184 Best Places to Shop in Japan

Background Illustration for Shopping

We've compiled the best of the best in Japan - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Antique Nanae

Chuo-ku Fodor's choice

This darling and inexpensive antiques shop in Kitano-cho has a large collection of high-quality yukata (lightweight summer kimonos) that you can try on. There's also a good selection of ceramics and lacquerware. Nanae, the owner, enjoys explaining the history behind the pieces.

Atelier Sogeikan

Asakusa Fodor's choice
What better souvenir than one made by your own hand with the guidance of a master? Join a lantern making workshop and learn to paint your own name (or whatever you choose) in a traditional lettering style called Edomojii on your own paper lantern. A brush and sumi (black ink for Japanese calligraphy) will be provided.

Azabudai Hills

Minato-ku Fodor's choice

The area's latest ultra-sleek urban complex opened in late 2023. Like Tokyo Midtown and Roppongi Hills, it mixes office spaces with cafés, restaurants, a luxury hotel, art galleries, and plenty of high-end shops—all spread across two skyscrapers and a cluster of smaller buildings and plazas. Shop-wise, it's known for it's brand-name boutiques, such as Bulgari, Cartier, Celine, and Dior. The most notable art venue is the digital teamLab gallery, although there's also a small manga museum and the contemporary art-focused Azabudai Hills Gallery. 

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Beams Harajuku

Shibuya-ku Fodor's choice

Shopping at Beams ensures that you or your kids will be properly stocked with the city's coolest wares. Indeed, there's such a variety of merchandise—ranging from street wear to high-end imports—that it won't fit into just one store. In Harajuku, you'll find a cluster of shops, including Beams T for T-shirts, Beams Plus for casual wear, a record store, a funky "from Tokyo" souvenir shop that sells anime figurines, and more.

Comme des Garçons

Minato-ku Fodor's choice

Sinuous low walls snake through Comme des Garçons founder Rei Kawakubo's flagship store, a minimalist labyrinth that is one of Tokyo's funkiest retail spaces. Here you can shop for the designer's signature clothes, as well as shoes and accessories.

Daikanyama T-Site

Shibuya-ku Fodor's choice

This is a calming respite, complete with a leafy garden, a trendy terrace eatery, a gallery, and, of course, the main business—a shop selling books, music, and videos with a focus on art and design. One of the lounges has 30,000 books and a large selection of foreign magazines you can read there with a drink. There's also a pet boutique, so some locals bring their designer-dud-clad dogs with them to enjoy the on-site amenities.

Decks Tokyo Beach

Minato-ku 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 over the harbor, a view that's particularly delightful at sunset, when the yakatabune (traditional-roofed pleasure boats) drift down the Sumida-gawa from Yanagibashi and Ryogoku.

Disk Union

Shinjuku-ku Fodor's choice

Music lovers rejoice: the Shinjuku flagship of this chain has floors devoted to different genres of music, selling vinyl and more from around the world. Other branches even specialize in just one type of music, so if you have a preference—be it Latin, rock, indie, jazz, or something else—grab a store flyer that lists all the outlets.

Dover Street Market

Chuo-ku Fodor's choice

This multistory fashion playhouse is a shrine to exclusives, one-offs, and other hard-to-find pieces from luxury brands all over the world. Curated by Comme des Garçons, the selection may leave all but the most dedicated fashion fans scratching their heads, but the unique interior sculptures alone warrant a visit.

Ginza Natsuno

Shibuya-ku Fodor's choice

This two-story boutique sells an incredible range of chopsticks, from those with traditional to pop motifs to wooden or crystal-encrusted sticks that can be personalized. The kid-focused second floor is a must-see no matter your age.

Haibara

Chuo-ku Fodor's choice

Founded elsewhere in 1806, but now located in this sleek, modern grey cube just off Chuo-dori in Nihonbashi, Haibara specializes in gorgeous notebooks, letter sets, fans, and traditional washi paper. Among the examples of the latter, look for gampi, an artisanal paper known for its delicate appearance yet high durability.

