Inbound Guide: How to Attend a Japanese Event (Tickets, Access, Cash & Etiquette)
Tickets: free festivals vs. ticketed events
Big outdoor festivals and fireworks are usually free to attend (paid grandstand seats are optional). Ticketed events — sumo, concerts, conventions — sell through Japanese platforms (Ticket Pia, e+/eplus, Lawson Ticket) that can be fiddly in English. Where possible, buy via the official English site or an international reseller, and book popular things (sumo, Comiket-scale events, top fireworks seats) well in advance. For meetups, you simply RSVP on Luma / connpass / Meetup.
Getting there
Japan runs on rail. Use Google Maps or a transit app for exact platforms and the last train (typically around midnight). Get a Suica/PASMO IC card (or its mobile version) — tap through gates everywhere. For festival days, expect station crowd control and one-way pedestrian flows near venues; allow extra time and follow staff.
Cash vs. card
Cards and IC pay are now widely accepted — *but festival food stalls (yatai), small shrines, and rural events are frequently cash-only. Carry ¥5,000–¥10,000 in cash* for any festival day. Convenience-store ATMs (7-Eleven, Lawson) take foreign cards.
Etiquette that actually matters
- Queue and follow the flow — don't push against one-way crowds.
- Carry your trash out; public bins are rare.
- Ask before photographing people, performers' close-ups, or shop interiors; stay behind barriers at fast events.
- For shrine/temple events, a quiet, respectful manner is expected — these are living religious sites.
- Bars and clubs strictly check 20+ ID — bring your passport.
How much English to expect
Major venues, big festivals and international meetups have English signage and some English-speaking staff. Smaller community events, neighbourhood matsuri and rural festivals often don't — a translation app and a few polite Japanese phrases (sumimasen, arigatou) go a long way and are warmly received.
Your day-of checklist
Cash, IC card, passport, a small trash bag, a portable battery, and water in summer. Below: a spread of inbound-friendly events to practise on.
Tous les événements
Grand Sumo Tournament Tokyo (Hatsu Basho) 2027
Japan's first sumo tournament of the year roars to life over 15 days at Ryogoku Kokugikan, as top rikishi clash to set the tone for the season.
2027/01/09 23:00 TokyoBox (masu) and chair seats from ~¥3,800; sales typically open early December.
© Michael Hollander · GoogleGrand Sumo Tournament — Kyushu Basho (Fukuoka)
The year's final grand sumo tournament fills Fukuoka Kokusai Center for 15 days of ring-entering ceremonies, salt-throwing and thunderous bouts of giants.
2026/11/07 23:30 FukuokaFrom ~¥3,800 (arena seats) to box seats
© よっしー · GoogleTokyo English Stand-up Comedy Nights
Laugh the night away at regular English-language stand-up comedy shows hosted by Tokyo's international comedy scene.
2026/06/30 11:00 TokyoTickets typically 1,500-3,000 yen; some open-mic nights free
© Tokyo Comedy Bar (TCB) · GoogleSumida River Fireworks Festival 2026
Tokyo's most storied summer fireworks show launches 20,000 shells over the Sumida River with Tokyo Skytree glowing behind.
2026/07/25 10:00 TokyoGratuit
© Mark Williams · GoogleTsukiji Outer Market & Toyosu Food Walk
Tokyo's food paradise: graze on fresh sushi, tamagoyaki and seafood at the historic Tsukiji Outer Market.
2026/06/24 23:00 TokyoGratuit
© Kevin Wong · GoogleMeiji Jingu Hatsumode — Japan's Most-Visited New Year Shrine
Roughly three million people stream through the towering torii to pray at Tokyo's grandest shrine in the first three days of the year.
2026/12/31 14:00 TokyoGratuit
© Lawrence · Google