Skyscrapers of Shinjuku 2009 January in Tokyo, Japan

Tokyo Japan

Things to do in Tokyo in January 2027

By Tripnostic Research · Updated June 3, 2026

For Tokyo in January 2027, build the day around dated events, seasonal conditions, venue hours, and booking windows. Good starting points are Shibuya Crossing, Imperial Palace East Gardens, and Tokyo Skytree & Sumida River. Check the event list and public holidays below before assigning fixed dates.

Promo codeGoing.com

30% off on flights

Plan your Tokyo trip here. Your promo code unlocks on the checked trip page after this short planner.

Tokyo in January 2027

Weather

Temperature

48°F / 33°F

8.7°C / 0.7°C

Precipitation

11d

2.5in · 62.6mm

Daylight

10h

Sea

52.3°F

11.3°C

January is crisp and mostly dry, with clear views from Skytree and cold nights around Asakusa or Shinjuku.

Public holidays

  • Jan 1New Year's Day
  • Jan 11Coming of Age Day

Planning checklist

  1. 1Use the Tokyo weather, seasonal timing, and attraction list as the spine because the dated January event list is still sparse.
  2. 2Hold flexible plans around the 2 public holidays in Japan; museums, markets, and government-run sights can switch hours.
  3. 3Group each Tokyo day by nearby neighborhoods, then validate the saved places against your trip dates before exporting the checked route to Google Maps.

Build your Tokyo plan for January

Start fresh — type or paste places you're considering — and Tripnostic checks every one against your January dates: opening hours, closures, what needs booking ahead, and which Tokyo events overlap your trip. Already have a list from a friend or an AI itinerary? Paste it and we'll check that too.

Build my Tokyo plan

About Tokyo

City overview

Tokyo is a rail-shaped metropolis where the JR Yamanote loop frames the old shogun centre, while Shinjuku, Shibuya, Ueno, Asakusa, Ginza, and Odaiba pull visitors into separate city-centres. The Sumida River, Tokyo Bay, and the former Edo castle grounds still organize the first-timer map even when the subway makes the city feel borderless.

Food & drink

Tokyo is one of the world's densest restaurant cities, with Edo-mae sushi, tempura, unagi, soba, ramen, tonkatsu, and Tsukishima monjayaki all tied to specific districts. Tsukiji Outer Market is the breakfast anchor, Ginza and Nihonbashi handle high-end sushi counters, Shinjuku and Ebisu cover izakaya nights, and the city has held more Michelin-starred restaurants than any other city in several guide years while still rewarding cheap station-counter meals.

Top sights

Ranked for January suitability using weather, setting, ratings, and review volume.

Map of Tokyo with pinned top attractions (a through j)
  1. AShibuya Crossing
  2. BImperial Palace East Gardens
  3. CTokyo Skytree & Sumida River
  4. DGinza & Tsukiji Outer Market
  5. EToyosu Market
  6. FMeiji Jingu & Harajuku
  7. GUeno Park, Tokyo National Museum & Ameyoko
  8. HSenso-ji & Nakamise-dori
  9. IAkihabara Electric Town
  10. JOdaiba & the Yurikamome
  • Shibuya Crossing in Tokyo1

    Shibuya Crossing

    4.5outdoor

    The scramble crossing outside Shibuya Station is a rail-node spectacle rather than a long sight. Pair it with Hachiko, Center-gai, Harajuku, or the Shibuya Sky side of the station.

    Wikipedia
  • Imperial Palace East Gardens in Tokyo2

    Imperial Palace East Gardens

    4.4outdoorClosed Mon/Fri

    The former Edo Castle site sits in Chiyoda inside the Yamanote loop, with moats, stone walls, and garden paths near Tokyo Station. The main palace remains closed except for limited public occasions, so the East Gardens are the everyday visit.

    Wikipedia
  • Tokyo Skytree & Sumida River in Tokyo3

    Tokyo Skytree & Sumida River

    4.4outdoorOpen daily

    The 634-metre Skytree rises on the east side near Oshiage, giving the clearest aerial read of the Sumida River and central Tokyo spread. Combine it with Asakusa by walking or taking a short train hop.