Hanashyo

Koto-ku Fodor's choice
This showroom and shop features exquisite examples of Edo Kiriko glassware, a traditional art that dates to the end of the Edo Period (1603–1868). Artisan Ryuichi Kamukura opened this store in the 1980s and is one of the most respected names in glassware. His subtle rice-chain patterns are especially popular.

Issey Miyake

Minato-ku Fodor's choice

The otherworldly creations of internationally renowned brand Issey Miyake are on display at his Tokyo flagship store, which carries the full Paris line. Just a stone's throw away are other Miyake stores, among them Issey Miyake Men, Pleats Please, and Reality Lab. The latter showcases Miyake's most experimental creations including incredible origami-like clothing and BaoBao totes.

Jahana Kippan

Fodor's choice

Not far from Kokusai Street is a shop fit for a king. In fact, the traditional sweets that Jahana Kippan produce were once made for the royal court of the Ryukyu Kingdom. The secret recipes have been passed down from generation to generation, and the ingredients are all natural, mainly based on sugarcane, winter melon, and kippan, a citrus fruit. Hisano speaks excellent English and can explain the different delicacies. The green-tea-covered sweets are popular, but the coconut-covered tougan (winter melon) is sublime.

Kama-Asa

Taito-ku Fodor's choice

Specializing in handcrafted knives and kitchen utensils, this elegant store first opened in 1908 in Asakusa's Kappabashi (Kitchen Town). It now occupies two neighboring buildings, one selling more than 80 varieties of knives made by leading makers around Japan, the other focusing on high-grade items like Nambu cast ironware. Allow extra time to have your knives engraved with Japanese symbols or your name at no extra cost.

Kiddy Land

Shibuya-ku Fodor's choice

Considered by many to be Tokyo's best toy store, this Omotesando landmark carries the cutest and kitschiest of items, including some character-themed wares that are being test-marketed. The store can become quite crowded and the atmosphere chaotic, but that's part of the experience of shopping for toys that are unique, new, or both.

Kukuli

Shinjuku-ku Fodor's choice

This tiny store in charming Kagurasaka sells scarves, wraps, and linens made of all kinds of fabrics—sometimes even vintage textiles—from different regions of Japan.

1–10 Tsukudocho, Tokyo, 162-0821, Japan
03-6280–8462

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Midori-Ya

Arakawa-ku Fodor's choice

Established in 1908, this family-run shop near the base of the staircase on the traditional Yanaka Ginza shopping street, offers the wares of three generations of bamboo artists. Look for insect cages (with bamboo bugs), flower baskets, chopsticks, cups, lotus-root coasters, and lunchboxes.

Mikimoto Ginza Main Store

Chuo-ku Fodor's choice

Since 1893, Kokichi Mikimoto has been associated with the best quality cultured pearls in the industry, and this flagship store is devoted to them. The building, like the pearls it holds, dazzles shoppers with a facade decorated with 40,000 small glass plates. A few streets away, the exterior design of the sister branch, Mikimoto Ginza 2, is even more striking: it resembles a block of Swiss cheese.

Mitsukoshi Main Store

Chuo-ku Fodor's choice

Founded in 1673 as a dry-goods store, Mitsukoshi later played one of the leading roles in introducing Western merchandise to Japan. It has retained its image of quality and excellence, with a particularly strong representation of Western fashion designers. The store also stocks fine traditional Japanese goods and, in the basement, has excellent deli counters and prepared foods—if the weather is good, take your bento to the rooftop garden. With its own subway stop, bronze lions at the entrance, and an atrium sculpture of the Japanese goddess Magokoro, this flagship store merits a visit even if you're not planning on buying anything.

Muji

Chuo-ku Fodor's choice

The global flagship store of this minimalist, design-focused interiors and clothing brand is home to a large selection of furniture, appliances, bedding, and clothes for the whole family. The store also houses a café–bakery, a diner, and a sleek hotel.

