from $22 teamLab Planets TOKYO: Digital Art Museum Entry Ticket
- Barefoot walk through water and light installations
- Timed-entry ticket, skip the sales queue
- Toyosu location, 4 immersive exhibition spaces + garden
Wade barefoot through teamLab's water rooms, stand an arm's length from National Treasure swords, then walk a rebuilt Edo street under one roof. This guide sorts the essential museums in Tokyo by theme, with hours, prices and skip-the-line tours you can book with free cancellation.
Tokyo has more museums than any sensible trip can hold, and they have almost nothing in common with each other: a digital art museum you walk through barefoot, the oldest national collection in Japan, a museum where you train with a katana, and a lottery-ticket shrine to Studio Ghibli. This guide sorts the best museums in Tokyo into seven themes so you can pick the ones that fit your day. Each section covers where the museum sits and which station serves it, when it opens, what a ticket costs, what you will actually see inside, and the practical tips that save time, followed by the tickets and guided tours worth booking ahead.
Hours, prices and closing days on this page were last checked in July 2026, but Tokyo museums shift schedules for exhibitions and holidays, so confirm on the official site before a special trip. Two quirks to remember from the start: most public museums here close on Mondays, and the two biggest names, the Ghibli Museum and teamLab, sell out days or months ahead, so those are the tickets to fix first.
Tokyo National Museum in Ueno Park, Japan's oldest and largest museum: samurai armor, National Treasure swords and 2,000 years of art under one roof.
teamLab Planets in Toyosu. Barefoot, knee-deep in water, surrounded by light. There is no museum like it anywhere, and it doubled in size in 2026.
The Edo-Tokyo Museum reopened in March 2026 after a four-year renovation, with life-size Edo streetscapes and the best city-history storytelling in Japan.
Kid-friendly ninja training in Asakusa, then the tiny working worlds of Small Worlds Tokyo. Neither feels like being taken to a museum.
The Ghibli Museum in Mitaka, if you can get in. Tickets are advance-only, but two Kichijoji tours include them, which is the reliable route.
The Fukagawa Edo Museum, a full 1840s neighborhood rebuilt indoors, where the lighting cycles from dawn to dusk. Locals' favorite, tourists rarely find it.
Short on time? These are the top museums in Tokyo, ranked, the best museums to visit in Tokyo with a one-line case for each and a link to its full section.
The essentials for the most famous museums in Tokyo, Japan, side by side. Note the closing days: the public museums shut on Mondays, the Ghibli Museum shuts on Tuesdays, and teamLab, the Samurai Ninja Museum and the big commercial attractions run every day. Use this as your working list of museums in Tokyo.
| Museum | Best for | Area | Time needed | Closed | Ticket | Our take |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tokyo National Museum | Japan's masterpieces | Ueno | 2–3 h | Mon | ¥1,000 / ~$7 · Check Availability | Start in the Honkan gallery and let the rest be a bonus; the swords and armor alone justify the trip. |
| teamLab Planets | Immersive digital art | Toyosu | 2–3 h | Open daily | ¥3,800–4,900 / ~$25–33 · Check Availability | Book the first morning slot and wear trousers you can roll to the knee. The water rooms are the point. |
| teamLab Borderless | Wandering art maze | Azabudai Hills | 2–3 h | Open daily | ¥3,800–5,400 / ~$26–37 · Check Availability | Choose Planets for spectacle, Borderless for atmosphere. Doing both in one trip is not excessive. |
| Edo-Tokyo Museum | City history | Ryogoku | 2–3 h | Mon | ¥800 / ~$5.50 · Check Availability | Fresh from its 2026 renovation and still under-visited. Go before the crowds relearn the habit. |
