Where to Stay in Tokyo for First-Time Visitors

Choosing where to stay in Tokyo is not about finding the one correct area. It is about choosing a base that fits the way you will actually move through the city.

A hotel that feels easy for a couple with light luggage may feel tiring for a family arriving late at night. A lively area that works well for food and shopping may not be the easiest choice before an early Shinkansen. Tokyo has many good hotel areas, but the best one for your first trip depends on what your stay needs to handle: airport arrival, Disney plans, Shinkansen departure, luggage, kids, seniors, quiet nights, or a short itinerary where every transfer matters.

This guide compares the main Tokyo areas in practical terms. Use it to narrow your options, then check the exact hotel-to-station route before you commit.

Quick Answer

For many first-time visitors, Ginza / Tokyo Station and Shinjuku are the easiest starting points – but they solve different problems.

If you are unsure where to start, Ginza / Tokyo Station and Shinjuku are the easiest options for most first-time visitors. Ginza / Tokyo Station is calmer and better for logistics, while Shinjuku works better for food, nightlife, and west-side Tokyo.

  • Choose Ginza / Tokyo Station if you want calmer logistics, easier Shinkansen access, or a quieter first and last day.
  • Choose Shinjuku if you want food, nightlife, lots of hotel choices, and easy access to west-side Tokyo.
  • Consider Shibuya / Harajuku if Tokyo’s fashion, cafes, and visual energy are a main reason for your trip.
  • Consider Asakusa / Ueno if you want traditional atmosphere, museums, east-side sightseeing, or better value.
  • Consider Maihama / Disney Area if Disney is the main purpose of the trip or you have multiple early park mornings.
  • Compare first if you have kids, heavy luggage, a late arrival, Disney plans, an early Shinkansen, or only one or two nights.

Local perspective

In Tokyo, the area name is only the first check. The exact hotel location, station exit, and route with luggage often matter more than whether the hotel says Shinjuku, Ginza, or Shibuya.

Why Your Tokyo Hotel Area Matters

Tokyo is connected by excellent trains, but the city is wide. A hotel can look central on a map and still add transfers if it sits on the wrong side of your plans. For a first trip, the hard parts are usually not sightseeing itself. They are arrival day, departure day, early mornings, and moving luggage through large stations.

Airport access

Narita and Haneda create different arrival routes. A convenient hotel from Haneda may not be the easiest from Narita, and a cheap room can feel less cheap if it adds a tired transfer after a long flight. If you arrive late, travel with children, or have large bags, keep the airport route simple.

Disney plans

Tokyo Disney Resort is in Maihama, outside central Tokyo. If Disney is one day in a longer Tokyo stay, a central hotel may still be easier overall. If Disney is the main purpose of the trip, or you have several early park mornings with young children, staying near Maihama can reduce stress.

Shinkansen and luggage

If you are taking the Shinkansen to Kyoto, Osaka, or another city, the morning route to Tokyo Station or Shinagawa matters. It is worth checking the exact hotel-to-platform path, especially with suitcases. A small time saving during sightseeing may not be worth a difficult departure morning.

Kids, seniors, and quiet nights

Station size, stairs, crowd levels, room size, and evening atmosphere matter more when you travel with children, older parents, or heavy luggage. A famous area is not automatically the easiest area for your group.

! Worth checking first

Do not judge a hotel only by the neighborhood name. A hotel can be in a famous area but still require a long walk, a difficult station exit, or an extra transfer on the day when you have luggage.

The Main Areas First-Time Visitors Compare

The areas below are common choices for first-time visitors. None of them is right for every trip. Each one is useful when its strengths match your route.

Shinjuku

Shinjuku can be a very convenient choice, especially if you want food, shopping, nightlife, and west-side access. But for your first night in Japan, the exact station side and hotel location matter more than the area name.

The area has a wide range of mid-range and upscale business hotels, along with some larger international brands. Rooms near the station tend to be compact and can be expensive; check room size if you have large luggage.

