Tokyo, Japan

Evergreen city guide with quick facts, travel, business, and culture.

Overview

Tokyo is the world's largest metropolitan area where serene Shinto shrines stand beside neon-drenched streets, Michelin-starred restaurants outnumber any other city on earth, and the trains arrive within seconds of schedule.

Temples & Shrines

Meiji Shrine, Senso-ji, Toshogu, and hundreds of Shinto and Buddhist sacred sites across the metropolis.

Culinary Capital

200+ Michelin stars, Tsukiji sashimi, ramen perfection, izakayas, and the world's greatest food culture.

Anime & Pop Culture

Akihabara, Ghibli Museum, themed cafes, retro arcades, and the global epicenter of manga and anime.

Modern Metropolis

Shibuya Crossing, Shinjuku skyline, Roppongi art, and the city that defines urban futurism.

Parks & Gardens

Cherry blossoms in Shinjuku Gyoen, Imperial Palace gardens, and Ueno Park's museum cluster.

Day Trips

Mount Fuji, Kamakura's Great Buddha, Nikko's ornate shrines, and Hakone hot springs.

History

Tokyo began as Edo, a fishing village that became Japan's political center when the Tokugawa shoguns established their capital here in 1603, transforming it into the world's largest city by the 18th century. The Meiji Restoration (1868) renamed it Tokyo ('Eastern Capital'), modernized Japan, and launched an era of rapid transformation. The 1923 Great Kantō Earthquake and WWII firebombing each devastated the city, and each time Tokyo rebuilt itself—adapting, innovating, and growing into the vast, efficient, technologically sophisticated metropolis of today. This cycle of destruction and reinvention explains both the scarcity of old buildings and the city's extraordinary resilience and forward-looking energy.

Culture

Tokyo has more Michelin stars than any city on earth. But even everyday food is exceptional: ramen from dedicated specialists, conveyor-belt sushi at ¥100/plate, onigiri from convenience stores, and department store basement food halls (depachika) that present food as art. Izakayas serve grilled skewers and draft beer in smoky, atmospheric settings. Tsukiji Outer Market remains essential for fresh sashimi mornings. Tipping is not practiced and can cause confusion. Festivals: Cherry Blossom Season (late March-April — hanami parties), Sanja Matsuri (May — Asakusa's largest festival), Sumida River Fireworks (July), New Year's Hatsumode (shrine visits). Museums: Tokyo National Museum, Mori Art Museum, National Art Center, teamLab (digital art), Ghibli Museum (advance tickets required).

Practical Info

Safety: Tokyo is extraordinarily safe—violent crime against tourists is virtually unheard of. Women can walk alone at night in most areas. Main concerns: crowded trains during rush hour (8-9:30 AM), and occasionally aggressive touts in Kabukichō and Roppongi at night (ignore them). Lost property is reliably returned—check train station lost-and-found offices. Emergency: 110 (police), 119 (ambulance/fire). Language: Japanese. English signage has improved dramatically (especially since the 2020 Olympics preparations), and younger people often speak some English, but communication can still be challenging. Translation apps and pointing menus are essential. Learning basic phrases goes a long way. Currency: JPY (Japanese Yen). Cash remains more important than in other developed nations—carry ¥10,000-20,000 (approximately $70-140). 7-Eleven ATMs reliably accept foreign cards. Many restaurants and smaller shops are cash-only. Tipping is not practiced.
Travel Overview

Tokyo overwhelms in the best possible way—a metropolis of 14 million people (37 million in the greater metro area) that somehow manages to be clean, safe, punctual, and endlessly fascinating. The city oscillates between ancient and ultramodern: the Meiji Shrine's forest sanctuary sits minutes from Harajuku's youth fashion explosion, the Imperial Palace's moats and gardens occupy the heart of the business district, and centuries-old temples in Asakusa overlook the Tokyo Skytree's 634-meter lattice tower. Each district is a distinct city within the city—Shinjuku's skyscraper government quarter and red-light Kabukichō, Shibuya's famous scramble crossing and youth culture, Ginza's luxury shopping and Kabuki theatre, Akihabara's electric town of anime and electronics, and Roppongi's art triangle and nightlife. Tokyo holds more Michelin stars than any city in the world—from three-starred sushi temples where dinner costs $300 to ¥500 ramen counters and standing soba shops that deliver extraordinary quality. The city's rail network (JR, Tokyo Metro, and Toei lines) moves 8 million riders daily with near-perfect punctuality. Japan's famously respectful culture, minuscule crime rate, and attention to detail make Tokyo one of the safest and most fascinating major cities on earth—even if the scale, density, and Japanese-language signage initially intimidate first-time visitors.

Discover Tokyo

Shibuya's scramble crossing—where up to 3,000 people cross simultaneously from all directions when the lights change—epitomizes Tokyo's organized intensity. Around it, Shibuya's shopping towers (Scramble Square's rooftop SHIBUYA SKY offers 360-degree views), Center Gai's youth bars, and the Hachikō statue (meeting point and symbol of loyalty since the faithful dog waited here for his deceased owner in the 1930s) create perpetual human energy. Shinjuku, a 10-minute train ride away, divides into distinct worlds: the west side's corporate skyscraper cluster topped by the free observation decks of the Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building (243 meters, best city view for zero cost), the east side's Kabukichō entertainment district (Japan's largest, now undergoing revitalization with the Tokyu Kabukicho Tower), and the south side around New South Exit with Shinjuku Gyoen—a pristine 144-acre garden combining French formal, English landscape, and Japanese traditional styles. Golden Gai, a cluster of over 200 tiny bars each seating 6-8 people, preserves a vanishing Tokyo: intimate, eccentric, and increasingly tourist-friendly despite its local-only reputation.

Diplomatic missions in Tokyo

5 embassies based in this city, grouped by region.