9 Best Shopping in Tokyo, Japan

Decks Tokyo Beach

Odaiba Fodor's choice

Overlooking the harbor, this six-story complex of shops, restaurants, and boardwalks is really two connected malls: Island Mall and Seaside Mall. For kids (or nostalgic adults), check out the Lego Discovery Center, Joypolis mega-arcade, Trick Art Museum, and Madame Tussauds Tokyo. At the Seaside Mall, a table by the window in any of the restaurants looks out to a delightful view of the harbor, especially at sunset, when the yakatabune (traditional-roofed pleasure boats) drift down the Sumida-gawa from Yanagibashi and Ryogoku. You can also try shopping at the equally large Aqua City mall next door.

Asagaya Pearl Center

Suginami-ku

Ignore the name (this isn’t a pearl store), the Pearl Center is a classic shotengai (covered shopping arcade) running for just over half a kilometer (⅓ mile) on the south side of Asagaya Station. Like many shotengai, it houses a mishmash of stores, from cafés and small eateries to everyday goods stores and clothing shops. You will also find places selling kimonos, crafts, and traditional sweets. It’s a great place to soak up some local flavor and possibly pick up a souvenir. Most stores open around 11 am.

Glassarea

Minato-ku

Virtually defining Aoyama elegance is this small cobblestone shopping center, which draws well-heeled young professionals to its handful of fashion boutiques, spa, and a specialty store of Japanese crafts from Fukui Prefecture.

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Marunouchi Buildings

Chiyoda-ku

Bringing some much-needed retail dazzle to the area are these six shopping, office, and dining mega-complexes called Marunoucuhi, Shin-marunouchi, Oazo, Iiyo, Brick Square, and Tokia. Highlights include the fifth-floor open terrace on the Marunouchi building, with its view of Tokyo Station, and Bricksquare, which has its own oasislike European garden on the ground floor to rest in between bouts of shopping at the luxury and everyday boutiques.

Omotesando Hills

Shibuya-ku

Architect Tadao Ando's adventure in concrete is also one of Tokyo's monuments to shopping. Despised and adored with equal zeal, the controversial project demolished the charming yet antiquated Dojunkai Aoyama Apartments along Omotesando Avenue. Six wedge-shape floors include some brand-name heavy hitters (Yves Saint Laurent, Jimmy Choo and Harry Winston) and a wide range of smaller stores whose shelves showcase mid- to high-end shoes and bags. It's worth a stroll to see the latest in Japanese haute couture, and restaurants and cafés can also be found here—but beware of long lines at weekends.

Roppongi Hills

Minato-ku

You could easily spend a whole day exploring the retail areas of this complex of shops, restaurants, residential and commercial towers, a nine-screen cineplex, the Grand Hyatt Tokyo hotel, and the Mori Art Museum—all wrapped around the TV Asahi studios and sprawled out in five zones located between the Roppongi intersection and Azabu Juban. The shops here emphasize eye-catching design and chichi brands, although finding a particular shop can be a hassle given the building's Escher-like layout. To navigate, go to the information center to retrieve a floor guide with color-coded maps in English.

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Tokyo Midtown

Minato-ku

This huge complex is an architectural statement with sweeping glass roofs and a large walkable garden in the back. The airy, open spaces house exclusive boutiques, hotels, and a concentration of cafés by the world's top pâtissiers on the first few floors.

Tokyo Midtown Hibiya

Chiyoda-ku
Billed as a luxury entertainment-and-shopping complex, Midtown Hibiya's curvy glass-meets-greenery design is worth a visit for the architecture itself. The complex has six floors of shopping and dining, focusing on high-end and smaller brands. Two floors are devoted to Toho Cinema's premier theater. Outside, the grassy lawn of the sixth-floor garden often hosts events and is a great place to relax outside.

Ueno Sakuragi Atari

Taito-ku

A collection of wooden structures at the end of a stone path is home to Yanaka Beer Hall, which has many craft beers on tap (closed every third Monday), a bread shop in a little back garden, a shop with different vinegars and olive oils, and a few other small shops. It's a good place to stop for a beer or just a peek into these increasingly rare wooden structures that Tokyo doesn't build anymore.