Tokyo.
Tokyo is the most layered city in Asia, and the one that hides it best. The skyline reads neon and steel, but step ten meters off the avenue and you find a 400-year-old shrine inside a sake brewery’s back garden. Senso-ji’s incense smoke still rises through Asakusa at 5am the way it has since 645 AD. The Imperial Palace gardens — eight square kilometers of forest at the city’s exact center — operate the way they have since 1888. You can walk a thousand years of Japan in a single Tokyo afternoon, then eat the world’s most awarded dining scene at night.
160 Michelin stars. 13.96 million people. Two of the world’s busiest train stations.And still — the cleanest, quietest, most precise major city on the planet.
Tokyo’s gift is its restraint. The hospitality is anticipatory but never intrusive. The trains arrive to the second. The omakase counter chef tracks the exact temperature of the rice between courses. The taxi drivers wear white gloves. Every transaction is a small ritual — a two-handed bow, the receipt presented with both hands, the receipt taken with both hands. You start adjusting your own movements after a few days. You start matching the precision.
What every first-time visitor underestimates is the scale. Tokyo is 23 wards, each functioning like its own city. Shibuya alone has more people than Manhattan. Shinjuku Station moves 3.6 million riders a day — the busiest in the world. You don’t try to see Tokyo. You pick a neighborhood, anchor a luxury hotel in it, and let that neighborhood teach you the city’s logic. Ginza for the polished. Aoyama for the design-led. Otemachi for the institutional. Asakusa for the old.
Slowness in Tokyo isn’t a posture — it’s earned. The city rewards travelers who slow themselves down to its level of precision.
Before you arrive.
US Embassy Tokyo. 1-10-5 Akasaka, Minato. Tel: +81 3-3224-5000. Emergency 119 (ambulance) · 110 (police). Keep all on file.
645 to today.
Tokyo splits a hundred ways. Asakusa is old — narrow streets, shop fronts that haven’t moved in 80 years, incense at Senso-ji still burning through fog at 5am the way it has for 14 centuries. Ginza is wealth — beaux-arts department stores from 1872, the world’s first electric streetlights, the most expensive square meter of real estate on earth. Shibuya is now — the scramble crossing, 3,000 pedestrians per light cycle, neon and noise and digital signage. That’s where the design world stays. That’s where the energy lives.
But you don’t come to Tokyo for any one of those. You come for the Imperial Palace at 5:30am, when the moat is still and the locals are jogging the 5km loop. You come for the first wave of incense smoke through Senso-ji’s main hall before the tour buses arrive. You come for the sushi counter where the chef has been refining one technique for 40 years. The reward of Tokyo isn’t the monuments. It’s the precision. It’s knowing that every interaction here has been perfected over decades.
Imperial Palace at sunrise.
The Imperial Palace sits at Tokyo’s exact center — 8 square kilometers of forest, gardens, and moats surrounded by the Otemachi financial district. The outer perimeter is a 5-kilometer loop, used by runners and walkers every morning since the moat-side path opened in 2007. 6,000 runners a day pass through. At 5:30am, the loop belongs to the locals.
This is where you understand Tokyo’s first lesson: the city is enormous, but every Tokyoite anchors to this single quiet patch of pine and water. You’ll see executives in track gear, retirees doing radio taiso group exercise, salarymen walking before their 7am train. No one’s performing. Everyone is moving with the city’s heartbeat at the city’s exact center.
The East Gardens — open to the public 9am to 4pm — contain the foundations of Edo Castle (1457), the seat of the Tokugawa shogunate for 264 years. The stone walls are massive, hand-cut, dry-stacked. They’ve held since the 1600s. The cherry blossoms here in late March are the version of Tokyo every photographer comes for.
- WHEN
- different times, different vibes: 5:30–6:30amthe loop belongs to locals — quiet, blue light 7–8amcommuter wave — the city wakes 9amEast Gardens open — Edo Castle ruins + cherry blossoms in season 4:30pmgolden hour — the moat reflects the skyline
- WHERE
- Otemachi or Hibiya station exits · 5km outer perimeter loop
- BRING
- Running shoes if you’ll loop. Otherwise just yourself.
Senso-ji at dawn.
Senso-ji is older than Tokyo itself. Founded in 645 AD, dedicated to Kannon (the bodhisattva of compassion), it predates the city by nearly 1,000 years. By the time Tokugawa Ieyasu moved his capital to Edo in 1603, Senso-ji had already been operating as a Buddhist temple for nine and a half centuries.
It’s also the most-visited temple in Tokyo — 30 million pilgrims and tourists per year. Which is why you go at dawn. Between 5:30 and 7:00am, the temple is yours and the monks’. The Kaminarimon thunder gate, the Nakamise pilgrimage shopping street (closed at this hour, shutters down), the Hozomon inner gate, the five-story pagoda, the main hall — all of it standing silent in the first blue-grey light before Asakusa wakes.
By 9am the buses arrive and Asakusa floods. Get there at 5:30 and the entire complex hands you something most Tokyo visitors will never see: silence at one of the world’s busiest sacred sites. The incense smoke. The pre-dawn chants from the monks’ quarters. The slow click of wooden geta sandals on the stones.