| Ghibli Museum | Studio Ghibli | Mitaka | 2–3 h | Tue | ¥1,000 / ~$7, advance only · Check Availability | The cheapest great ticket in Tokyo and the hardest to get. If the monthly sale is gone, book a tour that includes it. |
| Samurai Ninja Museum | Hands-on samurai | Asakusa | 1–2 h | Open daily | From ¥3,000 / ~$20 · Check Availability | More experience than gallery, and better for it. The sword lesson upgrade is the one to take. |
| Warner Bros. Studio Tour | Harry Potter sets | Nerima | 4 h | Open daily | ~¥6,500 / ~$41 · Check Availability | Non-refundable and timed, so commit. Fans rate it above the London original for set access. |
| Small Worlds Tokyo | Miniature worlds | Ariake | 1.5–2 h | Open daily | ¥2,700 / ~$19 · Check Availability | Pairs perfectly with teamLab Planets, fifteen minutes away on the Yurikamome line. |
| Fukagawa Edo Museum | Old-Tokyo atmosphere | Kiyosumi | 1–1.5 h | 2nd/4th Mon | ¥400 / ~$3 · Check Availability | The best ¥400 in Tokyo. Take the guided version; the volunteer stories make the street come alive. |
| Yushukan | War history | Kudanshita | 1.5–2 h | Open daily | ¥1,000 / ~$7 · Check Availability | Sobering and openly one-sided; go with a guide who can supply the missing context. |
The Grutto Pass is Tokyo's museum pass: ¥2,500 (about $17) buys a booklet of admission tickets and discounts for 107 museums, gardens and zoos, valid for two months from first use. The 2026 edition went on sale April 1 and is sold online and at participating museums. The catch is that the famous private attractions are not in it: teamLab, the Ghibli Museum, the Samurai Ninja Museum and Warner Bros. sell their own tickets.
Where the pass shines is exactly the quieter half of this page, the city-run history museums, where it pays for itself in three visits.
| Museum | Door ticket | In the Grutto Pass? |
|---|---|---|
| Edo-Tokyo Museum | ¥800 | Yes |
| Fukagawa Edo Museum | ¥400 | Yes |
| Edo-Tokyo Open Air Architectural Museum | ¥400 | Yes |
| National Museum of Western Art | ¥500 | Yes, collection galleries |
| Tokyo National Museum | ¥1,000 | Discount only, check the current list |
| teamLab Planets / Borderless | ¥3,800–5,400 | No, buy separately |
| Ghibli Museum | ¥1,000 | No, advance sale only |
| Samurai Ninja Museum / Warner Bros. | ¥3,000–6,500 | No, buy separately |
A quick example: the Edo-Tokyo Museum, the Fukagawa Edo Museum, the Open Air Architectural Museum and the National Museum of Western Art together cost about ¥2,100 at the door, so add one more stop, a garden or the Shitamachi Museum, and the ¥2,500 pass is already ahead. Buy it if your trip leans toward history museums and gardens over headline attractions, and skip it if your list is teamLab, Ghibli and Harry Potter, because none of those are covered.
Color = theme. Click any pin to jump to that museum's section of the guide. One museum sits off this map: the National Museum of Japanese History is in Sakura, Chiba, about an hour east.
Tokyo invented the museum you experience with your whole body, and the digital art museum in Tokyo that started it all is teamLab. There are two, and they are genuinely different. teamLab Planets in Toyosu is the sensory one: you go barefoot, roll your trousers and wade knee-deep through a mirrored water room while projected koi scatter around your legs. In early 2026 it more than doubled in size, adding the Athletic Forest and a new Future Park, so even repeat visitors have reason to return. It opens daily from 9:00 to 22:00 and runs on timed entry, with dated tickets from about ¥3,800.
teamLab Borderless in Azabudai Hills is the atmospheric one. There is no map and no route; artworks leave their rooms, drift down corridors and merge into each other, and half the pleasure is being lost. Tickets sell out days ahead in high season, and same-day availability is rare. If your dates are fixed, book Borderless before you book dinner. The private tour below pairs it with the Imperial Palace East Gardens and includes the entry everyone else is refreshing the ticket page for.
