I just spent a month traveling in Japan and stayed at this hotel for the last ten days.It destroyed all the good impressions of Japan I had accumulated in the previous 20 days.Let me start with what it doesn't have:•There is no receptionist. If you ring the bell, a cold-faced boy will come down from upstairs. He lives here.•The checked luggage is placed in an unoccupied kitchen with no security measures.•No authentication.•No key card, two people share one key. Its website states: If the key is lost, a compensation of 20,000 yen will be required. If you need help opening the door due to lost or forgotten keys, an additional 2,000 yen will be charged.•There are no tables, chairs, refrigerators, kettles, charging cables, TVs, etc. in the room. We stayed in hotels with similar prices for the first 20 days in Japan, thinking that these facilities were necessary.•The toilet does not have a flushing function. This is the first time I have seen a toilet without a flushing function since coming to Japan.•The toilet lid does not have a slow-down function. This was the first time I was shocked when I closed the toilet lid since I came to Japan.•No pajamas, no face towels. Other hotels have it.•There are no replaceable bath towels. You need to ask the boy to ask for them. You can only ask for them once in two days.•No white supplies. The bath towels are not white. Neither are the sheets or covers. It can't be seen that it is clean and tidy.•The bathroom mirror does not have the heating and anti-fogging device found in other hotels, and the air conditioner does not have the function of adjusting the blowing angle.•No other hotel replaces toothbrushes, toothpaste, wooden combs, razors, tea bags, coffee bags, toothpicks, cotton swabs, toilet paper, etc. every day.•No room cleaning service. Do your own hygiene and take out the trash yourself. Other hotels must be cleaned every two days, but this hotel will not be cleaned even if you stay for ten days.•No vacuuming service. The boy told me to use the kitchen vacuum cleaner, a small cordless one that was already full of dust.•No washing machine or dryer. It should be said that there are all of them. In the dirty basement, there are other people's clothes that have been stored for an unknown period of time.Here’s what it has:•Have hair. There are hairs left by others everywhere, on the sheets, quilts, pillows, carpets, and in the bathroom.•There are mosquitoes. I didn’t get bitten by a mosquito for the first twenty days in Japan. In the next ten days, I was bitten twenty times. Maybe it's because the corridors and stairs are too dirty, and the interior is too dirty, which breeds mosquitoes.•There is dust. There was dust and hair on the bed frame and in the drawers under the bed. Seems to have never been cleaned.•Has slimy user manual. The slime on the plastic skin is disgusting.•Has Mucor albicans. The bottom of the small leather box containing the dental appliances is covered with white hair fungi.•There is Mucor black mold. The edges of the plastic shower curtain on the tub are covered with black hair fungus. The shower curtains in other hotels are clean white cloth.•There are stains on the wall, next to the switch.So why don't I check out and leave?•Its terms and conditions state that no cancellations are allowed and no refunds will be given if you don’t stay.•We have paid 119,520 yen and are reluctant to give up.How did you survive these ten days?•First ask boys to change dirty quilt covers and sheets. Then use wipes to clean up hair and stains yourself. Used a pack of alcohol wipes.•On the morning of the third day, after asking for two dark “new” bath towels from the boys, we never touched them again. Instead, we went to Muji to buy new quilt covers, sheets, and pillowcases. As well as bath towels and hand towels.•Clean up your own trash every day. Buy bottled water every day.•I spent half an hour cleaning the microwave, and the buildup inside had turned black. I also spent a few days gradually cleaning out the refrigerator. The fruits in the refrigerator were all moldy, and the shelf life of a piece of food stored in the freezer was written in 2019. This kitchen is where the boys eat. Every time I use the kitchen, I clean it first, wipe the table, and clean the stove.• To do laundry, go to the nearby 24-hour self-service laundry room.Summary: Don’t imagine that Japan is too good. I wonder how such a dirty hotel can pass the inspection of the health department? If the owner and staff of this hotel are Chinese, I'm sorry, I didn't say anything.