Best Areas to Stay in Tokyo: Neighborhood Guide
Choosing where to stay in Tokyo can make or break your trip. Compare Shinjuku, Asakusa, Ueno, Guest House Toco and Andon Ryokan-style east-side bases, and calmer central luxury districts before you book.
How to Choose Where to Stay in Tokyo
Tokyo is massive — 23 special wards spread across a sprawling urban landscape. The Official Tokyo Travel Guide area index is useful for seeing how neighborhoods cluster, while its guides to Shinjuku, Asakusa, and Ueno give concrete transport and atmosphere checks before you book. The key is picking a neighborhood that matches your travel style and priorities.
Here are the best areas to stay, organized by what matters most to you.
Best for First-Time Visitors: Shinjuku
Shinjuku is Tokyo's busiest transport hub, with the world's busiest train station connecting you to virtually every part of the city. The west side offers large international hotels, while the east side buzzes with restaurants, bars, and the neon-lit Kabukicho entertainment district.
- Pros: Unbeatable train access, huge hotel selection, great food scene
- Cons: Can feel overwhelming, crowded during rush hour
- Budget range: 5,000 yen (capsule) to 50,000+ yen (luxury)
Best for Culture and Tradition: Asakusa
Home to Senso-ji temple and the old-town Shitamachi atmosphere, Asakusa offers a taste of historic Tokyo. Budget-friendly hostels and ryokan-style hotels line the quiet side streets. The Sumida River adds a scenic touch, and Tokyo Skytree is a short walk away.
If you specifically want a traditional Tokyo guesthouse rather than a standard hostel, widen the map slightly into nearby Taito and Yanaka. Guest House Toco Tokyo is a useful concrete example when you want wooden-house atmosphere with easy access to Ueno and Asakusa.
If your search is specifically for Andon Ryokan, think of this side of Tokyo as a city ryokan zone rather than an onsen destination. The logic is Minowa / Asakusa-side access, design character, and tatami atmosphere inside an urban trip, not a remote hot-spring-town stay.
- Pros: Traditional atmosphere, affordable, close to Skytree
- Cons: Fewer direct train lines, quieter nightlife
- Budget range: 3,000 yen (hostel) to 25,000 yen (boutique hotel)
Best for Nightlife: Shibuya
Shibuya is youth culture, fashion, and nightlife. The famous scramble crossing is here, along with endless bars, clubs, and late-night izakaya. It is also a major train hub with excellent connections.
- Pros: Vibrant nightlife, great shopping, central location
- Cons: Noisy, pricier accommodation, very crowded on weekends
- Budget range: 6,000 yen (business hotel) to 60,000+ yen (luxury)
Best for Families: Odaiba
This waterfront island offers a resort-like feel with teamLab exhibits, shopping malls, and open spaces. Hotels tend to be larger with family-friendly rooms. The Rainbow Bridge views are stunning, and the area is less hectic than central Tokyo.
- Pros: Spacious, family-friendly attractions, waterfront views
- Cons: Isolated from central Tokyo, limited dining options at night
- Budget range: 10,000 to 40,000 yen
Best for Foodies: Tsukiji / Ginza
Stay near the old Tsukiji outer market for the best breakfast sushi and street food in Tokyo. Ginza, just a short walk away, is home to some of Japan's finest restaurants, including numerous Michelin-starred establishments. The area combines culinary excellence with upscale shopping.
If your search is specifically for Hotel Okura Tokyo, the real question is whether you want a calmer central luxury/business base around Toranomon, Akasaka, or nearby business districts rather than nightlife-heavy Shibuya or east-side guesthouse atmosphere. That style fits travelers who care more about polished service, airport-bus practicality, and quieter evenings than about immediate bar-hopping.
- Pros: World-class dining, upscale atmosphere, central location
- Cons: Higher prices, quieter after business hours
- Budget range: 8,000 to 80,000+ yen
Best for Budget Travelers: Ueno
Ueno offers affordable accommodation near museums, Ueno Park, and Ameyoko market. It is also a major train station with Shinkansen access, making it a smart base for day trips. The area has a down-to-earth, local feel that many travelers prefer.
- Pros: Affordable, museum district, Shinkansen access
- Cons: Less trendy, fewer upscale options
- Budget range: 2,500 yen (hostel) to 15,000 yen (mid-range)
Quick Comparison
- Best overall: Shinjuku — unmatched access and variety
- Best value: Ueno or Asakusa — affordable with character
- Best luxury: Ginza or Marunouchi — refined and elegant
- Best for short stays: Tokyo Station area — Shinkansen and airport express access
Primary sources: GO TOKYO area index, GO TOKYO Shinjuku guide, GO TOKYO Asakusa guide, GO TOKYO Ueno guide.