
Nakamise Street
Best time to visit
Visit early morning on weekdays, before tour groups arrive, for clearer photos and shorter lines. Evening brings atmospheric lantern light but draws larger crowds on weekends.
Budget tips
No entrance fee, only costs come from shopping and snacks; carry cash as some stalls prefer yen. Look for tax-free signs at larger shops and try smaller food stalls for cheaper, authentic bites.
Recommended for
First-time Tokyo visitors, Food explorers, Photography enthusiasts, Souvenir hunters
Plan your visit
30-45 min
About
Fakta singkat: A lively shopping lane funnels crowds toward a towering temple gate, lined with roughly 90 tiny stalls selling snacks, crafts, and colorful souvenirs. Expect the snap of freshly grilled senbei, the powdery sweetness of ningyo-yaki, and shopkeepers calling out offers in a steady, friendly chorus.
Sorotan: A narrow corridor of red-paper lanterns frames the walk, vendors press small cake-shaped ningyo-yaki into iron molds that hiss and steam, sending warm, sweet aromas into the air. Several family-run stalls keep recipes and ledgers passed down across nine generations, and many will hand you a hot sample for about ¥200 so you can taste the tradition immediately.
Insider tips
- Wear comfortable shoes, the pavement is narrow and you will be walking back and forth.
- Arrive before 10:00 on weekdays to avoid tour groups and long lines at snack stalls.
- Photograph the street facing Kaminarimon gate early for a clear shot of the giant lantern.
- Skip the souvenir chains closest to Senso-ji and browse a few stalls further down for better prices.
Klik untuk memesan tur jalan kaki GRATIS di Tokyo, Japan
Cara terbaik untuk mengalami sebuah kota dengan pemandu lokal.
Tip: We strongly recommend a free walking tour on your first day to get to know the city with a local guide. They usually cover all main attractions and you can ask for personal recommendations based on your interests for the next days. Book early as spaces fill up fast!
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