Jump to:
It’s almost impossible to keep up with Tokyo’s progress: a city that is ever building, updating and innovating. As the neon façades grow higher, the temples and parks are carefully respected, maintaining quiet refuges within the city. The latest trends and fashions can be found in quirky cafés and pop-culture clothing, while centuries-old rituals are still valued in the training halls of the sumo and under the tiered roofs of Tokyo’s tranquil shrines.
Japan specialist RoryI’ve never been anywhere else with such contrasts. Delicate temples stand next to earthquake-proof skyscrapers and peaceful gardens sit aside 24-hour markets.
Things to see and do in Tokyo
Wander through the Imperial Palace Gardens
As the main residence of the Emperor of Japan, the Imperial Palace is closed to visitors, but it’s possible to wander the palace’s East Gardens. The gardens protect the remains of Edo Castle, the seat of Japan’s rulers until 1888, when the Imperial Palace was built. None of the main buildings are left standing, but you can still explore the moat, entrance gates and the city wall, which was constructed of huge stones.
Pathways wind through manicured lawns, overhung with carefully trimmed pine and maple trees, and past a small tea plantation and a series of ponds topped with waterlilies. Visit in March and you’ll find the flowerbeds in bloom. Toward the middle of the park lies a huge platform — the foundations of the castle’s tower — which you can climb for views across the lawns.
Shop at Ginza shopping district
Attracting shoppers from all over the world, Tokyo’s Ginza shopping district contains some of the most expensive real estate in Japan. Brands such as Chanel, Dior and Louis Vuitton boast gleaming flagship stores alongside extensive shopping malls and cafés. Sitting among the luxury goods retailers, you’ll find a selection of specialist and quintessentially Japanese shops from vintage kimono sellers to artisan chocolate makers.
Natsuno sells more than 2,500 types of chopsticks while the bookshop Morioka Shoten chooses to sell only one novel a week. Hello Kitty’s first store can be found here as well as comic shops crammed with children and adults alike. To try a popular mid-shopping treat, stop at one of the many coffee shops and order an anpan — a bun stuffed with sweet red-bean paste.
Soak up Shinjuku’s nightlife
Referred to locally as ‘the city within the city’, Shinjuku is Tokyo’s buzzing commerce hub, an ideal spot to head to after a day’s exploration. Skyscrapers, shopping malls and contemporary hotels are crammed in among narrow streets lined with tiny eateries, karaoke bars and red-light establishments.
Evening is when Shinjuku becomes particularly animated, pulsing with flashing neon signs and music. The Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building towers over it all. From the observatory deck on the 45th floor, you can see right across the district. Back on the ground, there are fashionable wine bars to try, or head to Golden Gai (Golden District) for its compact collection of bars and restaurants.
Watch the street fashion in Harajuku
Since the 1970s, western Tokyo’s Harajuku district has become a hive of Japanese youth culture and fashion. Tiny, independent shops line the streets, crammed with a bewildering array of clothes. Takeshita-Dori Street is the focal point, where shops sell kitsch cartoon accessories, beauty parlours dye hair shades of neon and a bespoke fairy-wing maker has set up business.
Visit on a Sunday and you’ll find the street turned into a parade ground for aficionados of Japanese street fashion to show off their style. The carefully curated outfits are emblematic of a range of subcultures from doll-like Lolita girls to leather-clad Gothic styles. The most theatrical garb is cosplay: costumes based on Japanese cartoon characters.
Visit Sensoji Temple
In a city full of temples, Sensoji is where it all began. Legend dictates that two fishermen caught a small gold Buddha in their nets and built a temple on the site to house it. Over the following years, the temple gained stature, with the city of Tokyo slowly swelling around it. Record has it that the temple was founded in 645 AD.
On entering through the Kaminarimon Gate, you’ll find that the temple is now an impressive complex of halls and gardens. Many of the halls are relatively modern, having been rebuilt after heavy bombing during World War II. The bright stalls of mementoes and trinkets may look like a modern addition, but souvenir vendors have been selling to pilgrims within the temple since the 18th century. A popular tradition is to visit the incense burners of the Bentendo Shrine and waft the scented wisps of smoke over any aches and pains.
Join the crowd at Shibuya pedestrian crossing
At one of the world’s busiest intersections, in front of the entrance to Tokyo’s Shibuya Station, ten lanes of traffic and five crossroads converge under the relentless flashing of neon signs. With each change of the lights, more than 1,000 people surge forward, gilding seamlessly past one another in a minute of co-ordinated chaos.
Known by local people as ‘the scramble’, the spectacle is particularly dramatic on a Friday or Saturday night when the streets are thick with crowds dressed in their evening finery. Once the last train of the night has departed, the crossing becomes eerily deserted.