The quiet third option is the Art Aquarium Museum GINZA, a permanent exhibition above Ginza Mitsukoshi where thousands of goldfish swim through lit glass sculptures. It takes about an hour, costs around ¥2,500 and needs no planning at all, which makes it the perfect rainy day or pre-dinner stop in central Tokyo.
No glass cases and no velvet ropes; the artwork surrounds you, reacts to you and soaks your knees in the water rooms.
Planets doubled in size in early 2026 with the Athletic Forest and Future Park, so the classic rooms now come with a second act.
Artworks migrate between rooms and merge into each other. Two visits are never the same, by design.
The crystal universe and the flower-filled infinity rooms are the most photographed interiors in Japan for a reason.
While the public museums rest on Mondays, teamLab and the Art Aquarium run daily from morning to night.
Planets sits on the Yurikamome line near Small Worlds Tokyo; the Art Aquarium is an hour well spent in the middle of Ginza.
Wear trousers you can roll above the knee; some rooms are ankle- to knee-deep water. Lockers and towels are provided.
Book dated tickets as soon as your Tokyo dates are fixed, especially for Borderless, and take the first morning slot at Planets, when the water rooms are emptiest. Skirts and rolled-tight jeans fight you in the water rooms, so dress for wading.
Planets was the best thing we did in Tokyo. Walking barefoot through the water while the koi swim around your legs is something I still think about.
We did Borderless with the Imperial Palace tour and having the ticket handled was worth it alone, the online slots were gone for our whole week.
The goldfish aquarium in Ginza is smaller than the photos suggest but genuinely beautiful. Perfect one-hour stop before dinner.
Timed entry to teamLab Planets, the Ginza Art Aquarium, and a private Borderless tour with the hard-to-get ticket included.
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from $109 Ueno Park is Japan's museum quarter, and its anchor is the Tokyo National Museum, the oldest and largest museum in the country. The Honkan, the main Japanese Gallery, is where the icons live: National Treasure swords, samurai armor, Buddhist sculpture, kimono and ukiyo-e prints rotated through climate-controlled rooms. Admission is ¥1,000, it opens 9:30 to 17:00 Tuesday to Sunday with late Friday and Saturday evenings, and it closes on Mondays. Two focused hours in the Honkan beat five hours of trying to see all six buildings.
Two minutes away stands the National Museum of Western Art, a UNESCO World Heritage building by Le Corbusier with Rodin bronzes in the forecourt and Monet inside, and the collection galleries cost just ¥500. Between them, these two are the art museums in Tokyo to see first, the classical counterweight to teamLab's digital rooms. Between them, Ueno Park itself is half the reason to come: lotus ponds, temple corners, street performers and, from late March, some of Tokyo's most famous cherry blossoms. The National Museum of Nature and Science and the Shitamachi Museum round out the park if you are staying the full day.
The tours below split by depth. The private tours put a licensed guide or an ukiyo-e specialist next to you inside the National Museum, and they are the difference between looking at a sword and understanding why it is a National Treasure. The half-day options add the park walk, admission tickets and, on one, a seated Japanese tea.
The finest blades in Japan, displayed edge-up so the temper line catches the light, with armor and helmets alongside.
The Honkan walks you from Jomon pottery to Edo painting in a single loop, the best crash course in Japanese art anywhere.
Hokusai and Hiroshige prints rotate constantly to protect the pigments; whatever is up when you visit is a one-time show.
The National Museum of Western Art is Le Corbusier's only building in East Asia, with The Thinker outside and Monet inside for ¥500.
Lotus ponds, shrines and cherry blossoms connect the museums; the walk between them is part of the visit.
The National Museum stays open into the evening on Fridays and Saturdays, when the galleries are at their quietest.
Free collection days in 2026: May 19, September 21 and November 3. Prioritize the Honkan gallery.
