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5 Days in Tokyo, a local's plan

I cluster Tokyo by geography instead of running down a checklist. Here's how I'd spend 5 days, east to west, so you're never doubling back.

The mistake almost everyone makes in Tokyo is planning by attraction: a temple here, a tower on the far side of the city, a market back the other way, and half the trip vanishes into trains. I plan the opposite way, by geography, clustering each day into neighbourhoods that sit next to each other so you walk more and commute less. Below is how the days break down and the areas each one covers; the exact stop-by-stop route, with the timing, the station exits and what to order at each stop, is what the full guide adds.

The neighbourhoods this plan weaves together

A good 5-day plan in Tokyo is not a list of sights, it is a route that keeps each part of the day in one part of the city, so you walk more and ride the trains less. This one moves through 13 of the neighbourhoods I know best:

What the full guide adds

This free page is the map of where to go. The plan itself, the exact order to move through these areas, timed to the hour, the specific stops inside each one, the station exit for every stop, what to order and which days things close so you never hit a shut door, is what opens with the full guide. That routing is the part worth paying for.

Planning your Tokyo trip: frequently asked questions

How many days do you need in Tokyo?

Three full days is the sweet spot for a first visit, enough for the big neighbourhoods and a proper meal or two without sprinting. Four or five lets you add a day trip (Kamakura or Hakone) and slow down. One day is doable but it's a highlights reel, not a trip.

Is 3 days enough for Tokyo?

For a first visit, yes, if you cluster smartly. Three days covers old Tokyo (Asakusa, Ueno), the modern west side (Shibuya, Shinjuku, Harajuku) and a refined day (Ginza plus a riverside or garden neighbourhood) without doubling back. You won't see everything — nobody does — but you'll see Tokyo.

How do you get around Tokyo?

Trains, and only trains. Get an IC card (Suica or Pasmo) the moment you land, use Google Maps for routing, and pay attention to station exits, which is where most lost time happens. Taxis are for after the last train or heavy rain. The whole city is reachable on the rail network.

What is the best area to stay in Tokyo for sightseeing?

Anywhere on the JR Yamanote loop keeps you close to everything, with Shinjuku, Shibuya, Tokyo Station and Ueno the most convenient hubs. Shinjuku and Tokyo Station give you the most train connections; pick by vibe and price, since transit is easy from all of them.

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