Musubi

Shibuya-ku Fodor's choice

You might not expect to find classic crafts in the vicinity of trendy Harajuku, but this charming boutique specializes in traditional furoshiki cloths—beautifully decorated squares used to wrap anything and everything. You'll find up to 500 options here made from a variety of fabrics and featuring traditional, seasonal, and modern designs. The store also offers workshops on the various ways to use the cloths.

Ozu Washi

Chuo-ku Fodor's choice

This shop, which was opened in 1653, has one of the largest washi showrooms in the city and its own gallery of antique papers and calligraphy. It also offers a variety of cultural classes each day (see the website for times), including a washi paper workshop for ¥800.

Prada

Minato-ku Fodor's choice

This fashion landmark, designed by Herzog & de Meuron, is one of the city's most buzzed-about architectural wonders in the city. Its facade is a mosaic of green glass "bubble" windows with alternating convex and concave panels that create distorted reflections of the surrounding area. Many world-renowned, nearby boutiques have tried to replicate the significant impact the Prada building has had on the area, but none have been unable to match this tower. Don't miss the cavelike entrance that leads into the basement shoe floor.

Shinjuku Marui - Main Building

Shinjuku-ku Fodor's choice

Almost ubiquitous at Tokyo's major stations and easily recognized by its giant O|O| logo, Marui burst onto the retail scene in the 1980s, when it was one of the first department stores in Japan to offer an in-store credit card. With four buildings—Marui Honkan, Marui Annex, Marui One, and Marui Mens—this branch is by far the area's largest department store, and the variety on offer makes each building worth a visit. Of course, as with all Tokyo shopping adventures, there are also dining options.

Tokyu Hands

Shibuya-ku Fodor's choice

This chain carries a wide and varied assortment of goods, including hobby and crafts materials, art supplies, and knitting and sewing materials, as well as jewelry, household goods, stationery, even cosmetics. There is also the related Hands Do within the store that hosts events on how to make things. It's not unusual for local hobbyists to spend an entire afternoon browsing in here.

Yamada Heiando

Shibuya-ku Fodor's choice

With a spacious, airy layout and lovely lacquerware goods, this fashionable shop is a must for anyone who appreciates fine design. Rice bowls, sushi trays, bento lunch boxes, hashioki (chopstick rests), and jewelry cases come in traditional blacks and reds, as well as patterns both subtle and bold. Prices are fair—many items cost less than ¥10,000—but these are the kinds of goods for which devotees of Japanese craftsmanship would be willing to pay a lot.

2K540 Aki-Oka Artisan

Taito-ku

Located in a renovated area under the train tracks just north of Akihabara Station, this hip collection of 50 some artisanal shops is a great place to hunt for high-end gifts made by local artists and designers. Most shops have a single specialty: paper, ceramics, leather bags, even umbrellas combining traditional techniques with modern design. On weekends some of the shops offer workshops, demonstrations, and other events.

5–9 Ueno, Tokyo, 110-0005, Japan
03-6806–0254
Shopping Details
Closed Wed.

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6%DokiDoki

Shibuya-ku

Kawaii (cute) Harajuku fashion lives on at this pastel, dollhouse-like shop on the second floor of a nondescript building. Browsing the colorful items and glittery accessories—part of a style called "kawaii anarchy"—might be one of Tokyo's most unique shopping experiences. Even the shop clerks dress the part.

4–28–16 Jingumae, Tokyo, 150-0001, Japan
03-3479–6116

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Aizen Kobo

Kamigyo-ku

Fine handwoven and hand-dyed indigo textiles are this shop's specialty. The indigo plant is grown only in one place in Japan nowadays, and Aizen Kobo makes exclusive use of that product, crafting cloth and garments in this rich deep-blue color. The owner dyes the cloth and his wife, Hisako Utsuki, designs.