Do the National Museum first thing while your attention is fresh, then let the park and the Western Art museum fill the afternoon. On Fridays and Saturdays, flip it: park by day, quiet galleries in the evening.
Our licensed guide made the sword rooms unforgettable. I would have walked past half of it without understanding what I was seeing.
The ukiyo-e tour was the highlight of our trip for my wife, a printmaker. Two and a half hours felt like twenty minutes.
Ueno Park with the museum and the tea ceremony afterwards was a lovely, unhurried day. The Western Art building surprised us most.
Private licensed-guide visits, an ukiyo-e specialist tour, and half-day Ueno Park walks with museum admission included.
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from $118 The biggest museum news in Japan this year: the Edo-Tokyo Museum in Ryogoku reopened on March 31, 2026 after a four-year renovation. It remains the best history museum in Tokyo, a vast hall where you cross a full-scale replica of Nihonbashi bridge into life-size reconstructions of Edo, with scale-model merchant districts so detailed you can pick out individual shop signs. Admission is ¥800, hours are 9:30 to 17:30 Tuesday to Sunday with Saturday evenings until 19:30, and the crowds have not yet returned to pre-closure levels, so 2026 is the year to go.
Two smaller museums complete the old-Tokyo picture. The Fukagawa Edo Museum in Kiyosumi rebuilds an entire 1840s riverside neighborhood indoors, with boats in the canal, cats on the roofs and lighting that cycles from dawn to dusk; volunteer guides walk you through the tenements for a ¥400 ticket. Out west in Koganei Park, the Edo-Tokyo Open Air Architectural Museum preserves thirty rescued buildings you can actually enter, from thatched farmhouses to the 1929 bathhouse that is said to have inspired the one in Spirited Away.
For the full arc of Japanese history, a specialist-led day trip goes to the National Museum of Japanese History, the country's largest history collection. One honest note: it sits in Sakura, Chiba, about an hour east of the city, which makes it a natural stop on the way to or from Narita Airport rather than a central-Tokyo museum.
Four years of renovation ended on March 31, 2026. The exhibits are refreshed and the crowds have not caught up yet.
The museum's full-scale replica of Edo's great bridge drops you into the shogun's city the moment you enter.
The Fukagawa Edo Museum rebuilds a whole riverside neighborhood, complete with a day-night lighting cycle and volunteer storytellers.
At the Open Air Architectural Museum you can step inside the 1929 sento widely linked to Miyazaki's film.
The Edo-Tokyo Museum shares its block with the Kokugikan sumo arena and its free Sumo Museum; the neighborhood is a museum in itself.
¥800, ¥400 and ¥400 tickets, and all three are covered by the Grutto Pass.
Reopened March 31, 2026 after a four-year renovation. Next door: the Kokugikan sumo arena and its free museum.
Pair the Edo-Tokyo Museum with the Fukagawa Edo Museum: they are two stops apart on the Oedo line and tell the same story at opposite scales. If a sumo tournament is on at the Kokugikan, the whole Ryogoku neighborhood turns into theater.
We visited three weeks after the reopening and had the Edo models almost to ourselves. Our guide's stories about the merchant district made it.
Fukagawa was the sleeper hit of our trip. The lights dimmed to evening while we stood in the little street and the cicadas started. Magical.
The open-air museum is worth the trip west if you like architecture. Five hours with a private guide flew by, and the bathhouse is beautiful.
The reopened Edo-Tokyo Museum with a guide, the Fukagawa Edo experience, the open-air architecture park, and a specialist day at Japan's largest history museum.
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from $65 The samurai museum in Tokyo that travelers actually remember is not a row of glass cases. At the Samurai Ninja Museum, every visit is a guided tour: real Edo-period armor and blades on the walls, and then the parts you do with your hands, throwing shuriken, dressing in samurai armor for photos, and, on the upgraded experiences, a proper katana lesson in a hakama. There are two branches, the original near Asakusa and a newer one in Shinjuku, running the same format on opposite sides of the city.