Best for Food, shopping, nightlife, west-side sightseeing, and a wide range of hotel choices.
Watch out The station is large and busy. The wrong hotel side can make arrival day tiring, especially with luggage or on your first night.
Good to book if Your plans lean toward Shibuya, Harajuku, west Tokyo, Hakone, Mount Fuji routes, restaurants, or evening options.
Compare first if You have kids, heavy luggage, a late arrival, or Disney is a main part of your trip.

Ginza / Tokyo Station

Ginza and Tokyo Station work well when you want a calmer base and easier movement on arrival or departure days. Tokyo Station is especially helpful if you are leaving by Shinkansen, while Ginza gives you a polished central stay with restaurants, shopping, and a calmer evening feel.

Hotels here lean toward business-class and upper-mid-range, with a polished atmosphere. It is generally one of the higher-priced areas in Tokyo, but the logistics tradeoff is worth it for some trips.

Best for Calmer logistics, Shinkansen access, central sightseeing, polished city atmosphere, and easier first or last days.
Watch out Hotels can run higher here, and the area has less late-night energy than Shinjuku or Shibuya.
Good to book if You are taking the Shinkansen to Kyoto or Osaka, prefer a quieter base, or want a smooth arrival and departure.
Compare first if Nightlife, youth culture, or western Tokyo plans are the main reason for your stay.

Shibuya / Harajuku

Shibuya and Harajuku are strong choices if the visual, creative, and energetic side of Tokyo is a major reason for your trip. They can also make west-side sightseeing feel natural.

The area has a good mix of mid-range boutique hotels and some larger chains. Some properties are uphill from the station, so check the walking route if you are carrying luggage.

Best for Fashion, cafes, music, design, iconic Tokyo energy, and west-side plans.
Watch out Shibuya Station is large and can be confusing. Some hotels involve uphill walks or crowded crossings with luggage.
Good to book if Trends, cafes, design, music, and the visual side of Tokyo are your focus.
Compare first if You need an early Shinkansen, travel with heavy bags, arrive late, or prefer a quieter start to each day.

Asakusa / Ueno

Asakusa and Ueno are helpful if you want traditional atmosphere, museums, east-side sightseeing, or better room value. They are often more relaxed than the busiest west-side areas, but they are not automatically easier if most of your plans are west of central Tokyo.

These areas often have better value than Shinjuku or Ginza, with a mix of budget, mid-range, and some traditional guesthouse options. Room sizes can be larger for the price compared to the west side.

Best for Traditional atmosphere, temples, museums, east-side sightseeing, and often better value.
Watch out The east side can add travel time to Shibuya, Harajuku, Shinjuku, and some west-side day-trip routes.
Good to book if East-side plans such as Senso-ji, Akihabara, Ueno Park, or Nikko are a core part of your trip, or value is a priority.
Compare first if Most of your time will be in west Tokyo, or your stay is so short that repeated cross-city travel would feel tiring.

Maihama / Disney Area

Maihama is practical when Disney is central to the trip. It is not a central Tokyo base, so the right answer depends on how many Disney days you have and how much regular sightseeing you want to do.

Hotels here range from the official Disney resort hotels to practical mid-range options nearby. Prices can run high during Disney peak seasons, so book early if this area is your choice.

Best for Multiple Disney days, families with young children, early park mornings, or trips where Disney is the main purpose.
Watch out Maihama is outside central Tokyo. Regular sightseeing days in Shibuya, Asakusa, Shinjuku, or Ginza will involve more travel.
Good to book if Tokyo Disney Resort is the reason for this Tokyo stay, or you have two or more park days with children.
Compare first if Disney is just one day in a broader Tokyo trip, or most of your plans are in central or west Tokyo.

Match the Area to Your Actual Trip

After you have a shortlist, match the area to the parts of the trip that create the most friction. This is where many first-time visitors get a clearer answer.

If you arrive at Narita

Keep the first hotel route simple, especially after a long flight. Ginza / Tokyo Station, Ueno, and some east-side locations can be comfortable options depending on your exact train route. Shinjuku can still work, but check the transfer and station side carefully if you will arrive tired or late.

If you arrive at Haneda

Haneda often makes central and south-central Tokyo feel easier than Narita does, but the final hotel-to-station route still matters. If you are arriving late with luggage, a slightly calmer area can be more valuable than a lively nightlife base.

