the closest comparisons on our list are Aman Tokyo (#3), The Gritti Palace in Venice (#6), and The Connaught in London (#1). Aman Kyoto takes #7 for the quietest, most architectural anniversary of the group; for a city celebration Aman Tokyo or the Connaught may suit better. The full list below ranks all twenty.

Practical: getting in

Address: 1 Okitayama Washimine-cho, 大北山鷲峯町 北区 京都市 京都府 603-8458, Japan. Anniversary-suited categories, the upgraded suites, the rooms with the morning view, book six to twelve months ahead. The full review at the hotel page has current rates, the room categories worth paying up for, and the dining and spa programmes worth booking pre-arrival. Use our anniversary occasion page for the broader context, or the Kyoto city guide for what else to do while you’re there.

Read the full hotel review → More in Kyoto →

Other contenders

Sibling entries on the Top 20 Anniversary list with full editorial cases:

#1 · The Connaught · London#2 · Belmond Hotel Caruso · Ravello#3 · Aman Tokyo · Tokyo#6 · The Gritti Palace · Venice
View the full Top 20 Anniversary ranking →

Why this hotel works for an anniversary

Editorial · #7 on the Top 20 Anniversary Hotels 2026 list

Aman Kyoto ranks #7 for anniversaries because the 2019 opening on an 80-acre forested estate in northern Kyoto produced one of the most architecturally significant Japanese hotels of the past decade. The Kerry Hill Architects-designed pavilions, the natural onsen drawing on a spring on the site, and the intimate 24-room scale together define a Japanese-heritage anniversary stay.

For anniversary couples who want Kyoto at Aman's service standard, this is the address. The largest rooms open straight onto the forest, and The Living Pavilion by Aman runs the principal dining. The drawback is access: it is a 25-minute drive from central Kyoto, so this is a base for slow days, not for walking out to dinner. Most milestone anniversary trips pair Aman Kyoto with Aman Tokyo (3-4 nights each) for the urban-and-heritage Japanese itinerary. The 25-minute drive from central Kyoto to the property places guests close enough for daily temple visits but removed from the principal Kyoto tourist density.

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