
Hotels had been meeting for decades to exchange insider information regarding occupancy rates and future pricing projections.
If you were putting together a who’s who of famous fancy hotels in Tokyo, you’d have to start with the Imperial Hotel. The Hotel New Otani, Okura Tokyo, and Hyatt Regency Tokyo would also make the list, as they’re all long-established hotels providers of accommodation for travelers craving class and comfort while staying in the city center.
But it turs out there’s something less appealing that those hotels have in common too, which is that they’ve been warned by Japan’s Fair Trade Commission that something they’d been doing for a very long time could be considered a price-fixing antitrust violation.
The Fair Trade Commission has discovered that representatives from 15 Tokyo hotels with different ownerships had been regularly meeting on a monthly basis to exchange information including their respective hotel occupancy rates, average room fees charged, and projections regarding future pricing changes. Referred to by the hotels as “FR (front reservation) meetings,” the practice had been going on for decades, the Fair Trade Commission discovered.
The Fair Trade Commission’s investigation has not found any concrete evidence of outright collusion, such as the hotels collectively agreeing to raise prices simultaneously to orchestrate a shortage of lower-priced alternatives. However, the investigators believe it is possible that the insider information provided at the meetings regarding competitors’ current and projected business conditions could have influenced pricing decisions at other hotels, and that the meetings could possibly be construed as the members forming a price-fixing cartel. The hotels have been warned to cease the practice, and have done so.
The complete list of hotels to receive the warning consists of the Imperial Hotel, Hotel New Otani, Okura Tokyo, Hyatt Regency Tokyo, Hotel Metropolitan, Keio Plaza Hotel, Cerulean Tower Tokyu Hotel, Hotel Chinzanzo Tokyo, Asakusa View Hotel, Palace Hotel Tokyo, Royal Park Hotel, Dai Ichi Hotel Tokyo, Prince Park Tower Tokyo, Grand Nikko Hotel Daiba, and Sheraton Miyako Hotel Tokyo.
For their part, the hotels claim that there was no collusive intent behind the meetings. “Although the actions pointed out [by the Fair Trade Commission] were not done with the intent of unfairly restricting [competition], we will continue to fully cooperate with the investigation,” said a spokesperson for the Imperial Hotel, which says it voluntarily withdrew from the monthly meetings last August after it was determined that they could constitute a violation of antitrust laws. A representative for the Hyatt, which stopped attending the meetings last September, said “Our purpose in attending the meetings was not to obtain information to be used in setting our prices, but to learn about the overall state of operations at other companies’ hotels, such as the ratio of smoking and non-smoking rooms or the introduction of cleaning robots.”
Considering, though, that the meetings were called “forward reservation meetings,” not “smoking meetings” or “robot meetings,” it seems obvious that data about reservations, such as the number and prices of room bookings, was seen by members as the key information that was to be exchanged. With the negative effects the pandemic had on travel now completely over and Japan in the middle of its largest travel boom ever (there were 650 million nights of hotel stays in Japan last year, the largest number in the country’s history), and hotel prices continuing to rise higher and higher, price-fixing isn’t going to be viewed with much sympathy, and hopefully ending the meetings will help keep competition honest and prices for travelers fair.
Source: NHK News Web, Yomiuri Shimbun via Livedoor News
Top image: Pakutaso
● Want to hear about SoraNews24’s latest articles as soon as they’re published? Follow us on Facebook and Twitter!

Tokyo’s famous Lost in Translation hotel is closed
Low price and low privacy as we share a room with a single stranger at Tokyo hotel
Ultra-cheap, convenient Tokyo hotel is a great place to stay…if you pay extra for earplugs
All-you-can-eat sashimi from Tokyo’s fish market, convenient location make this budget hotel great
Japanese beef bowl chain Sukiya’s 2026 Smile Box lucky bag basically pays for itself
Japanese airlines offer discounted fares to international tourists
Starbucks Japan ready to get Year of the Horse started with adorable drinkware and plushies【Pics】
Japan Airlines is giving away free domestic flights to international tourists
7 great places to see Mt. Fuji from without having to climb it
Serpentine Winnie the Pooh Year of the Snake plushies, Mickey and Baymax daruma arrive in Japan
We go behind the scenes at Japan Airlines’ in-flight meal factory【Photos】
Here are the top ten foodie factory tours for the fall throughout Japan
“Deflowering” services for virgin women are now a thing in Japan, apparently
Haunted hospital near Mt Fuji re-opens after renovation at Fuji-Q Highland, and it’s terrifying
Cyberpunk anime meets traditional culture in Ghost in the Shell gold leaf Japanese changing screens
Hayao Miyazaki says Happy New Year to Studio Ghibli fans with new art for Year of the Horse
Hello Kitty Choco Egg figures are an adorable trip through three periods of Japanese pop culture【Pics】
We found possibly the quietest Japanese-style hotel in Tokyo’s bustling Shinjuku district
7-Eleven Japan’s ramen-cooking robot whipped us up a bowl of noodles【Taste test】
Sumo Sanrio! Hello Kitty and pals team up with Japan Sumo Association for new merch【Pics】
Japan’s oldest largetooth sawfish in captivity back on display in Mie Prefecture
More Than a Capsule Stay: Why Solo Travelers Choose “global cabin Yokohama Chinatown”
7-Eleven Japan starts new temporary luggage storage service in over 300 branches
Disillusionment at Tsukiji’s tourist-target prices led us to a great ramen restaurant in Tokyo
Starbucks teams up with 166-year-old Kyoto doll maker for Year of the Horse decorations【Photos】
Tokyo considering law requiring more trash cans following litter increase in heavily touristed area
Tokyo’s Tsukiji sushi neighborhood asks tour groups to stay away for the rest of the month
Tokyo event lets you travel back in time, for free, to celebrate 100 years since Showa era start
Sanrio theme park in Japan announces plans to expand into a Sanrio resort
Japan may add Japanese language proficiency, lifestyle classes to permanent foreign resident requirements
Stamina-destroying “Paralysis Noodles” are Tokyo’s newest over-the-top ramen innovation
Survey asks foreign tourists what bothered them in Japan, more than half gave same answer
Japan’s human washing machines will go on sale to general public, demos to be held in Tokyo
Japan’s deadliest food claims more victims, but why do people keep eating it for New Year’s?
We deeply regret going into this tunnel on our walk in the mountains of Japan
Studio Ghibli releases Kodama forest spirits from Princess Mononoke to light up your home
Major Japanese hotel chain says reservations via overseas booking sites may not be valid
Put sesame oil in your coffee? Japanese maker says it’s the best way to start your day【Taste test】
No more using real katana for tourism activities, Japan’s National Police Agency says
Starbucks Japan reveals new sakura drinkware collection, inspired by evening cherry blossoms
Updated cherry blossom forecast shows extra-long sakura season for Japan this year
Leave a Reply