Compare Prices from All US Cities
| From | Airport | Est. Price | Flight Time | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
BESTSeattle | SEA | $440 | ~11h | View → |
Portland | PDX | $445 | ~11h | View → |
San Francisco | SFO | $473 | ~11h | View → |
Los Angeles | LAX | $503 | ~12h | View → |
Salt Lake City | SLC | $503 | ~12h | View → |
Las Vegas | LAS | $509 | ~12h | View → |
San Diego | SAN | $513 | ~12h | View → |
Phoenix | PHX | $532 | ~13h | View → |
Denver | DEN | $534 | ~13h | View → |
Minneapolis | MSP | $549 | ~13h | View → |
Chicago | ORD | $579 | ~14h | View → |
St. Louis | STL | $587 | ~14h | View → |
Detroit | DTW | $590 | ~14h | View → |
Dallas | DFW | $593 | ~14h | View → |
Austin | AUS | $603 | ~14h | View → |
Nashville | BNA | $612 | ~14h | View → |
Houston | IAH | $613 | ~14h | View → |
Boston | BOS | $618 | ~14h | View → |
Newark | EWR | $621 | ~14h | View → |
New York | LGA | $621 | ~14h | View → |
New York | JFK | $622 | ~14h | View → |
Philadelphia | PHL | $623 | ~14h | View → |
Baltimore | BWI | $624 | ~14h | View → |
Washington D.C. | DCA | $624 | ~15h | View → |
Atlanta | ATL | $632 | ~15h | View → |
Charlotte | CLT | $634 | ~15h | View → |
Tampa | TPA | $668 | ~15h | View → |
Orlando | MCO | $669 | ~15h | View → |
Fort Lauderdale | FLL | $685 | ~16h | View → |
Miami | MIA | $686 | ~16h | View → |
San Juan | SJU | $768 | ~18h | View → |
About Tokyo
Tokyo is the city that makes every other city feel slightly underdeveloped. Fourteen million people packed into an urban core that somehow runs quieter, cleaner, and more efficiently than anywhere else on earth. For Americans, the culture shock isn't chaos — it's the opposite. Trains arrive to the second, vending machines dispense hot coffee at 3am, and convenience stores (7-Eleven, Lawson, FamilyMart) sell fresh onigiri and tonkatsu sandwiches that embarrass most American restaurants. The yen's relative weakness against the dollar since 2022 has made Tokyo genuinely affordable compared to New York or San Francisco — a bowl of ramen costs $8, a craft beer runs $6, and a Michelin-starred omakase can be had for $120 per person if you plan ahead.
The city is best understood as a collection of villages, each with its own personality. Shinjuku is neon overload and the world's busiest train station. Shibuya is fashion and that famous scramble crossing. Shimokitazawa is vintage shops and live music. Yanaka feels like Tokyo circa 1960, with wooden temple gates and tofu shops that have been there for generations. You could spend three weeks here and never run out of distinctly different neighborhoods to explore — which means your hotel location matters enormously. Pick wrong and you'll be commuting past what you actually want to see.
Food is the main event. Tokyo has more Michelin stars than any other city in the world, but the real action is at the $15-and-under level: conveyor belt sushi at Genki Sushi, yakitori at standing bars under the Yurakucho train tracks, curry rice at CoCo Ichibanya, and the obsessive regional ramen shops where the owner has spent 20 years perfecting a single broth. The Tsukiji outer market is still the right call for tuna sashimi at 7am even after the wholesale auction moved to Toyosu. And the basement food halls (depachika) of department stores like Isetan in Shinjuku or Mitsukoshi in Ginza are world-class edible experiences you won't find replicated anywhere.
Practical reality for first-timers: get a Suica card the moment you land (now available on iPhone Apple Wallet before you even board your flight), download Google Maps with offline Tokyo data, and accept that you will get lost in department stores and train station underground malls constantly — this is a feature, not a bug. Most signs have English. Almost no one speaks it fluently but everyone will try to help. Tipping is not just unnecessary, it's actively confusing and sometimes offensive. Japan's IC card system covers virtually all transit and many convenience stores and vending machines.
Best Time to Fly to Tokyo
Click any month for weather, crowds, and what's on.
Get alerts when Tokyo flights drop to your target price.
