What Travelers Say About Tokyo
Tokyo is a city of infinite layers — a place where you can spend two weeks and feel you've barely scratched the surface. With a population of 14 million, it is one of the largest cities on earth, yet it functions with an almost surreal level of precision, cleanliness and courtesy. From the neon-drenched chaos of Shinjuku's Golden Gai alleys and the Blade Runner skylines of Shibuya crossing, to the tranquil cedar groves of Meiji Shrine and the bonsai gardens of Yanaka, Tokyo holds contradictions together in a way that no other megacity manages.
Food is arguably Tokyo's greatest gift to the world. The city holds more Michelin stars than Paris, but its best meals often come from ramen counters, conveyor-belt sushi bars and izakaya pubs charging ¥500 a dish. Harajuku's Takeshita Street serves up strawberry crepes and youth fashion madness; Tsukiji Outer Market still shucks the finest oysters at dawn; TeamLab's digital art warehouses and the teamLab Borderless re-opening in Azabudai Hills offer experiences that exist nowhere else. In spring, cherry blossoms transform Shinjuku Gyoen and Ueno Park into pink cathedrals; in autumn, the maples of Rikugien and Koishikawa Korakuen glow red and gold. The JR Pass covers the bullet trains between cities, while a Suica IC card handles every subway, bus, convenience store and coin locker in Tokyo itself.
Tokyo is one of the safest major cities on the planet — violent crime against tourists is genuinely rare. The main concerns are minor: the subway can be bewildering at first (download the Tokyo Metro app), some izakayas have unwritten no-foreigner policies that are disappointing but rare, and the capsule hotel experience, while authentic, requires a comfort level with very small spaces. Earthquakes are a fact of life — familiarise yourself with the nearest emergency exit in your accommodation. Otherwise, Tokyo rewards curiosity, patience and the willingness to get lost.