If you take the Shinkansen after Tokyo

Tokyo Station and Shinagawa access become more important if you leave early for Kyoto, Osaka, or another city. You do not always need to stay beside the station, but the route should be simple enough with suitcases.

If Tokyo Disney Resort matters

One Disney day does not automatically mean you should stay in Maihama. If Disney is one day in a longer city stay, a central Tokyo base may still be easier overall. If Disney is the main purpose, or you have multiple early park mornings with children, Maihama becomes much more practical.

If you travel with kids, older parents, or large luggage

Prioritize station simplicity, elevators, room space, and evening comfort. A famous and exciting area can still be a good choice, but it should not make every transfer harder for your group.

If you only have one or two nights

Short stays punish unnecessary transfers. Choose the area that reduces your biggest movement: airport arrival, Disney day, Shinkansen departure, or the sightseeing cluster you care about most.

CHECK YOUR OWN PLAN

Still choosing between two areas?

General area advice only goes so far. Trip Check can compare your Tokyo hotel area against your actual route, airport, Disney plans, luggage, and travel companions.

Compare my hotel area →

You can also start with “Not sure yet.”

CHECK YOUR SIGNAL

Not sure which signal applies to your trip?

The area cards can narrow your options, but your airport, luggage, Disney plans, Shinkansen route, and companions can change the answer.

Check my Tokyo hotel area →

You can start even if your hotel area is “Not sure yet.”

What to Check Before Booking

Before you book, check the details that affect arrival, departure, and daily comfort. The neighborhood name is only the starting point.

Before you book, check these

  • Nearest station and exit – Check the exact exit, not just the area name. The walk from the wrong side can be long with luggage.
  • Airport route – Is your hotel easy to reach from Narita or Haneda on arrival day?
  • Disney day – Is Disney one day in a longer trip, or the main reason you are in Tokyo?
  • Shinkansen departure – Will you need easy access to Tokyo Station or Shinagawa?
  • Luggage – Can you manage the hotel-to-platform route with your bags?
  • Evening comfort – Does the area feel right for your group after dinner?
  • Room size – Will the room fit your luggage, your people, and feel comfortable?
  • Cancellation rules – Do not commit to a non-refundable rate until you are confident.

No area is wrong for everyone. The goal is to find one that makes the harder parts – arrival, departure, early mornings, and luggage movement – as smooth as possible for this specific trip.

The Bottom Line

Shinjuku and Ginza / Tokyo Station are good starting points for many first-time visitors, but they are useful for different reasons. Shibuya / Harajuku, Asakusa / Ueno, and Maihama can also be good choices when they match your actual route.

The right answer changes with your airport, Disney plans, Shinkansen route, luggage, companions, and number of nights. Some areas are good to book immediately. Some are worth one quick comparison before you commit. A few may add friction to your specific route without looking wrong on the map.

General advice can help you narrow the options. Trip Check helps you test your own route before you book, even if your starting point is “Not sure yet.”

FREE PRE-BOOKING CHECK

Which area actually fits your trip?

Answer a few quick questions about your airport, Disney plans, Shinkansen route, and luggage — and see whether your hotel area is a good fit before you book.

  • Your arrival airport — Narita or Haneda
  • Disney plans and early park mornings
  • Shinkansen departure day
  • Luggage, companions, and stay length

Check my hotel area →

Takes about 2 minutes. No sign-up required to see your result.

Written by the Visit Japan With Me editorial team, based in Japan. Our guides focus on practical pre-booking decisions for first-time visitors to Japan.

Related Guides

  • Shinjuku vs Ginza / Tokyo Station: Which is Better for Your Tokyo Hotel? (coming soon)
  • Should You Stay Near Tokyo Disney Resort or Central Tokyo? (coming soon)
  • Best Tokyo Hotel Area if You Arrive at Narita Airport (coming soon)
  • Is Odaiba / Toyosu a Good Place to Stay in Tokyo? (coming soon)
  • Where to Stay in Japan: Hotels, Ryokan, Guesthouses, or Capsule Hotels? (coming soon)
  • Japan Travel Guide for First-Timers (coming soon)
  • How to Use Trains in Japan (coming soon)