Track Tokyo flights →Airport to City: How to Get There
Narita Express (N'EX) is the gold standard: 53 minutes to Shinjuku, 90 minutes to Yokohama, runs every 30 minutes, costs ¥3,070 (~$20) one-way from Terminal 1/2 or Terminal 3. Buy the round-trip ticket on arrival for ¥4,070 (~$27) — significant savings. Limousine Bus (Airport Limousine) is slower (90-120 min depending on traffic) but drops you directly at major hotels in Shinjuku, Ginza, and Akihabara for ¥3,200-¥3,600 (~$21-24); good if you have heavy luggage and your hotel is on the route. Taxis exist but run ¥20,000-¥30,000 ($130-200) to central Tokyo — never worth it unless you're splitting 4 ways and arrive at 2am. Pro tip: if you stay near a Keisei Skyliner station, take the Keisei Skyliner to Ueno in 41 minutes for ¥2,570 (~$17) — often the fastest option for east-side hotels.
Neighborhoods & Where to Stay
The undisputed transportation hub of Tokyo with the world's busiest train station — living here means you're never more than two transfers from anywhere. The east side has Kabukicho's neon chaos and Memory Lane (Omoide Yokocho) for tiny yakitori stalls; the west side has skyscraper offices and the free observation deck of the Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building. Hotels range from the Park Hyatt (Lost in Translation territory) to solid business hotels like Keio Presso Inn around ¥10,000-15,000/night.
Home to the famous scramble crossing, Shibuya is fashion-forward and young-skewing with excellent department stores (Scramble Square, Hikarie) and great bar and izakaya density around Nonbei Yokocho. The Shibuya Sky observation deck at sunset is worth the ¥2,000 ticket. Mid-range hotels like Cerulean Tower and Granbell are strong choices and the area is well-connected on multiple subway and JR lines.
The most traditional neighborhood in central Tokyo, anchored by Senso-ji temple and Nakamise shopping street. The best budget accommodation in the city is here — hostels and guesthouses in converted townhouses run ¥3,000-5,000/night. Slightly slower to reach other neighborhoods since it's on the far east side, but the vibe of rickshaws, kimono rental shops, and sembei (rice cracker) vendors is irreplaceable. Base yourself here for a first trip if budget is the priority.
Tokyo's expat and nightlife center is also home to three of the city's best museums within walking distance: Mori Art Museum, National Art Center, and Suntory Museum of Art. The Roppongi Hills and Tokyo Midtown complexes have the kind of restaurant density that makes staying here genuinely convenient. Luxury hotels like The Ritz-Carlton Tokyo (floors 45-53 of Midtown Tower) command ¥80,000+/night but justify it with views that redefine 'city view.'
The Brooklyn of Tokyo — vinyl record shops, indie theaters, vintage clothing, and jazz bars packed into a neighborhood that resisted a road-widening project for decades to stay human-scale. Two stops from Shinjuku on the Odakyu line, accommodation is limited but guesthouses and Airbnbs run cheap. Best for return visitors who want to understand what Tokyo is like when it's not performing for tourists.
Tokyo's Fifth Avenue equivalent, where Hermès, Louis Vuitton, and Chanel have their flagship stores in architecturally notable buildings. Eating here doesn't have to mean spending ¥30,000 — the Ginza Six basement food hall and the basement of Itoya (a six-floor stationary store worth visiting on its own merits) have excellent affordable options. The main strip closes to cars on weekend afternoons, turning it into a pedestrian promenade that's worth seeing even if you're not buying anything.