- WHEN
- Main hall opens 6am summer · 6:30am winter. Grounds 24/7. 5:30–7am is the window.
- WHERE
- 2-3-1 Asakusa, Taito · Asakusa station (Ginza Line, exit 1).
- ENTRY
- Free. Omikuji fortune draw at the main hall (¥100).
- DRESS
- No specific dress code. Shoulders covered out of respect. Shoes off in inner sanctum if entering.
Ginza to Shibuya.
This walk isn’t on most guides. 3 eras of Tokyo, each defined by one neighborhood. The whole arc is 4.5 kilometers — Ginza to Aoyama to Shibuya — and ends with you understanding how Tokyo built itself from Meiji wealth to Showa modernism to Heisei chaos.
Start at Ginza. The original Tokyo brick boulevard, paved in 1872 after a great fire — Japan’s first Western-style street, laid out by Irish architect Thomas Waters. Wako (the iconic clock-tower department store) was built in 1894 on the same spot. Mitsukoshi, Matsuya, Dover Street Market, Hermes’ six-story Renzo Piano flagship. This is old Tokyo wealth, restrained, polished, deliberate.
Walk southwest through Aoyama. Mid-century modernism made Tokyo’s design capital. Comme des Garçons, Issey Miyake, Yohji Yamamoto — all flagship here. The Nezu Museum (Kengo Kuma, 2009) anchors the southern end. This is where Japan’s post-war confidence built its showcase.
End at Shibuya. The world’s busiest pedestrian crossing — 3,000 people per light cycle. Hachiko statue (the famous loyal dog). The Scramble Square observation deck. Shibuya is Tokyo at full volume: glass towers, screens the size of buildings, club music leaking from underground passages.
One afternoon. Three Tokyos: Meiji period, post-war modernism, contemporary chaos. The complete arc of how this city built itself.
- WHEN
- Half-day · best 2pm–7pm. Shibuya at dusk (5–6pm light + neon) is the move.
- ROUTE
- Ginza Wako → Mitsukoshi → Aoyama (Omotesando) → Nezu Museum → Shibuya Crossing → Shibuya Sky.
- DISTANCE
- ~4.5km · 4-5 hours with stops.
Tokyo by helicopter.
Tokyo isn’t a city you can comprehend at street level. From the ground, it feels like 23 separate cities. From 800 feet up, the geography clicks: the Imperial Palace at dead center, the Sumida River cutting east, Tokyo Bay sprawling south, Mt. Fuji rising 100km west on clear winter days.
The standard route is a 25–30 minute Tokyo Bay loop from Mori Building Heliport in Roppongi: lift off, sweep over Tokyo Tower, bank east over the Imperial Palace, north past Skytree (634m — the world’s tallest free-standing tower), south down Rainbow Bridge over Odaiba, and back. On clear winter mornings, you’ll see Fuji-san directly out the west window.
This recalibrates how you see Tokyo for the rest of the trip. After 25 minutes from above, you understand which neighborhoods sit where, how the city’s bones are laid out, why Ginza and Shibuya feel like different cities. The next day you walk around differently.
For longer charters: Tokyo to Mt. Fuji 5th station + back is ~90 minutes. Tokyo to Hakone is ~45 minutes one-way and lets you skip the train to your onsen.
- WHEN
- Clear winter mornings (Dec — Feb) for Fuji visibility. Sunset flights = neon transition. Weather-dependent.
- WHERE
- Mori Building Heliport · Roppongi Hills Mori Tower rooftop · or HND/NRT for charter pickups.
- LEVELS
- 25-min Tokyo loop · 90-min Tokyo→Fuji loop · 45-min one-way to Hakone or Atami.
- BRING
- ID. Photo gear. Sunglasses (window glare).
- WE ARRANGE
- Operator selection (Excel Air, AirX), hotel pickup, in-flight stills photographer if requested.
Skip the Mario Kart street tours.
Groups of tourists race go-karts dressed as Mario through Shibuya and Akihabara. Multiple accidents per year. The local government has been trying to ban them. If you want to drive in Tokyo, charter a vintage car tour through Roppongi instead — same speed, real Japanese culture.
Skip the Robot / Cabaret shows.
$80–$100 per person for a Kabukichō flashing-lights spectacle that’s more sensory overload than entertainment. If you want Tokyo nightlife done right, go to Golden Gai (Shinjuku) for the 200-bar alley experience, or book a kabuki performance at Kabuki-za in Ginza.
The famous tuna auction moved.
The inner-market tuna auction relocated from Tsukiji to Toyosu Market in 2018. The Tsukiji Outer Market (food stalls, restaurants) still operates and is worth a morning walk. For the actual auction: book a guided Toyosu pre-dawn tour through the Tokyo Metropolitan Central Wholesale Market.
Where you sleep matters.
Aman Tokyo
Aman’s flagship Tokyo property occupying the upper floors of the Otemachi Tower. 84 meticulously crafted rooms and suites. Interiors blend natural woods, washi paper screens, tatami floors, and hand-thrown ceramics. From ~$2,200/night — Tokyo’s highest tier.
