Most guys pick a course by feel. I pick it with a calculator. And the price sheet at One More Okusama Shinjuku is one of those rare ones where doing the arithmetic actually changes the answer.
This isn't my first time through this shop — it's a Kabukicho okusama (married-women) delivery health, dispatch to your hotel, running 10:00 to 5:00 with phone reception opening at 9. What was new was the timing: a Wednesday, mid-afternoon, that dead pocket between a lunch meeting and a dinner one where a New York work trip either evaporates into email or turns into something you'll remember. I chose the second thing.
The Price Sheet, Read Honestly
Here's the ladder, as posted the day I called:
| Course | Price |
|---|---|
| 60 min | ¥11,000 |
| 90 min | ¥13,000 |
| 120 min | ¥17,000 |
| 150 min | ¥21,000 |
| 180 min | ¥26,000 |
Look at it as a first-timer and 60 minutes for ¥11,000 looks like the sensible entry. Look at it the way I do and the 60 is the trap. You pay ¥11,000, and the moment you want a single premium option, you're paying extra on top — and by then your ¥11,000 course isn't an ¥11,000 course anymore.
Because the real lever here is a line most people skim past: at 90 minutes and up, the high-price options — AF included — are free. Not discounted. Free, rolled into the course.
So run it. The 90 is ¥13,000 with everything included. The jump to 120 is only ¥4,000 more for a full extra half hour, on a course where the options already cost you nothing. That ¥4,000-for-30-minutes marginal rate is the cheapest time on the whole sheet. The 60 gives you the worst minutes-per-yen; the 120 gives you the best. That's not a hunch, that's the ladder telling on itself.
I booked the 120.
The Desk Passed the Only Test That Matters
I've said before that I judge a shop's front desk on one thing: do they steer me, or do they listen. A chain okusama operation can go either way — some of them run a script that funnels every caller toward whichever girl they need to move that hour.
This desk listened. I gave them the shape of what I wanted — composed, unhurried, someone who'd treat 120 minutes as a stretch of time rather than a checklist — and they came back with two names and one honest sentence about each. No overselling. When I confirmed the 120, the guy didn't upsell me to the 150. That restraint is worth noting; a shop confident in its own value doesn't need to squeeze the last course tier out of you.
Why the Extra Thirty Minutes Was the Whole Point
Dispatch to the hotel was quick — the afternoon advantage, exactly as advertised. The woman who arrived carried the okusama register this brand trades on: settled, warm without performing warmth, the kind of presence that doesn't need to fill silence.
And this is where the 120 justified itself, not on the price sheet but in the room. A 60-minute session is a transaction with a clock hanging over it; you're both aware of the meter the whole way through. Thirty extra minutes changes the physics. The front half stopped feeling like a countdown. There was room for actual conversation — where I was from, why New Yorkers always seem to be in Tokyo on business, the small unhurried talk that an experienced woman turns into something that reads as genuine rather than billed. The service, when it came, was unrushed precisely because the time budget wasn't tight.
That's the thing the calculator can't show you and the room can: the free options are nice, but the real product of the longer course is the absence of pressure.
The Verdict
| Item | Rating |
|---|---|
| Phone reception | ★★★★★ |
| Value of the course ladder | ★★★★★ |
| Dispatch speed (afternoon) | ★★★★★ |
| Composure of the girl | ★★★★☆ |
| Sense of being unhurried | ★★★★★ |
| Likelihood of return | High |
If you take one thing from this: at One More Okusama Shinjuku, don't default to the cheapest course. Read the ladder. The 90-and-up free-options line quietly makes the 120 the smartest buy on the sheet, and the extra thirty minutes buys you the one thing this business usually can't sell — the feeling that nobody's watching the clock.
Related info: More adult-entertainment coverage for this district is gathered on the area page. And if you're on the operator side researching how these shops advertise and pull in customers, FAP — How to Choose and Compare Delivery Health Ads is worth a read.