The Asakusa museum sits at 1-8-13 Nishiasakusa, three minutes from Tawaramachi Station and about eight from Sensoji Temple, so it slots naturally into an Asakusa morning. It runs daily from 9:00 with tour slots every fifteen minutes, and the basic guided ticket is around ¥3,000. The Shinjuku branch keeps the same hours a short walk from the east side of Shinjuku Station, which makes it the evening option before Kabukicho or Golden Gai.
Which experience to pick is mostly about who is coming. The one-hour guided tour with ninja star throwing is the easy default for adults short on time. The two-hour sword lessons, taught seriously, with cutting form and etiquette, are the ones people rate highest. Families get their own formats: a family sword lesson where parents and kids train together, and a kid-friendly ninja class where children in full costume practice blowdarts and stealth games while absorbing more history than they realize.
Edo-period armor, helmets and katana up close, presented by guides who explain how each piece was actually used.
No wandering past labels; a guide walks every group through, in English, with tour slots every fifteen minutes.
The ninja star range is included in the standard experience, and it is harder and more satisfying than it looks.
The katana workshops teach drawing, cutting form and etiquette in a hakama, not just poses for the camera.
Dedicated family sword lessons and a kids' ninja class in full costume make this the rare museum children beg to stay in.
Asakusa for the temple-district morning, Shinjuku for the west-side evening, both running every day of the week.
Timed slots sell out on weekends; book the sword lessons a few days ahead.
Book a timed slot ahead on weekends, and if you are choosing one upgrade, make it the sword lesson: it is the difference between watching samurai history and briefly living inside it. Pair Asakusa's museum with a Sensoji morning, or the Shinjuku branch with an evening in Kabukicho.
The sword lesson was my favorite two hours in Japan. The instructor corrected every cut until it felt right, and the museum tour before it gave everything context.
Our kids still talk about the ninja class. Costumes, blowdarts, sneaking games, and they came out knowing what a real ninja actually did.
Short, fun and informative. The guide was excellent and throwing shuriken is weirdly addictive. Book ahead, our first choice of time was full.
Guided museum tours, serious katana lessons, and family and kids' formats across the Asakusa and Shinjuku branches.
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from $57 The Ghibli Museum in Mitaka is the anime museum in Tokyo everyone wants and almost no one plans correctly. Designed by Hayao Miyazaki himself, it is a hand-built storybook of crooked staircases, stained glass and a rooftop robot soldier, with a small cinema showing short films you cannot see anywhere else on earth. The ticket costs just ¥1,000, but there are no door sales at all: tickets go on sale on the 10th of each month at 10:00 Japan time for the following month and are gone within minutes, with a separate lottery for the summer holidays. The realistic route for most travelers is one of the Kichijoji tours below, both of which include the museum ticket along with a walk through the neighborhood that inspired so much of the studio's scenery.
The deeper cut for anime fans is the Birthplace of Manga walk in Toshima, where Osamu Tezuka, the creators of Doraemon and half the founding generation of manga shared a cheap apartment block called Tokiwa-so in the 1950s. The rebuilt Tokiwa-so Manga Museum and the Toei Animation Museum anchor a guided walk through the actual streets where the industry began. It is quiet, specific and unforgettable if the medium matters to you.
The rest of the category is blockbuster scale. Warner Bros. Studio Tour Tokyo, on the old Toshimaen park grounds, is the largest indoor Harry Potter attraction in the world, four self-paced hours through the Great Hall, Diagon Alley and Platform 9¾, with broomstick rides and Butterbeer. And for one very specific tribe, a full-day Initial D pilgrimage drives the real Mount Haruna hairpins with an automobile museum and a legendary tuning shop on the itinerary.
The Ghibli Museum's Saturn Theater screens exclusive Miyazaki shorts that have never been released outside the building.
Spiral staircases, stained-glass Totoros and the rooftop robot from Laputa; the museum itself is the exhibit.