Appreciate the peace at Meiji Shrine
After the death of Emperor Meiji in 1912 and his wife in 1914, 100,000 trees were donated from across Japan to plant a pocket of forest in west Tokyo. At its heart, the Meiji Shrine was built in the imperial couple’s memory and completed in 1920.
Wandering this green space, with its wide, tree-lined paths and peaceful benches, makes a refreshing change of pace to the city beyond. The 12 m (40 feet) high torii arches at the entrance to the shrine complex mark the point at which you must leave everyday life behind as you pass into a sacred space.
As part of their visit, many choose to write a Kiganbun — a letter to the deities, usually accompanied by a donation and posted in one of the many post boxes within the shrine. Wishes are also written down, on wooden prayer plaques, and hung on the trees. The shrine is a popular wedding venue and you might catch a wedding procession with the bride and groom sheltered under a red umbrella.
Take a night photography tour
A professional local photographer will guide you through Tokyo’s brightly lit nightscapes and show you how to use a tripod and long exposures to your advantage to capture the neon, fast-moving traffic and crowds of people on the go. Your photographer’s intimate knowledge of the city will lead you to less photographed parts of the city as well as helping you find unusual angles to view the city’s better-known night scenes of Shibuya and Shinjuku.
Attend a sumo tournament or training ground
Originally a practice to entertain the Shinto faith’s deities, sumo wrestling is now a national sport. Three fifteen-day tournaments are held in Tokyo each year in the Ryōgoku Kokugikan, the national sumo stadium. Bouts usually last only a few seconds; the first wrestler to touch the floor or be thrown out of the ring loses the match. The tension mounts throughout the day of competition, culminating in the hard-fought highest ranking bouts in the early evening. Tickets for better positioned seats or boxes are always bought in advance, bench seats or any unsold spaces are purchased on the door.
If you're in Tokyo out of tournament time, you can visit a sumo training ‘stable’. Wrestlers live in these communal stables, their daily lives running to highly regimented schedules. During your tour, your guide will explain the complex rituals surrounding the ancient sport, and you'll hopefully glimpse a morning practice session. For lunch, your guide will invite you to try chanko nabe — a traditional sumo midday meal. Deliberately high in protein, it’s a chicken broth packed with chicken, tofu and fish.
Learn the basics of samurai fighting
Tetsuro Shimaguchi and his team of Kamui — samurai sword artists — teach instruction on how to wield a samurai sword. A respected master of his art, Shimaguchi is well-known for his film work, choreographing fight scenes in a number of films including Quentin Tarantino’s Kill Bill: Volume One.
On entering the dojo (practice room) you start to learn some basic movements before advancing to combine them into a sequence. Learning to draw and deftly swing your sword are important aspects of the training, as well as practising your stance. Your instructors will then demonstrate the techniques at full speed by performing an impressive choreographed sword fight.
Best time to visit Tokyo
Japan has four clear seasons. In Tokyo, September to November, and March through to the beginning of May are the best times to travel given the minimal rain and comfortable temperatures. These are also the busiest periods, so we recommend booking well in advance. Travel outside this time is possible, but Tokyo can experience heavy snowfall from December to February, and the hot and humid climate can make travel uncomfortable from May to August.
Festivals, events and seasonal reasons to visit
- The Sanja Matsuri, translated as the Three Shrine Festival, celebrates the three men who created Tokyo’s oldest and most important shrine, the Asakusa Shrine, which sits within the Sensoji Temple. Held on the third full weekend in May, the event culminates in a parade of shrines carried through the streets, followed by musicians and traditionally dressed dancers.
- Between the skyscrapers and shopping malls, there are still enough green spaces to show off Japan’s seasonal hues. Candyfloss-pink cherry blossom can be seen for a brief period toward the end of March. Visit in November to see the Japanese maples turning ever deeper shades of red.
who's been there
-
01993 838 92501993 838 210
- Make an enquiry
Suggested itineraries featuring Tokyo
Our itineraries will give you suggestions for what is possible when you travel in Tokyo, and they showcase routes we know work particularly well. Treat them as inspiration, because your trip will be created uniquely by one of our specialists.
