Panama Hotel and Tea House

Hotel · International District

Panama Hotel and Tea House

Hotel · International District

6

605 South Main St, Seattle, WA 98104

Photos

Panama Hotel and Tea House by null
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Panama Hotel and Tea House by Flickr user ikrichter (Creative Commons)
Panama Hotel and Tea House by Aty Trocious (Atlas Obscura User)
Panama Hotel and Tea House by Flickr user Joe Mabel (Creative Commons)
Panama Hotel and Tea House by matthucke (Atlas Obscura User)
Panama Hotel and Tea House by Flickr user Joe Mabel (Creative Commons)
Panama Hotel and Tea House by Flickr user Marc-Anthony Macon (Creative Commons)
Panama Hotel and Tea House by Aty Trocious (Atlas Obscura User)
Panama Hotel and Tea House by Flickr user pasa47 (Creative Commons)
Panama Hotel and Tea House by Wikimedia user Joe Mabel (Creative Commons)
Panama Hotel and Tea House by Aty Trocious (Atlas Obscura User)
Panama Hotel and Tea House by null
Panama Hotel and Tea House by null
Panama Hotel and Tea House by null
Panama Hotel and Tea House by null
Panama Hotel and Tea House by null
Panama Hotel and Tea House by null
Panama Hotel and Tea House by null
Panama Hotel and Tea House by null
Panama Hotel and Tea House by null
Panama Hotel and Tea House by null
Panama Hotel and Tea House by null
Panama Hotel and Tea House by null
Panama Hotel and Tea House by null
Panama Hotel and Tea House by null
Panama Hotel and Tea House by null
Panama Hotel and Tea House by null
Panama Hotel and Tea House by null
Panama Hotel and Tea House by null

Highlights

Historic hotel with preserved Japanese bathhouse and tea house  

Featured in Conde Nast Traveler
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605 South Main St, Seattle, WA 98104 Get directions

panamahotelseattle.net
@panamahotelseattle

Information

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605 South Main St, Seattle, WA 98104 Get directions

+1 206 223 9242
panamahotelseattle.net
@panamahotelseattle

Features

Last updated

Sep 7, 2025

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@onthegrid

On the Grid : Panama Hotel

"A bonafide national treasure built in 1910, the Panama Hotel is one of the oldest hotels in the area — home to one of two remaining traditional Japanese bathhouses in the country. Don't miss the glass floor near the back, you'll see artifacts left by Japanese-Americans in the basement undisturbed since 1942." - Shore

https://onthegrid.city/seattle/international-district/panama-hotel
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@atlasobscura

Celebrate Asian-American History With These Eateries and Food Businesses

"Seattle’s Panama Hotel may look like little more than a quaint bed and breakfast with the Pacific Northwest’s requisite tea and coffee shop in its lobby, but hidden within its floorboards is an aspect of America’s history that refuses to be buried. Built in 1910 by Seattle’s first Japanese-American architect, Sabro Ozasa, from the outset, the Panama Hotel served as a home to generations of new immigrants to the United States settling in the city’s bustling Japantown (Nihonmachi) District, as well as international travelers and offshore fishermen hailing from all over the Pacific Rim. Throughout the late 1930s, as the area grew and prospered, the Panama Hotel’s popularity was no exception. With tenants above and a Japanese bathhouse in the basement, the Panama Hotel rose to be the center of Nihonmachi’s cultural life, bolstered by a traditional Japanese bathhouse tucked in its basement—the restored version is on display, and remains the only sento in the United States. Everything changed, however, after the bombing of Pearl Harbor. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt ordered the forced relocation of Japanese Americans, and from 1942 to 1945, the U.S. government would force some 120,000 Japanese Americans to leave their homes. Many were incarcerated or placed into concentration camps. Today, a window on the floor of the restored tea shop provides a glimpse into the area where Seattle’s residents hid their personal possessions in hopes of retrieving them later. Many would never return. The hotel’s current owner, Jan Johnson, bought the hotel from original owner Takeshi Hori in 1985, and offers tours of these original, unclaimed belongings. Visitors walk away with a better understanding of Nihonmachi’s vital role in Seattle’s cultural development in the years before and since this dark period of American history.  Recent years have seen the Panama Hotel become a newfound destination for the literary crowd, drawn by its pivotal and poignant role in Jamie Ford’s 2009 novel Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet. The aforementioned belongings discovered in the hotel set the rest of the story into motion. Today, the Panama Hotel continues to operate as a functioning bed and breakfast, with each of its 101 rooms decorated to match a theme. All are welcome to step inside for a peek at the discarded possessions visible through the floorboards in its public-facing tea house in the lobby, which also serves excellent Japanese pastries." - ATLAS_OBSCURA

https://www.atlasobscura.com/lists/asian-american-restaurants-food-history
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@onthegrid

"Panama Hotel, International District by Shore. A bonafide national treasure built in 1910, the Panama Hotel is one of the oldest hotels in the area — home to one of two remaining traditional Japanese bathhouses in the country. Don't miss the glass floor near the back, you'll see artifacts left by Japanese-Americans in the basement undisturbed since 1942."

Seattle
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@cntraveler

These Century-Old Businesses Define Japantown in Seattle | Condé Nast Traveler

"The sun-bleached Douglas fir floors at the Panama Hotel and Tea House may be 111 years old, but they still support the customers who sit at tables sipping steaming mugs of nutty genmaicha. Below, in the property's basement, is a long-shuttered but marvelously preserved public bath. Its neat rows of wooden lockers and deep marble tubs made it indispensable during the early 20th century when few people had private baths."

https://www.cntraveler.com/story/these-century-old-businesses-define-seattles-japantown
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@postcardnews

Part café, part living museum, this tea room inside the century-old Panama Hotel pours sencha and hojicha beside artifacts from Seattle’s Japantown. Recognized as a National Historic Landmark, it’s frequently cited by travel editors for meaningful context and hospitality.

https://www.nps.gov/places/panama-hotel.htm
Tea Houses in Seattle (2025)
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