
Nest Hotel Naha Kumoji in Okinawa (Image: Google)
Activia Properties is buying a hotel in Okinawa’s prefectural capital of Naha for JPY 5.5 billion ($35 million), giving the Tokyu Land-sponsored REIT a foothold in one of Japan’s top resort markets as tourism demand on the island continues to outpace the broader inbound market.
The Tokyo-listed trust said Tuesday that it had agreed to acquire the 120-key Nest Hotel Naha Kumoji from Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Panasonic Finance, with the deal scheduled to close Friday and to be funded with cash on hand, according to a stock exchange filing.
The acquisition comes after foreign visitor arrivals in Japan eased 5.5 percent year-on-year to 3,692,200 in April, per official statistics, even as the month marked the strongest inbound tally so far this year. Okinawa, meanwhile, recorded 905,500 tourist arrivals last month — up 2.6 percent from a year earlier and marking a record high for April — as domestic arrivals rose 3.9 percent to 645,300, offsetting a 0.6 percent dip in foreign visitors to 260,200.
“The property has strong potential not only as a base for sightseeing in Naha City but also for broader regional tourism,” the REIT’s manager said in the filing.
Gateway Exposure
The seller, Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Panasonic Finance, is a leasing and finance firm backed by Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Bank and Panasonic Holdings and is not connected to Activia or sponsor Tokyu Land. It previously sold the Tokyu Plaza Ginza mall to Gaw Capital Partners and Patience Capital Group for $983 million in Asia Pacific’s top retail property deal of 2025.

Activia Properties executive director Manabu Kamikawara (Image: Activia)
Activia’s agreed price for Nest Hotel Naha Kumoji represents a 4.9 percent discount to the asset’s appraisal value and equates to JPY 45.8 million ($291,000) per key. The 2021-vintage property is leased to a single tenant and is expected to generate annual rent of JPY 264 million and net operating income of JPY 247 million, implying a 4.5 percent NOI yield.
Located at 2-22-5 Kumoji in Naha, the 11-storey hotel is a four-minute walk from Miebashi station of the Okinawa Urban Monorail and within walking distance of Kokusai Dori, a major shopping and entertainment district. The nearby Tomari Wharf ferry terminal provides a gateway to Okinawa’s surrounding islands and an exchange hub with destinations like Taiwan, giving the asset exposure to both domestic leisure travel and international tourism demand.
The property offers rooms ranging from 19 to 29 square metres (205 to 312 square feet), with some units able to be connected for groups of four or more. The building’s lease structure combines minimum guaranteed rent with variable rent, giving Activia a base level of income while letting the REIT capture potential upside from operating performance, the manager said.
Nest Network
The hotel is operated by Nest Hotel Japan Corporation, which runs four properties in Naha, giving the group local scale and knowledge of area demand patterns.
The Nest brand sits in Japan’s midscale-to-limited-service segment, with the Kumoji property featuring compact room sizes, group-friendly configurations and access to transit, tourism and ferry links, rather than resort-style facilities.
For Activia, the acquisition extends a portfolio traditionally anchored by Tokyo office and urban retail assets into a hotel property supported by Okinawa’s recovering tourism market. The buy forms part of an asset replacement strategy being carried out alongside the trust’s planned sale of Kobe Kyu Kyoryuchi 25Bankan, a Kobe retail-and-hotel property being divested in four stages for a total of JPY 26.3 billion.
Activia announced the Kobe disposition in January, saying the sale would reinforce future portfolio profitability and free proceeds for acquisitions after the property was agreed at a price exceeding both book value and appraisal value.
Following completion of the Nest Hotel acquisition and the first stage of the Kobe sale, Activia’s portfolio will comprise interests in 46 properties with a total acquisition value of JPY 542.1 billion ($3.4 billion).
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