Show 7 more sights
  • 4Ginza & Tsukiji Outer Market
  • 5Toyosu Market
  • 6Meiji Jingu & Harajuku
  • 7Ueno Park, Tokyo National Museum & Ameyoko
  • 8Senso-ji & Nakamise-dori
  • 9Akihabara Electric Town
  • 10Odaiba & the Yurikamome

Neighborhoods

  • Shinjuku in tokyo1

    Shinjuku

    Shinjuku is a transport machine, nightlife district, and hotel base in one: the station, Tokyo Metropolitan Government towers, Kabukicho, Golden Gai, and department-store basements all stack together.

  • Shibuya, Harajuku & Ebisu in tokyo2

    Shibuya, Harajuku & Ebisu

    This west-side belt is youth fashion, crossings, music shops, cafes, and shrine forest. Shibuya and Harajuku bring the crowds; Ebisu is the calmer dinner-and-bar release valve.

  • Ueno, Asakusa & Taito in tokyo3

    Ueno, Asakusa & Taito

    Taito keeps the old-town Tokyo feeling with Senso-ji, Ueno museums, Ameyoko, kitchenware streets, and Sumida River access. It is better for temples and markets than late-night skyscraper views.

  • Ginza, Nihonbashi & Tsukiji in tokyo4

    Ginza, Nihonbashi & Tsukiji

    Chuo is polished and expensive: Ginza stores, Kabuki-za, Nihonbashi department stores, and Tsukiji breakfasts sit on a gridded east-centre map.

  • Chiyoda, Marunouchi & Akihabara in tokyo5

    Chiyoda, Marunouchi & Akihabara

    Chiyoda mixes the Imperial Palace, Tokyo Station, Marunouchi offices, Jimbocho bookshops, and Akihabara hobby retail. It is the business core with sudden specialist pockets.

  • Minato, Roppongi & Odaiba in tokyo6

    Minato, Roppongi & Odaiba

    Minato covers embassies, Roppongi museums and nightlife, Tokyo Tower, Shiodome, and bayfront Odaiba. It is spread out, so rail-line choice matters more here than in Taito.

Day trips

  • 50km / about 1h by JR from Tokyo or Shinjuku

    Kamakura

    Kamakura gives Tokyo visitors temples, beach air, and the Kotoku-in Great Buddha in a manageable day. It is the best first temple-town escape from the capital.

  • 85km / about 90m by Odakyu Romancecar from Shinjuku to Hakone-Yumoto

    Hakone

    Hakone is the onsen and Fuji-view circuit, with Lake Ashi, the ropeway, and the Open-Air Museum. It works as a long day, but ryokan nights make the transport loop less rushed.

  • 140km / about 2h by Tobu limited express from Asakusa

    Nikko

    Nikko is a full-day shrine and forest trip north of Tokyo, anchored by Tokugawa mausoleums and mountain air. Start early because the rail ride and bus transfers consume real time.

Getting around

Tokyo runs on JR, Tokyo Metro, Toei Subway, and private railways; Suica and PASMO IC cards remove fare math across almost all of them, while the Yamanote loop is the mental map for first-timers. Haneda is the closer airport, Narita is about 70km east, and subway fares in 2026 start around 180 yen with Tokyo Metro/Toei passes useful only on heavy subway-only days.

Common questions about Tokyo in January

Will the places on my list be open when I'm in Tokyo in January?
Not always. Opening days and hours vary by weekday, season, and holiday. Paste your Tokyo list into Tripnostic and it checks every place against the exact dates you're there, flagging closures before the trip instead of at a locked door.
How do I plan Tokyo days without crossing the city twice?
Tripnostic groups your places by neighborhood so each day stays in one or two areas instead of zig-zagging. It also flags what needs booking ahead, so timed tickets and reservations don't fall through.
What to pack for Tokyo in January

Pack for January's weather, not a generic Tokyo checklist.

  • A warm coat and insulating layers for average highs around 9°C / 48°F.
  • A heavier evening layer because nights average 1°C / 33°F.
  • Compact rain gear and shoes that handle wet pavement across about 11 rainy days.
How many days do you need in Tokyo
4 days covers the main Tokyo highlights at a realistic pace. Add 3 extra days if you want the listed day trips.
Is Tokyo worth visiting in January
Yes. Tokyo in January: 8.7°C high, 0.7°C low, 62.6mm rain over 11 days, 10h daylight. Mild and dry — shoulder-season sweet spot.

Other months in Tokyo

Other cities in January 2027

AI itinerary checks