11 Best Places to Shop in Tokyo, Japan

Background Illustration for Shopping

Tokyo is Japan's showcase. The crazy clothing styles, obscure electronics, and new games found here are capable of setting trends for the rest of the country—and perhaps the rest of Asia, and even Europe and America.

Part of the Tokyo shopping experience is simply to observe, and on Saturday especially, in districts like the Ginza and Shinjuku, you will notice that the Japanese approach to shopping can be nothing short of feverish. You’ll probably want to resist the urge to join in the fray, especially since many of the wildly trendy clothes and accessories for sale will already be "uncool" by the time you get home. But shopping in Tokyo can also be an exercise in elegance and refinement, especially if you shop for items that are Japanese-made for Japanese people and sold in stores that don't cater to tourists. With brilliantly applied color, balance of form, and superb workmanship, crafts items can be exquisite and well worth the price you'll pay—and some can be quite expensive.

Note the care taken with items after you purchase them, especially in department stores and boutiques. Goods will be wrapped, wrapped again, bagged, and sealed. Sure, the packaging can be excessive—does anybody really need three plastic bags for one croissant?—but such a focus on presentation has deep roots in Japanese culture.

This focus on presentation also influences salespeople who are invariably helpful and polite. In the larger stores they greet you with a bow when you arrive, and many of them speak at least enough English to help you find what you're looking for. There's a saying in Japan: o-kyaku-sama wa kami-sama, "the customer is a god"—and since the competition for your business is fierce, people do take it to heart.

Horror stories abound about prices in Japan—and some of them are true. Yes, European labels can cost a fortune here, but did you really travel all the way to Tokyo to buy an outfit that would be cheaper in the designer mall at home? True, a gift-wrapped melon from a department-store gourmet counter can cost $150. But you can enjoy gawking even if you don’t want to spend like that. And if you shop around, you can find plenty of gifts and souvenirs at fair prices.

Japan has finally embraced the use of credit cards, although some smaller mom-and-pop shops may still take cash only. So when you go souvenir hunting, be prepared with a decent amount of cash; Tokyo's low crime rates make this a low-risk proposition. The dishonor associated with theft is so strong, in fact, that it's considered bad form to conspicuously count change in front of cashiers.

Japan has an across-the-board 8% value-added tax (V.A.T.) imposed on luxury goods. This tax can be avoided at some duty-free shops in the city (don't forget to bring your passport). It's also waived in the duty-free shops at the international airports, but because these places tend to have higher profit margins, your tax savings there are likely to be offset by the higher markups.

Stores in Tokyo generally open at 10 or 11 am and close at 8 or 9 pm.

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.

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.

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Don Quijote

Shinjuku-ku

This massive store with branches all over the country is a bargain-hunters dream, though shopping here can be a claustrophobic experience. It's packed with eclectic discount merchandise—watches, used luxury handbags, costumes, cosmetics, family-size bags of Japanese snacks—that is stacked haphazardly from floor to ceiling. The store is also open 24 hours, which means there's ample opportunity for both shopping and people-watching.

Ginza Six

Chuo-ku

Below upper-floor office spaces, you’ll find eight floors that are home to outposts of swanky brands like Celine, Fendi, and Jimmy Choo. There are also cosmetic stores, deli foods, restaurants, art installations, and even the Kanze Noh theater in the basement. It's immediately across from the 12-story flagship of budget fashion brand Uniqlo.

6–10–1 Ginza, Tokyo, 104-0061, Japan
03-6891–3390

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Isetan

Shinjuku-ku

Shopping at Isetan, which was established in 1886 and is known in Japan and abroad for its high-end fashions, is one of the most pleasant retail experiences in the city. Its upper floors are a mix of clothes, cosmetics, foods, and drinks; its basement food court, which has both traditional and modern offerings, is the largest one inside a Tokyo department store. In addition, Isetan is directly connected to Shinjuku's maze of underground pathways.

3–14–1 Shinjuku, Tokyo, 160-0022, Japan
03-3225–2514

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Kitte Marunouchi

Chiyoda-ku

The unique geometric shape of Kitte’s interior, which was partly designed by renowned Japanese architect Kengo Kuma, sets this department store apart. It also has a notable free history museum on the second floor (called Intermediatheque) and an expansive sixth-floor rooftop garden overlooking Tokyo Station. In the basement is the Tokyo City Tourist & Business Information Center, where English-speaking staffers can share info on attractions and events in and around Tokyo. The department store’s name, Kitte, is a play on the Japanese words “stamp” and “come.” It makes sense once you know that Japan Post was the building’s developer.

Matsuya

Chuo-ku

The second-floor of this slick major department store has the European-designer boutiques (Prada, Luis Vuitton, Balenciaga) that are popular with Tokyo's brand-obsessed shoppers. The rooftop terrace is a welcome respite for the weary.

Mitsukoshi Ginza

Chuo-ku

The Ginza branch of Japan's first department-store chain has been open since 1930 and remains the largest department store in the area, with a sprawling grass-covered terrace on the ninth floor that provides a respite from the shopping bustle. Away from the multiple floors of fashion and style, the two basement floors have an impressive selection of delicacies, while the eighth floor is home to the Art Aquarium (fee required), where fish are displayed in a vibrant collection of tanks.

Takashimaya Shinjuku

Shibuya-ku

Like many Japanese department stores, each of Takashimaya's floors is dedicated to labels with similar price points, but here, the north half of each floor is for women and south half is for men, so couples and families can shop on the same floors. The basement-level food court carries every gastronomic delight imaginable, and the whole complex is linked to ground- and terrace-level shops as well as to the station. In addition, Kinokuniya book shop is nearby, as is the Ikea-like Japanese retailer, Nitori.

Wako

Chuo-ku

This grand old department store is well known for its high-end watches (it's owned by Seiko), glassware, and jewelry, as well as having some of the most sophisticated window displays in town. The clock atop the curved 1930s-era building is illuminated at night, making it one of Ginza's more recognized landmarks.

4–5–11 Ginza, Tokyo, 104-8105, Japan
03-3562–2111

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