Tokyo

Neon canyons, silent shrines, and the best food city on Earth — all running exactly on time.

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🇯🇵 Tokyo Essentials

Best Time: Mar-Apr, Oct-Nov

Cherry blossom or crisp autumn gold

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4-6 Days Ideal

Neighborhoods deserve their own days

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Currency: JPY (yen)

Cash still matters; 7-Eleven ATMs take foreign cards

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Suica/Pasmo + JR

One tap card runs every train, bus, and konbini

🧭 Why Visit

Tokyo is a hundred cities wearing one name: Shibuya's neon crossing, Asakusa's incense-wreathed temple, Michelin stars above ramen counters, and vending machines that work at 3am. It's the world's largest metropolis and its most courteous.

🏛️ A Little History

Edo was a fishing village until the shoguns made it their capital in 1603; renamed Tokyo when the Emperor moved in 1868, it burned in 1923 and 1945 and rebuilt itself twice into the future — while keeping a shrine on every other block.

💡 Did You Know?

Greater Tokyo holds ~37 million people — more than Canada — served by railways that apologize for 30-second delays, and it has more Michelin-starred restaurants than any city on Earth.

Most Popular

City Highlights & Skytree

Foodie Choice

Tsukiji Food & Izakaya Night

Unique Experience

Mt. Fuji & Hakone Day Trip

Live Prices & Availability

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Local Know-How

  • Stand LEFT on Tokyo escalators (Osaka stands right; yes, it's a thing)
  • Depachika — department-store basement food halls — are the best cheap gourmet lunch in the city

Getting There & Around

  • Get a Suica or Pasmo IC card at any station — it taps through trains, buses, and convenience stores
  • The JR Yamanote loop line touches most major districts — when lost, ride it

Frequently Asked Questions

How many days does Tokyo need?
Four to six minimum: pair neighborhoods by day — Asakusa/Ueno, Shibuya/Harajuku, Shinjuku, Ginza/Tsukiji — plus a day trip. You'll leave with a list for next time regardless.
Is Tokyo expensive?
Less than its reputation: superb ramen and konbini meals under ¥1,000, IC-card transit is cheap, and business hotels are fair value. Sushi splurges and taxis are where budgets go.
Do I need Japanese?
No — signage is bilingual, station staff are patient, and translation apps close the gaps. Learning sumimasen (excuse me) and arigatou earns disproportionate goodwill.
What's the airport-to-city move?
From Narita: Skyliner or N'EX trains (~40-60 min). From Haneda: monorail or Keikyu line (~30 min). Buy the IC card at the airport station and you're set for the whole trip.

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