Both Kichijoji tours below bundle the advance-only Ghibli ticket, the single most reliable way in.
The Tokiwa-so Manga Museum rebuilds the apartment where Tezuka and the Doraemon creators drew their first pages.
Warner Bros. Studio Tour Tokyo is the world's largest indoor Harry Potter attraction, with sets exclusive to Japan.
Harmonica Yokocho alleys, Inokashira Park and the anime shops around the station make the museum trip a full day out.
If the monthly sale is sold out, the Kichijoji tours below include the ticket.
For the Ghibli Museum, set an alarm for the 10th of the month at 10:00 Japan time, or simply book a tour with the ticket included and spend the saved stress on lunch in Harmonica Yokocho. Warner Bros. is non-refundable, so lock your date last, after flights and hotels.
We failed the ticket sale twice, then booked the food tour and it turned out better: Kichijoji snacks, the park, and the museum at the end. Yoshie was wonderful.
As a lifelong manga reader, standing in the rebuilt Tokiwa-so room where Tezuka worked genuinely moved me. A pilgrimage, not a photo stop.
The Studio Tour was better than London's, according to my teenagers. Four hours vanished. Butterbeer remains a crime, but you have to try it once.
Two ways into the Ghibli Museum with tickets included, the birthplace-of-manga walk, Harry Potter's Tokyo studio, and the Initial D day trip.
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from $416 Small Worlds Tokyo in Ariake is Asia's largest miniature museum, a waterfront hall where whole worlds run at 1:80 scale: a space center that launches a rocket on schedule, Kansai International Airport with taxiing planes, an Evangelion hangar and a nostalgic Showa-era town where the streetlights come on at dusk. Every scene cycles through day and night, trains run, and the longer you look at any one square meter, the more hidden jokes the modelers left for you.
Admission is around ¥2,700 and the museum opens daily from 9:00, with most visitors spending a happy ninety minutes to two hours. The signature extra is the resident program: a 3D scanner turns you into a 1:80 figure that staff install somewhere in the diorama, which is either delightful or unsettling depending on your relationship with permanence. Either way, your miniature self stays on display long after you fly home.
It sits three minutes from Ariake-Tennis-no-Mori Station on the Yurikamome line, which matters for planning: teamLab Planets is fifteen minutes up the same line, and the two together make the perfect odaiba-side day, especially in the rain. If you want the museum decoded rather than just seen, the guided combo below adds an anime-themed cafe and a guide who knows where the best hidden details are buried.
Thousands of square meters of running trains, launching rockets and cities that dim to nightfall every few minutes.
Tokyo-III and its Eva hangars rebuilt in miniature, an official collaboration that anime fans cross town for.
A 3D scan turns you into a 1:80 figure placed permanently in the diorama. Few museums let you move in.
Indoor, open daily from 9:00, and genuinely absorbing for kids and adults alike; the rainy-day answer in Tokyo.
Fifteen minutes from teamLab Planets on the Yurikamome line, so the two combine into one waterfront day.
The guided combo tour finds the hidden gags, the tiny crime scenes and film references you would never spot alone.
Combine with teamLab Planets, fifteen minutes up the Yurikamome line.
Go slowly: the museum rewards staring at one scene through a full day-night cycle far more than pacing the hall once. Book the figure scan at the start of your visit so it is ready before you leave.
We planned an hour and stayed three. When the little city dimmed to night and the windows lit up one by one, our daughter refused to leave.
The guided version was worth it, our guide pointed out a tiny wedding, a burglary in progress and a Godzilla shadow I would never have found.
Great couple of hours before teamLab. The airport diorama alone is absurdly good. The cafe stop afterwards was a fun bonus.
Straight entry to Small Worlds, or the guided combo with an anime-themed cafe and the hidden details decoded.
