Kanto Travel Guide

Tokyo Shopping Guide: Best Districts, Stores & What to Buy (2026)

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Why Tokyo Is a Shopper's Paradise

Tokyo is one of the world's great shopping cities — not just for luxury goods, but for the extraordinary depth and specificity of what's available. There are entire multi-story buildings dedicated to fishing gear, model trains, vintage jeans, or single-origin coffee equipment. Whatever you care about, Tokyo has a district, a store, and possibly a museum dedicated to it.

This guide covers Tokyo's major shopping districts, what each is best for, and the key stores and experiences not to miss.

ginza tokyo shopping luxury street — Arnie Papp / Pexels

Ginza: Tokyo's Luxury Shopping District

Bustling Japanese street scene

Ginza is Tokyo's equivalent of Paris's Avenue Montaigne or New York's Fifth Avenue — the prestige luxury shopping district where every major global brand maintains a flagship. Chanel, Louis Vuitton, Hermès, Gucci, Prada, Dior — all here in architecturally spectacular buildings.

But Ginza is more than imported luxury. Itoya (a multi-story stationery and paper goods store running since 1904) and Uniqlo Ginza (the brand's global flagship, 12 floors) are Tokyo institutions. The Ginza Six mall contains Japanese luxury brands, galleries, and a rooftop garden. Mikimoto, the birthplace of cultured pearls, has its flagship here.

  • Best for: International luxury brands, Japanese craft goods, upscale department stores (Matsuya, Mitsukoshi)
  • Don't miss: Itoya stationery, Mikimoto pearls, Ginza Six rooftop garden
  • Price range: ¥¥¥¥ (though some stores like Uniqlo are budget-friendly)

Harajuku & Omotesando: Fashion Across Every Price Point

Walk five minutes from Harajuku Station and you can spend anything from ¥500 (crepe on Takeshita-dori) to ¥500,000 (handbag on Omotesando). The district covers every fashion category:

  • Takeshita-dori: Teen fashion, kawaii accessories, costume shops, fast fashion, ¥100–3,000
  • Omotesando Hills: Tadao Ando's masterpiece mall — Japanese and international mid-to-high fashion
  • Cat Street / Ura-Harajuku: Independent Japanese designers, streetwear labels, Supreme Japan, select shops
  • Kiddy Land: Five floors of character goods, toys, anime merchandise — essential for gifts
shibuya 109 shopping fashion tokyo — Eterna  Media / Pexels

Shibuya: Youth Fashion & Department Stores

Tokyo skyline and bridge at night

Shibuya 109 (officially "SHIBUYA109") is the icon of Japanese youth fashion — a cylindrical building packed with small boutiques selling the clothes, shoes, and accessories that define what young Tokyo women are wearing right now. It's a window into live fashion culture, not just a shopping mall.

Around Shibuya: Hikarie (contemporary fashion and arts space), Tokyu Hands (six floors of brilliant miscellany — the best gift-shopping store in Japan), Loft (lifestyle goods, stationery, seasonal items), and the enormous Shibuya Scramble Square retail tower.

  • Best for: Youth fashion, Japanese lifestyle goods, department stores
  • Don't miss: Tokyu Hands (gifts), Shibuya 109 (current Japanese fashion)
akihabara electronics anime shop tokyo — AXP Photography / Pexels

Akihabara: Electronics & Anime

Akihabara is the global center for electronics, gaming, anime merchandise, and otaku culture. The range is staggering:

  • Yodobashi Akiba: Nine-story electronics megastore — the largest electronics retail building in Japan. Everything from camera lenses to washing machines.
  • Animate: Multi-story anime merchandise chain flagship
  • Super Potato: Legendary retro video game shop — original Famicom, Super Nintendo, PC-Engine consoles and games in working condition
  • Radio Kaikan: Eight floors of model kits, figures, and collectibles

For electronics, compare prices at Yodobashi, Bic Camera, and smaller independent shops. Electronics are sometimes (not always) cheaper than abroad — research specific items before buying. Tax-free shopping is available at major stores with passport. Full Akihabara Guide →

Shinjuku: Everything, Everywhere

Shinjuku station's surrounding blocks contain some of Tokyo's largest department stores and specialty retailers:

  • Isetan Shinjuku: Tokyo's finest department store — particularly the basement food hall (depachika), which is an attraction in its own right
  • Takashimaya Times Square: 15-floor department store complex with Tokyu Hands and Kinokuniya bookstore inside
  • Odakyu/Keio department stores: Connected directly to the station — convenient and comprehensive
  • BIC Camera: Electronics — good for cameras, appliances, and SIM cards
vintage clothing secondhand shop tokyo — cottonbro studio / Pexels

Shimokitazawa & Koenji: Vintage & Secondhand

Tokyo has arguably the world's finest selection of curated vintage and secondhand clothing. The two best districts:

  • Shimokitazawa: Dozens of vintage shops ranging from ¥500 racks to carefully curated select shops. Best for vintage denim, band tees, 90s Japanese fashion, vintage sportswear.
  • Koenji: Slightly more obscure, slightly cheaper — excellent for American vintage, punk/rock fashion, and vintage workwear. The "alta" area has a cluster of vintage shops in a small radius.

What to Buy in Tokyo: The Best Souvenirs & Gifts

ItemWhere to BuyPrice Range
Japanese stationery (washi, pens, notebooks)Itoya (Ginza), Loft, Tokyu Hands¥300–5,000
Matcha / Japanese teaLupicia, Ippodo Tea (Shinjuku), department store basement¥1,000–8,000
SakeDepartment store B1, liquor shops, Yodobashi¥1,500–15,000
Japanese skincare / cosmeticsAny drugstore (Matsumoto Kiyoshi, Sundrug, Welcia)¥500–5,000
Retro video gamesSuper Potato (Akihabara)¥500–50,000
Anime / manga merchandiseAnimate, Jump Shop, Pokémon Center¥500–20,000
Japanese kitchen knivesKappabashi Kitchenware Town (Asakusa), Tsukiji¥3,000–100,000+
Vintage fashionShimokitazawa, Koenji¥500–30,000

Tax-Free Shopping in Japan

Foreign tourists can claim consumption tax refunds (8–10%) on purchases over ¥5,000 at participating stores. Look for "Tax Free" signs. Present your passport at the tax-free counter — you'll receive the tax back immediately. Note: some stores have a dedicated tax-free window, others process it at the register.

From 2026: Japan's tax-free system is changing — purchases are taxed at the register and refunded at the airport. Check current rules with your hotel or the Japan Tourism Agency before shopping.

Opening Hours & Practical Tips

  • Most department stores open 10:00–20:00 or 21:00
  • Specialty shops: 11:00–20:00 is typical
  • Convenience stores (konbini): 24 hours — and genuinely good for gifts and food items
  • Carry cash: Many smaller vintage stores, independent boutiques, and market stalls prefer cash or are cash-only
  • Bags: Bring your own shopping bag — most stores charge ¥3–10 per bag

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-Kanto, Travel Guide