Temples, Ramen, Neon
& Everything In Between
Tokyo is not one city โ it's dozens of neighborhoods stacked together, each with its own rules. This guide helps you find the ones that matter to you.
Why Tokyo?
Tokyo has more Michelin-starred restaurants than any other city on earth (230+). It also has a 7-Eleven onigiri for ยฅ150 that's genuinely better than most convenience store food anywhere else. Both of these things are true, and that's the key to understanding Tokyo.
It's a city that takes craft seriously at every level. Ramen, sushi, tempura, the way a train door opens exactly where the platform marking says it will โ there's a precision and attention to detail here that you feel constantly, even when you can't name it.
Asakusa โ Old Tokyo
Senso-ji Temple is Tokyo's oldest temple, founded in 645 AD โ older than the written history of the city. The approach through the Kaminarimon (Thunder Gate) with its giant red lantern, along the Nakamise shopping street to the temple proper, is the most atmospheric walk in Tokyo.
Visit before 8am or after 8pm โ when the tour groups thin out and the temple grounds take on a completely different weight. The giant red lantern at night, lit up and almost empty, is one of Tokyo's best quiet moments.
Shibuya โ The Crossing & Beyond
The Shibuya Scramble Crossing is one of the most photographed intersections in the world โ and it earns it. When the light turns, up to 3,000 people cross simultaneously from all directions. Watch it from the Starbucks above, from the Shibuya Sky observation deck, or simply stand in the middle of it.
Beyond the crossing: the Hachiko statue (the loyal dog), Shibuya 109 fashion building, and the backstreets of Daikanyama and Nakameguro โ two of Tokyo's most stylish neighbourhoods, 10 minutes walk south.
Shinjuku โ The City That Never Sleeps
Shinjuku contains multitudes. The east exit has Kabukicho โ Tokyo's entertainment district, neon-soaked and slightly chaotic. Golden Gai โ a network of tiny alleys with over 200 bars, most fitting 5โ8 people. Omoide Yokocho (Memory Lane) โ a narrow alley of yakitori stalls, smoke and laughter, open until late.
The west exit has the Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building โ free observation deck, one of the best views in the city, open until 11pm most nights.
Yanaka โ The Neighbourhood That Survived
Yanaka escaped the WWII bombing and the postwar redevelopment that flattened most of old Tokyo. What remains: narrow lanes, wooden shopfronts, family-run businesses, temples and a cemetery that locals walk through like a park. Yanaka Ginza shopping street has local food, crafts and one of the most genuinely old-Tokyo atmospheres you'll find.
Come here when you've had enough of neon. It's a 10-minute walk from Nippori station.
Tsukiji Outer Market โ The Sushi Breakfast
The famous inner wholesale market moved to Toyosu in 2018, but the outer market โ rows of small stalls and restaurants surrounding it โ remains active and excellent. Come before 10am for the freshest sushi, tamagoyaki (sweet rolled omelette) and shellfish.
A sushi breakfast at one of the counter restaurants here (ยฅ1,500โยฅ3,000) is one of the best Tokyo experiences at any price point. Order omakase, let the chef decide, eat what's in front of you.
What to Eat in Tokyo
Tokyo's food culture is the most serious and diverse on the planet. These are the things worth making time for:
Best Time to Visit Tokyo
2026 note: Weak yen means 25โ30% effective discount for EUR and USD holders. Excellent time to visit.
Tokyo Travel Tips
Tokyo stays with you
Most visitors leave saying they didn't have enough time. Plan accordingly.