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.
Tous les événements
Akihabara Anime & Gaming Exploration
Dive into otaku heaven: multi-floor anime stores, retro arcades, maid cafes and gachapon as far as the eye can see.
2026/06/24 03:00 TokyoGratuit
© Alvin Leow · GoogleSanja Matsuri
Asakusa's wildest weekend: nearly 100 portable shrines and two million people flood the streets around Senso-ji Temple.
2026/05/15 02:00 TokyoGratuit
© Guanchul Guanchunao · GoogleTokyo Japanese-English Language Exchange
Practice Japanese and help others with English at relaxed, recurring language-exchange meetups across Tokyo.
2026/06/26 10:00 TokyoOften free entry; buy your own drinks
© 岡野谷覚士 · GoogleTokyo Gaijins Social & Outdoor Events
A long-running group running hikes, sports days, parties and day trips for internationals and locals across Tokyo.
2026/06/30 01:00 TokyoPer-event fees vary (hikes, BBQs, parties); see listing
© Tokiotours - Your Personal Tour Guide in Japan · GoogleShinjuku Golden Gai Bar Hopping
A maze of 200+ tiny, characterful bars in Shinjuku — squeeze in, meet strangers, and barhop into the small hours.
2026/06/25 11:00 TokyoMany bars charge a 500-1,000 yen seating fee plus drinks; some are foreigner-friendly
© Tekcho · GoogleUeno Park Cherry Blossom Viewing (Hanami)
One of Tokyo's most famous hanami spots: 1,000 cherry trees line Ueno Park's central path in a pink canopy each spring.
2026/03/25 TokyoGratuit
© jared lee · Google