๐ Where Is Tokyo?
Tokyo is located in Japan.
Where neon meets centuries of silence
Tokyo is located in Japan.
Tokyo is the rare megacity that gets calmer the closer you look. Step off a neon-lit crossing in Shibuya and a quiet shrine appears two streets later; a Michelin-starred ramen counter seats six people and closes the moment the broth runs out. It's the most orderly chaos in the world โ 14 million people moving through a city that somehow runs on time, to the minute, every single day. Whether you're here for the food, the temples, the shopping, or just to watch how a city this size functions this smoothly, Tokyo rewards wandering as much as it rewards planning.
Make the most of your time on the ground.
Tokyo's oldest temple, approached through the lantern-lined Nakamise shopping street. Go at dawn for a near-empty temple, or in the evening when the pagoda is lit.
Check Availability โThe world's busiest pedestrian crossing by day, then Shinjuku's neon backstreets and tiny Omoide Yokocho alleyways by night for yakitori and cheap beer.
View Experiences โThe old fish market's outer stalls remain a working food destination โ fresh sushi for breakfast, tamagoyaki, and grilled seafood skewers from dawn.
See Activities โCapsule hotels and business hotels around Asakusa or Ueno from $30โ50/night โ small rooms, but spotlessly clean and well located.
Check Prices โ3โ4 star hotels in Shinjuku or Shibuya from $90โ140/night, putting you right at the centre of the city's transit network.
Compare Options โFive-star towers overlooking the skyline from $300/night, several with views toward Mount Fuji on a clear day.
View Luxury Hotels โCherry blossom season (late Marchโearly April) is spectacular but crowded and priced accordingly. Book months ahead.
Hot, humid, and rainy in June โ but lively with summer festivals (matsuri) and fireworks displays.
Comfortable temperatures and autumn colour โ arguably the best all-round window, especially November.
Tokyo has a reputation for being expensive, but day-to-day costs โ especially food โ are often lower than people expect.
A bowl of ramen costs $6โ9, convenience store (konbini) meals are excellent and under $5, and a prepaid IC card (Suica/Pasmo) makes transit fast and contactless across nearly every train and bus.
Narita (NRT) and Haneda (HND) are Tokyo's two main airports, with Haneda considerably closer to central Tokyo โ about 30 minutes by monorail or train versus Narita's 60โ90 minutes. The Narita Express and Keisei Skyliner both run direct, comfortable rail connections into the city, avoiding traffic entirely.
Days 1โ2 โ Asakusa & East Tokyo: Senso-ji, Tokyo Skytree, and the Tsukiji Outer Market, finishing with a sunset Sumida River walk.
Day 3 โ Shibuya & Harajuku: Shibuya Crossing, Meiji Shrine, Takeshita Street, and an evening in Shinjuku's Golden Gai.
Day 4 โ Culture & Gardens: Imperial Palace East Gardens, teamLab digital art museum, and Ginza for an upscale evening.
Day 5 โ Day Trip: Hakone or Nikko for mountain views and onsen, or Kamakura for its Great Buddha and coastal temples.
Plan now, travel smarter โ book before peak season pushes prices up.