Rainy-Day & Indoor Events
Art that ignores the weather
A rainy day is the perfect excuse for Japan's world-class indoor art. teamLab Planets in Toyosu is an immersive, walk-through digital wonderland, and the Mori Art Museum on the 53rd floor of Roppongi Hills pairs contemporary shows with a skyline view — and stays open late. The Tokyo National Museum in Ueno offers samurai armor and national treasures by the hall-full.
Otaku shelter
If the rain has you near Ikebukuro, the flagship Pokemon Center Mega Tokyo is dry, free to enter and full of exclusive merch. For collectors, Nakano Broadway is a sprawling indoor maze of vintage manga, figures and that famous towering soft-serve.
A calm, dry ritual
In Kyoto, a traditional tea ceremony is an ideal rainy-afternoon plan — quiet, indoors, and a genuine window into Japanese aesthetics.
Make a day of it
The nice thing about a rainy day in Japan is how easily indoor spots connect. Department stores hide entire restaurant floors and basement food halls (depachika); station complexes like Tokyo and Shinjuku are small cities in themselves; and covered shopping arcades let you graze, shop and people-watch for hours without a drop landing on you. Plan a loop that strings a museum, a meal and a megastore together, and the weather becomes irrelevant.
Practical tips
- Buy a cheap clear umbrella at any convenience store; you'll see locals carrying the exact same one.
- Big museums and teamLab sometimes sell timed-entry tickets — book ahead for popular shows.
- Underground mall and station complexes let you move between spots without getting soaked.
- Many venues have umbrella stands or lockers at the door; some provide plastic sleeves to keep floors dry.
Pack an umbrella and a rainy day becomes its own kind of adventure.
Todos los eventos
teamLab Planets Tokyo
Wade barefoot through water and light in this immersive digital-art museum where you become part of the artwork.
2026/06/24 01:00 TokioAdmission around 3,800 yen; book timed tickets online in advance
© Phan Tom · GoogleMori Art Museum
Contemporary art on the 53rd floor of Roppongi Hills, paired with one of Tokyo's best skyline views from the City View deck.
2026/06/26 01:00 TokioAdmission around 2,000 yen; often includes the observation deck
© YUKIKO MIZUTANI · GoogleTokyo National Museum
Japan's oldest and largest museum in Ueno Park, home to samurai armor, Buddhist art and an unrivaled national treasure collection.
2026/06/29 TokioRegular collection around 1,000 yen; special exhibits priced separately
© 山賀康弘 · GooglePokemon Center Mega Tokyo
The flagship Pokemon store in Ikebukuro, packed with exclusive plush, seasonal merch and a giant Pikachu welcoming fans.
2026/06/25 01:00 TokioGratis
© Atsushi Ehara · GoogleNakano Broadway
A retro shopping complex packed with vintage manga, rare figures, idol goods and Tokyo's famous towering soft-serve ice cream.
2026/06/27 03:00 TokioGratis
© 加藤展康 · GoogleKyoto Tea Ceremony Experience
Learn the graceful art of the Japanese tea ceremony in a traditional Kyoto machiya, hosted in English for visitors.
2026/06/26 02:00 KiotoSessions typically 2,500-6,000 yen; reservations required
© 一保堂茶舗 京都本店 · Google