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from $51 The Yushukan, on the grounds of Yasukuni Shrine in Kudanshita, is Japan's oldest war museum, founded in 1882. Its halls run from samurai armor through the Meiji wars to the Pacific War, and the artifacts are extraordinary: a restored Mitsubishi Zero fighter in the lobby, a kaiten human torpedo, artillery, uniforms, and room after room of photographs and farewell letters from young men who did not come back. It opens daily from 9:00 to 16:30 and admission is ¥1,000.
It is also, without qualification, a contested place. Yasukuni enshrines Japan's war dead, including convicted war criminals, and the Yushukan's telling of the Pacific War differs sharply from the history taught almost everywhere else, which is precisely why prime-ministerial visits to the shrine make international news. None of that is a reason to stay away; it is a reason to go informed. The museum shows, more clearly than any other building in Tokyo, how the war is remembered by those who built the shrine, and the gap between that memory and the record is itself the lesson.
This is the one museum on this page where a guide earns their fee twice over. The private tour below walks both the shrine grounds and the museum with space for exactly the questions the exhibits do not raise, and reviewers consistently single out that honesty as what made the visit worthwhile.
Founded in 1882, the Yushukan predates every other museum of its kind in the country.
A restored Mitsubishi Zero dominates the entrance hall, one of the few anywhere displayed in context rather than a hangar.
Handwritten last letters from soldiers and kamikaze pilots, translated in part, are the museum's quiet, devastating core.
The exhibits present a telling of the Pacific War you will not find in Western museums; seeing it firsthand is the point.
The great torii gates, the ginkgo avenue and the shrine rituals are free to visit and frame the museum's meaning.
A good guide supplies the other half of the story room by room, and this tour is built around exactly that.
Dress and behave as you would at any active place of worship; the shrine is not a theme park.
Read a page of background on Yasukuni before you go; the visit lands differently when you know why the site is controversial. Allow ninety minutes to two hours inside, and walk the shrine grounds first while your attention is fresh.
Our guide did not dodge a single question, including the hardest ones. The museum's perspective and his honest framing together taught me more than any book had.
Heavy, fascinating and unlike any war museum in Europe. The farewell letters stopped me completely. Go with a guide, not alone.
As a history teacher I found it essential precisely because of its point of view. The Zero and the kaiten torpedo are extraordinary artifacts.
A private guided visit to Yasukuni Shrine and the Yushukan with the context the exhibits leave out.
from $69 Not everything worth your time in Tokyo hangs on a wall. If the sumo exhibits at the Edo-Tokyo Museum leave you wanting the real thing, two experiences put you a few meters from it. The Shibuya sumo show stages live bouts in ninety minutes, with a chance to step into the ring against a wrestler afterwards, and the family workshop goes further: wrestlers teach the stomps and slaps, fight a full-power bout in front of you, then share chanko nabe, the hot pot sumo stables actually eat. Both run year-round, which matters because real tournaments visit Tokyo only three times a year, in January, May and September.
Think of this section as the field trip after the museum: the same culture the exhibits preserve, still alive and taking bookings.
Live bouts, hands-on training and a chanko lunch with the wrestlers, the working culture behind the museum exhibits.
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from $62 Five ways to spend one museum day in Tokyo without rushing. Each route groups places that sit within a short walk or one train ride of each other.
| Day plan | The route | Why it works |
|---|---|---|
| Ueno classic | Tokyo National Museum at 9:30 → lunch in the park → National Museum of Western Art → lotus ponds at Shinobazu | Japan's two best traditional collections, two minutes apart, with the park stitching them together |
| Digital waterfront | teamLab Planets first slot → Yurikamome to Small Worlds Tokyo → evening in Ginza at the Art Aquarium | Three open-daily attractions on one line; the perfect Monday, when public museums close |
| Old Edo day | Edo-Tokyo Museum at opening → soba in Ryogoku → Fukagawa Edo Museum → sumo show or workshop | The shogun's city at every scale, ending with the living culture the museums preserve |
| Family day | Kid-friendly ninja training in Asakusa → Sensoji and lunch → Small Worlds Tokyo until closing | Hands-on all day, zero gallery fatigue, and both anchors run daily |
| West Tokyo anime day | Ghibli Museum tour with ticket included → Harmonica Yokocho lunch → Inokashira Park → anime shopping in Kichijoji | The museum, the neighborhood that inspired it, and the shops, one JR stop apart |
Tokyo museum days do not have to cost teamLab prices. The Tokyo National Museum opens its collection free to everyone on May 19, September 21 and November 3, 2026, and its standard ¥1,000 ticket is already one of the world's great bargains. The city's history museums charge pocket change: ¥800 for the reopened Edo-Tokyo Museum, ¥400 at the Fukagawa Edo Museum, ¥500 for the collection galleries of the National Museum of Western Art.
