
Kagurazaka
Tokyo's most French neighbourhood with the most Japanese soul — a hillside former geisha district where ryotei (high-end kaiseki restaurants) hide behind unmarked wooden gates in cobblestone alleys. French bistros, Italian delis, and a French lycée coexist with ancient shrines and the last functioning geisha houses in central Tokyo.
Location
Location available to Pro members
Upgrade to ProPro Spot
Upgrade to Pro to access local tips, secret timing, and insider highlights for this spot.
Upgrade to Pro — $4.99/moLocal Tips
Kagurazaka is Tokyo's most French-Japanese neighbourhood — the back lanes (yokocho) hide excellent French bistros and traditional Japanese restaurants in converted machiya. Visit on a Saturday evening when the pedestrian section of the main street comes alive. The Bishamonten Zenkoku-ji shrine at the top of the street is the local guardian deity — worth a quick visit.
Add to your AI itinerary
Let AI build a multi-day trip around this spot.
Advertisement
More in Tokyo

Hamarikyu Gardens
A 300-year-old tidal garden in the middle of Tokyo's skyscraper district — the only garden in the city with saltwater ponds replenished by Tokyo Bay. Originally the shogunate's private duck-hunting grounds, it now offers extraordinary views of Shiodome towers reflected in ancient lotus ponds, with a teahouse on an island reached by wooden bridges.

Koenji
An old shopping arcade town that gentrified into Tokyo's most eclectic neighbourhood — vintage shops, curry restaurants, and tiny jazz bars coexist with a 100-year-old covered shotengai. The Awa-Odori festival in late August fills the streets with over 10,000 dancers and a million spectators — the largest summer street festival in Tokyo.

Nezu Shrine
Tokyo's alternative to Kyoto's Fushimi Inari — a serene 1,900-year-old shrine with a tunnel of 200 vermilion torii gates winding through a wooded hillside in Bunkyo. In April, the azalea garden (3,000 plants across 100 varieties) turns the shrine grounds into a labyrinth of pink and red. Usually crowd-free on weekdays.