Daily Budget: What to Expect
$15 capsule hotel or hostel dorm in Asakusa, $25 food (7-Eleven breakfast ¥400, ramen lunch ¥900, izakaya dinner ¥1,500 with two beers), $8 subway day pass or IC card charges, $10 temple admissions and a museum or two, $17 buffer for snacks and a convenience store beer at night
$80 business hotel room (Dormy Inn, Via Inn, or Remm properties are best value), $60 food (conveyor sushi lunch ¥2,000, nice izakaya dinner ¥4,500 with sake), $15 transit, $30 activities (teamLab digital art, Shibuya Sky, one nice museum), $15 coffee shop sits and snacks at depachika
$300 four or five-star hotel (Park Hyatt, Aman Tokyo, Conrad, Peninsula), $200 food (counter omakase sushi lunch ¥15,000, premium wagyu dinner ¥20,000+), $30 transit and occasional taxi, $80 high-end experiences (private tea ceremony, top-floor restaurant cover charge, department store premium goods), $40 sake bars and cocktail lounges
What to Eat in Tokyo
Ramen at Ichiran in Shinjuku — the single-occupancy booth system where you fill out a flavor customization sheet and receive your bowl through a small hatch without speaking to anyone is the most Tokyo thing that exists; the tonkotsu is genuinely great and costs ¥980
Tuna sashimi at Tsukiji Outer Market at 7am — specifically at Sushi Dai or Daiwa Sushi (expect 30-90 minute lines), or the tuna belly (otoro) on rice at any of the small counter shops; ¥2,500-4,000 gets you a set that would cost $80 at a NYC omakase
Yakitori under the Yurakucho train tracks — the cramped, smoky restaurants between Yurakucho and Hibiya stations have barely changed since the 1950s; order tsukune (chicken meatball), negi ma (chicken and scallion), and negima with a cold Sapporo for ¥2,000-3,000 total
Convenience store onigiri and tamago sando — this sounds like a joke but a FamilyMart egg salad sandwich (tamago sando, ¥260) is legitimately among the best sandwiches in the world and eating it on the curb outside a 7-Eleven at midnight after a long day is a peak Tokyo experience
Kaiseki dinner at a traditional ryotei in Akasaka or Minami-Aoyama — this is the 10-15 course seasonal tasting menu that Japanese haute cuisine is built around; budget ¥25,000-50,000 per person, book 3-6 months ahead via concierge or Tableall.com, and understand that this is the most labor-intensive, beautiful food you will ever eat
Flying from the US to Tokyo
Airlines & Routes
- →Japan Airlines nonstop from JFK, LAX, SFO, ORD, DFW, BOS
- →ANA nonstop from JFK, LAX, SFO, IAD, IAH, ORD
- →United nonstop from EWR, SFO, IAD, ORD, LAX
- →Delta nonstop from LAX, SEA, DTW, JFK (seasonal)
- →American nonstop from LAX, DFW
- →Alaska Airlines nonstop from SEA
- →Korean Air via Seoul ICN from JFK, LAX, SFO, SEA, ORD, ATL, DFW, IAH
- →Asiana via Seoul ICN from LAX, SFO, JFK, SEA
Flight Duration
Safety Tips
Tokyo is statistically one of the safest large cities on earth — violent crime against tourists is genuinely rare and petty theft is almost nonexistent compared to European capitals. That said: the main specific risks are getting blackout drunk in Kabukicho (Shinjuku's red-light district) and getting taken to a 'hostess bar' or 'snack bar' where a ¥20,000 bill appears at the end of the night — if a stranger aggressively invites you in, walk away. The area around Roppongi at 2-3am attracts some aggressive touts, same principle applies. Earthquakes happen; familiarize yourself with your hotel's emergency exits and know that Japan's earthquake warning system will blast an alert on your phone (very loud, in Japanese) before shaking begins. Download the Safety Tips Japan app from the Japan Tourism Agency — it provides real-time earthquake, tsunami, and weather alerts in English. Keep your Suica card separate from your passport in case you lose your bag. Japan is largely cash-accepting everywhere; carry ¥5,000-10,000 in cash at all times since some restaurants and small shops are cash-only.
Buy a JR Pass only if you're doing multi-city Japan travel (Tokyo-Kyoto-Osaka or beyond) — for a Tokyo-only trip it's a waste of money since the subway IC card covers everything you need. The real move: activate your Suica card on your iPhone via Apple Wallet before you leave the US (it's in the Wallet app under transit cards), load it with yen via Apple Pay, and arrive already set up for every subway, bus, convenience store, and vending machine in Japan without touching a physical card.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the cheapest way to fly to Tokyo?
The cheapest route to Tokyo from the US is typically from Seattle (SEA), with estimated round-trip prices around $440. Prices vary significantly by season and booking timing.
What is the best time to visit Tokyo?
The best time to visit Tokyo is March, April, October, November. Spring (March-April) for cherry blossoms, fall (October-November) for foliage. Summer is hot and humid (85°F+, 80% humidity). Winter is cold but clear.
Do US citizens need a visa to visit Tokyo?
Visa-free for US passport holders for up to 90 days (tourism). Easy entry, but bring proof of onward travel.
How long is the flight from the US to Tokyo?
Flight time from the US to Tokyo (NRT) is approximately 11 hours from Seattle. Flight times vary by departure city — eastern US cities are typically shorter to their destination.
Related Reading
Track flights to Tokyo
Set a price alert for your preferred route and we'll notify you when fares drop.
Get Price Alerts