And a surprising number of good small museums charge nothing at all, year-round.
The Tokyo National Museum in Ueno Park is the most famous and the oldest museum in Japan, home to National Treasure swords, samurai armor and more than 2,000 years of art (see our guide to touring the collection). Among newer museums, teamLab Planets in Toyosu has become the most visited by international travelers; its timed entry tickets sell out days ahead in high season.
For a first visit: the Tokyo National Museum for classical Japan, teamLab Planets or Borderless for the immersive digital art, the reopened Edo-Tokyo Museum for the city's history, and the Ghibli Museum if you can secure a ticket. Add the Samurai Ninja Museum if you want your history hands-on.
Greater Tokyo has well over 150 museums, from national institutions to single-room collections. The Grutto Pass alone covers 107 museums, gardens and zoos, and that list excludes the big private attractions like teamLab, the Ghibli Museum and Warner Bros. Studio Tour.
Most public museums close on Mondays, including the Tokyo National Museum, the Edo-Tokyo Museum and the National Museum of Western Art. Open on Mondays: teamLab Planets and Borderless, the Samurai Ninja Museum, Small Worlds Tokyo, the Art Aquarium and Warner Bros. Studio Tour. The Ghibli Museum is the outlier, closing on Tuesdays instead.
Tickets are advance-only: they go on sale on the 10th of each month at 10:00 Japan time for the following month and sell out within minutes, with a lottery system in summer. There are no door sales. The dependable alternative is a Kichijoji tour with the museum ticket included, which also adds the neighborhood food walk; our Ghibli Museum ticket guide compares the two tours that bundle entry.
Planets in Toyosu is the sensory one, barefoot and knee-deep in water, and it doubled in size in early 2026; Borderless in Azabudai Hills is the wandering maze where artworks drift between rooms. First-timers usually prefer Planets, art lovers lean Borderless, and doing both is common. Our guide to booking both teamLab museums walks through the differences; whichever you choose, book dated tickets early.
At ¥2,500 for admission and discounts across 107 facilities over two months, the Grutto Pass pays for itself in about three history-museum visits, for example the Edo-Tokyo Museum, the Fukagawa Edo Museum and the Open Air Architectural Museum. It does not cover teamLab, the Ghibli Museum, the Samurai Ninja Museum or Warner Bros., so skip it if those are your whole list.
The best museums for kids here are the kid-friendly ninja training at the Samurai Ninja Museum, Small Worlds Tokyo with its running trains and rocket launches, teamLab Planets, and Warner Bros. Studio Tour for Potter-age children. The family sumo workshop, while not a museum, is the highest-rated family activity on this page.
Always free: the Sumo Museum at the Kokugikan, Intermediatheque in Marunouchi, the Police Museum, the Fire Museum and the Currency Museum. The Tokyo National Museum's collection is free on May 19, September 21 and November 3, 2026. See the free museums section for the full list.
Ueno Park, at the station's Park exit, holds the densest museum cluster in Japan: the Tokyo National Museum, the National Museum of Western Art, the National Museum of Nature and Science and the Shitamachi Museum, all within a ten-minute walk. It is the best single stop for a museum day if you want minimal transit.