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Best Things to Do in Tokyo (2026 Guide)

Tokyo is one of the world's great cities: 14 million people across 23 special wards, more Michelin-starred restaurants than any other city on earth, an extraordinary public transit system, and cultural experiences ranging from ancient Shinto shrines to the world's most advanced digital art installations. This guide covers the best things to do in Tokyo — from Senso-ji in Asakusa to the teamLab Borderless immersive art space, from Shibuya Crossing to a day trip to Mount Fuji.

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The unmissable in Tokyo

These are the staple sights — don't leave Tokyo without seeing them.

1
Senso-ji Temple (Asakusa Temple)
#1 must-see

Senso-ji Temple (Asakusa Temple)

2
Tokyo Imperial Palace
#2 must-see

Tokyo Imperial Palace

3
Shibuya
#3 must-see

Shibuya

Attractions in Tokyo

More attractions in Tokyo

#4 Shibuya Crossing

Shibuya Crossing

#5 Tokyo Skytree

Tokyo Skytree

#6 Tokyo Tower

Tokyo Tower

#7 Meiji Shrine (Meiji Jingu)

Meiji Shrine (Meiji Jingu)

#8 Tokyo Disneyland®

Tokyo Disneyland®

#9 Tokyo DisneySea®

Tokyo DisneySea®

#10 Shinjuku

Shinjuku

#11 Daibutsu (Great Buddha of Kamakura)

Daibutsu (Great Buddha of Kamakura)

#12 Hakone Ropeway

Hakone Ropeway

#13 Lake Ashi (Ashi-no-ko)

Lake Ashi (Ashi-no-ko)

#14 Fuji Five Lakes (Fujigoko)

Fuji Five Lakes (Fujigoko)

#15 Harajuku

Harajuku

#16 Ginza

Ginza

#17 Ghibli Museum

Ghibli Museum

#18 teamLab Planets TOKYO

teamLab Planets TOKYO

#19 Tsukiji Fish Market

Tsukiji Fish Market

#20 Tokyo National Museum

Tokyo National Museum

#21 Ueno Park (Ueno Koen)

Ueno Park (Ueno Koen)

