First Week in Tokyo: Events for Newcomers

Land softly

Your first days in Tokyo are about finding your feet, not ticking off a bucket list. Start with low-pressure, free experiences: wander Akihabara for a free hit of pop-culture energy, or join a maid-cafe-free stroll through its arcades and megastores. If the timing lines up, a neighborhood matsuri like Sanja Matsuri in Asakusa shows you old Tokyo at its liveliest — and it costs nothing to watch.

Make a friend or two

Arriving alone is normal here. The Tokyo Language Exchange Meetup and the activity-based Tokyo Gaijins are both built for newcomers — just RSVP and show up. You'll leave with a few contacts and a sense that the city is smaller than it looks.

One memorable night

Once you've found your rhythm, treat yourself to a proper Tokyo evening. Shinjuku Golden Gai is the gentlest introduction to the city's nightlife — 200-plus tiny bars, many welcoming to visitors, where you can perch at a counter and chat with whoever's beside you.

Get your bearings

Tokyo is really a cluster of distinct neighborhoods, and your first week is the time to learn which ones you like. Shibuya and Shinjuku are loud and electric; Asakusa and Yanaka feel old and slow; Shimokitazawa and Koenji are second-hand shops and live music. Pick a couple to wander aimlessly — half the joy of the city is getting pleasantly lost and ducking into whatever looks interesting.

Practical first-week tips

  • Get a Suica or PASMO IC card on day one; it works on nearly all trains and many shops.
  • Carry cash — small bars, stalls and shrines often don't take cards.
  • The last train is around midnight, so plan your route home.

Go slow, say yes to one social event, and Tokyo will start to feel like yours.

On-the-ground coverage of Japan's festivals, culture and nightlife.