Places near Tokyo
- Kamakura 28 miles away
- Hakone & Mount Fuji 53 miles away
- Izu Peninsula 71 miles away
- Nikko 72 miles away
- Yudanaka 105 miles away
- Matsumoto 108 miles away
- The Japanese Alps 114 miles away
- Tsumago 122 miles away
- Kamikochi 123 miles away
- Hakuba 135 miles away
- Takayama 144 miles away
- Tateyama 154 miles away
- Shirakawago 166 miles away
- Kanazawa 185 miles away
- Noto Peninsula 186 miles away
- Matsushima 198 miles away
- Dewa-sanzan 199 miles away
- Kyoto 230 miles away
- Tohoku 235 miles away
- Nara 235 miles away
- Osaka 250 miles away
- Mount Koya 258 miles away
- Kakunodate 274 miles away
- Kinosaki Onsen 278 miles away
- Tazawako 283 miles away
- Nyuto Onsen 288 miles away
Photos of Tokyo
Our expert guides to exploring Tokyo
Written by our specialists from their own experiences of visiting Tokyo, these guides will help you make the most of your time there. We share both our practical recommendations and the best ways to appreciate Tokyo at its best.
-
Visiting Japan with your children Visiting Japan with your children
Visiting Japan with your children
A futuristic and vibrant country, Japan is a destination that appeals to family members of all ages. Safe, clean and with a good infrastructure, there are plenty of ways to explore. Japan specialist, Jake, talks us through how to get the most of your family holiday in Japan.
Read this guide -
What to do in Japan: our highlights guide What to do in Japan: our highlights guide
What to do in Japan: our highlights guide
Having lived and travelled across the country, our Japan Specialist Caitlin has compiled her highlights, from observing centuries-old rituals to the learning about the most modern technology.
Read this guide -
Japan’s seasons: cherry blossom and beyond Japan’s seasons: cherry blossom and beyond
Japan’s seasons: cherry blossom and beyond
Each Japanese season brings a raft of distinct experiences, from spring’s cherry blossom to winter’s snow crab delicacies. Japan specialist Laura shares the highlights of each time of year to help you decide when to visit Japan.
Read this guide -
Gardens of Japan Gardens of Japan
Gardens of Japan
From Kenrokuen’s venerated views to gardens hidden deep in the countryside, specialist Amanda recommends her preferred gardens to visit in Japan. She also explains what makes Japan’s gardens so interesting and why gardening is an important national art form.
Read this guide -
Honeymoons in Japan Honeymoons in Japan
Honeymoons in Japan
Honeymoon couples looking for a cultural adventure will be spoiled for choice in Japan. Country specialist, Layla, discusses some of the highlights for those wishing to honeymoon here.
Read this guide -
Japan’s bullet trains: an all-you-need-to-know guide Japan’s bullet trains: an all-you-need-to-know guide
Japan’s bullet trains: an all-you-need-to-know guide
Japan has long been celebrated for its high-speed train innovations. Japan specialist Phil explains why, for him, Japan’s bullet trains are an ideal way to see the country. He shares his experiences riding the trains through Japan and how to incorporate them into your trip.
Read this guide -
What to eat in Japan: sushi and beyond What to eat in Japan: sushi and beyond
What to eat in Japan: sushi and beyond
You might know your sushi, but it’s just the tip of a cuisine that’s garnered UNESCO heritage status. Our Japan specialists delve into some of the culinary experiences Japan has to offer, from kaiseki multi-course dinners to convenience-store specialties.
Read this guide
Accommodation choices for Tokyo
We've selected a range of accommodation options for when you visit Tokyo. Our choices usually come recommended for their character, facilities and service or location. Our specialists always aim to suggest properties that match your preferences.
-
Palace Hotel
Tokyo -
Conrad Hotel
Tokyo -
-
Villa Fontaine Shiodome
Tokyo -
Aman Tokyo
Tokyo -
Park Hotel
Tokyo -
The Peninsula Hotel
Tokyo -
Hotel Gracery Shinjuku
Tokyo -
Park Hyatt, Shinjuku
Tokyo -
Mandarin Oriental
Tokyo
Ideas for experiencing Tokyo
Our specialists seek out authentic ways to get to know the places that could feature in your trip. These activities reflect some of the experiences they've most enjoyed while visiting Tokyo, and which use the best local guides.
-
Visit the Ghibli Anime Museum Visit the Ghibli Anime Museum
Visit the Ghibli Anime Museum
Mitaka is a pleasant suburb of Tokyo. The town is home to the Ghibli Museum, an interactive exhibition containing all things related to the animated world created by Studio Ghibli, Japan's premiere animation studio.
View details -
Visit Tokyo Disneyland Visit Tokyo Disneyland
Visit Tokyo Disneyland
Enjoy the rides and atmosphere at Tokyo's Disneyland and DisneySea.
View details -
Tokyo City Tour Tokyo City Tour
Tokyo City Tour
Begin your day with a visit to Meiji Jingu shrine in Harajuku, one of Tokyo's busiest sights but an oasis of calm in the early morning. From here wander through the shopping streets of Harajuku and head south to Shibuya for morning coffee and people watching at the Hachiko pedestrian crossing.
View details