#22 Takeshita Street

Takeshita Street

#23 Toyosu Fish Market

Toyosu Fish Market

#24 Nikko National Park

Nikko National Park

The best things to do in Tokyo reward orientation by neighbourhood. Asakusa is Tokyo’s most historically preserved district: Senso-ji (Tokyo’s oldest temple, founded 645 AD), the Nakamise shopping street, and Kaminarimon Gate frame the city’s traditional atmosphere. Shibuya’s famous scramble crossing — 2,500 people crossing from every direction simultaneously when the lights change — is the definitive Tokyo street experience. The Tsukiji Outer Market (the inner market moved to Toyosu in 2018, but the outer market remains) still hosts the city’s best morning tuna sashimi and tamagoyaki breakfast. teamLab Borderless in Azabudai Hills (reopened 2024 after rebuilding) creates immersive digital worlds in 10,000 square metres of darkened rooms. The Shinjuku Gyoen National Garden is the city’s best cherry blossom location (late March-early April).Best time to visitLate March-early April is cherry blossom (sakura) season: Tokyo’s parks and river banks transform, and hanami (flower-viewing) picnics fill Yoyogi and Shinjuku Gyoen. This is peak tourist season — book flights and hotels 3-4 months ahead. September-November is autumn colour (koyo) season, particularly spectacular at Rikugien Garden and Mount Takao. June-August is hot and humid (32-35°C); the Sumida Fireworks Festival (last Saturday of July) and Obon (mid-August) are major events. December-February is cold (2-10°C) but comfortable, uncrowded (except New Year), and with clear Mount Fuji views. Golden Week (late April-early May) is the busiest Japanese holiday period — avoid if possible.Getting aroundTokyo’s public transit is the world’s most complex and most reliable system. The Suica or Pasmo IC card (rechargeable, purchased at any station) covers all JR trains, Tokyo Metro, Toei lines, and buses. The Yamanote Line — the loop connecting Shinjuku, Harajuku, Shibuya, Shinagawa, Tokyo, Ueno, and Akihabara — is the essential visitor rail line. Narita Airport: Narita Express (N’EX) to Shinjuku in 90 minutes. Haneda Airport: Tokyo Monorail to Hamamatsucho in 25 minutes. Day trips: Mount Fuji (Fuji-Q Highland station, 1.5-2 hours by highway bus or JR Chuo Line to Otsuki), Nikko (1.5 hours on Tobu Nikko Line from Asakusa), Kamakura (55 minutes from Shinjuku). IC card apps on iPhone and Android mean a physical card is no longer required.What to eat and drinkTokyo has more Michelin stars than any city on earth (230+ in recent years). But Tokyo’s greatness is in everyday food: a bowl of ramen at Fuunji in Shinjuku (arrive at 11am, queue accepted), sushi omakase at Jiro in Ginza (book months ahead), katsu curry at Tonkatsu Maisen in Harajuku, tonkotsu ramen at Ichiran (solo dining booths, each bowl customised), and standing soba at any JR station branch of Fuji Soba. The Tsukiji Outer Market’s morning tuna sashimi and rolled egg tamagoyaki are iconic. Food halls (depachika) in Isetan Shinjuku, Mitsukoshi Ginza, and Takashimaya basement levels contain some of Tokyo’s best prepared foods. Sake, Japanese whisky (the Suntory Toki Whisky at any bar), and canned highball (whisky and soda — the ubiquitous convenience store drink) are the standards. Yebisu, Asahi Super Dry, and Kirin Ichiban are the lagers.Neighborhoods to exploreAsakusa — Senso-ji Temple, Nakamise street, Kaminarimon Gate, and the Sumida River waterfront. The most traditionally atmospheric Tokyo district. Best visited at dawn before crowds arrive.Shibuya & Harajuku — The Crossing, Shibuya Sky observation deck, Takeshita Street (Harajuku’s wild fashion street), Omotesando (Tokyo’s Champs-Elysees), and Meiji Jingu Shrine in the adjacent forest.Shinjuku — The neon city within the city: Kabukicho entertainment district, Golden Gai (6 narrow alleyways of 200 tiny bars), Omoide Yokocho (Memory Lane — yakitori smoke-filled alley), and Shinjuku Gyoen National Garden.Akihabara — The electric town: multi-floor electronics shops, anime merchandise, maid cafés, and retro game stores. The epicentre of Japanese otaku culture.Yanaka — Tokyo’s most preserved pre-earthquake neighbourhood (much of Tokyo was destroyed in the 1923 Great Kanto Earthquake). Temple cemetery, wooden shophouses, and artisan studios. The most authentic old Tokyo experience.Toyosu (teamLab) — The new digital art frontier: teamLab Borderless (Azabudai Hills) and teamLab Planets (Toyosu) are the two permanent immersive installations.FAQWhat are the best things to do in Tokyo?Essential experiences: Senso-ji at dawn, Shibuya Crossing at peak hour, Tsukiji Outer Market breakfast, teamLab Borderless or Planets, ramen at Fuunji, cherry blossoms in Shinjuku Gyoen, and a day trip to Nikko or Kamakura.How many days do I need in Tokyo?Five days minimum to see the major neighbourhoods. Seven days allows day trips to Nikko (UNESCO shrines), Kamakura (the Great Buddha), and Mount Fuji. Ten days gives time to slow down and explore lesser-known areas (Yanaka, Shimokitazawa vintage district, Koenji).Is Tokyo safe for tourists?Extremely safe — Tokyo is consistently rated one of the world’s safest major cities. Violent crime is extremely rare. The main concern is getting lost — download Google Maps offline and a translation app (Google Translate camera feature handles Japanese menus). Items left on trains are reliably returned at lost property offices.Is Tokyo expensive?Moderate by major city standards. Ramen costs ¥800-1,200 (€5-8). A sushi omakase can range from ¥5,000 to ¥50,000+ depending on the restaurant. Transit is inexpensive (¥170-300 per journey). Mid-range hotels cost ¥15,000-25,000/night (€95-160). Convenience store (konbini) meals are genuinely good and cost ¥500-800.