- 2,500m² Aman Spa — traditional Onsen-style baths, steam facilities, Shinto-inspired wellness rituals
- Signature Kampo therapies + Shiatsu massage journeys
- Arva — refined Italian, panoramic Tokyo skyline view
- Musashi — 8-seat omakase sushi counter
- Imperial Palace gardens walking distance — 5 min
The Peninsula Tokyo
The Peninsula’s Tokyo flagship in the Ginza district — prime access to Tokyo’s best shopping, art, and cultural sites. Forbes Travel Guide Five-Star. $700-$1,200/night.
The rooftop onsen — mineral-rich hot springs beneath the Tokyo sky — is one of the rarest amenities in central Tokyo. Most city hotels can’t access real onsen water; Peninsula does.
- Peninsula Suite — corner Ginza views over Hibiya Park
- Peter — French rooftop dining, 24th floor
- The Lobby — afternoon tea at 3pm, the Tokyo tradition
- Peninsula Spa — rooftop onsen + 25m pool with skyline view
- Rolls-Royce fleet for in-city transfers (complimentary for guests within 2km)
Bvlgari Hotel Tokyo
Bvlgari’s first property in Japan. Opened 2023. Newly awarded Forbes Travel Guide Five-Star for 2026. Italian luxury meets Japanese craft in 98 rooms and suites. Yaesu — Tokyo Station-adjacent, walking distance to Ginza.
Designed by Antonio Citterio Patricia Viel — same architect language as Bvlgari Milano, Dubai, and Roma. Bvlgari Suite is one of the largest in the city.
- Bvlgari Suite — 400m², panoramic view of Imperial Palace
- Il Ristorante Niko Romito — 1-star Michelin Italian by Chef Romito
- Sushi Hōseki — 8-seat omakase counter, Edomae tradition
- Bvlgari Spa — 1,300m², the largest hotel spa in central Tokyo, full pool
- Bvlgari Bar — late-evening cocktails, terrace overlooking Tokyo Station
Hoshinoya Tokyo
Urban ryokan in Otemachi. Real natural onsen drawn from 1,500 meters underground — the only authentic onsen in central Tokyo. Tatami rooms. Slip into yukata at check-in. The most distinctively Japanese stay in the city.
Mandarin Oriental, Tokyo
Nihonbashi. 38th-floor sky lobby. Home to Sushi Shin (Michelin star) and Signature (modern French). The brand’s Tokyo flagship — heritage Asian luxury, central business district.
Shangri-La Tokyo
Marunouchi, directly above Tokyo Station. Imperial Palace gardens walking distance. Quieter than Aman in the same neighborhood — for travelers who want central convenience without the Aman price point.
160 stars. Six favorites.
The three-star tier.
— Tokyo has 15 restaurants at three stars. Here are the three we route clients to first.Sushi Yoshitake
The pinnacle of Edomae sushi in Tokyo. Chef Masahiro Yoshitake’s 7-seat counter in Ginza. Three Michelin stars retained for over a decade. Booking 2-3 months ahead; concierge assistance essential.
Joël Robuchon Tokyo
Joël Robuchon’s flagship Japan property in Ebisu Garden Place. A castle-like standalone structure — three floors of dining, the top floor at three stars. The grand French temple of Tokyo.
Ryugin
Chef Seiji Yamamoto’s globally renowned modern kaiseki. Mid-Town Hibiya, 7th floor. The Tokyo restaurant most often cited on World’s 50 Best lists. Booking 2-3 months out — concierge-only access at peak season.
Three more across cuisines.
— modern French · only 3-star Chinese in Tokyo · the accessible booking that’s still World’s-50-Best level.L’Effervescence
Chef Shinobu Namae’s plant-forward French innovation. Three Michelin stars + a Green Star for sustainability. Vegetable-led tasting menus that compete with the city’s best protein-forward kitchens. Nishi-Azabu.
Sazenka
Chef Tomoya Kawada’s reinterpretation of Chinese cuisine through Japanese precision. The only three-Michelin-star Chinese restaurant in Tokyo. 16 seats in a converted 1950s machiya house. Quietest tasting menu in the city.
Den
Chef Zaiyu Hasegawa’s playful modern kaiseki. Two Michelin stars + World’s 50 Best regular — and the most accessible booking among Tokyo’s top kitchens. The “DFC” — Dentucky Fried Chicken — has become a Tokyo dining inside joke.
Want a chef in your suite?
For longer stays or special dietary protocols — recovery nutrition, performance macros, post-training meals — we arrange a private Tokyo chef in your suite. Tsukiji market run optional. Single dinners or three meals a day. Quietly handled.
How the city moves.
HND or NRT → city center.
Haneda (HND) — 18km · 25-35 min by car. The preferred TBT airport for proximity and ease. Also accessible via Tokyo Monorail (13 min to Hamamatsucho) or Keikyu Line (17 min to Shinagawa).
Narita (NRT) — 60km · 60-90 min by car. Or Narita Express (NEX, 55 min to Tokyo Station, 1st class available). Helicopter transfers NRT-Tokyo possible.
Private Transfer. Mercedes V-Class or Lexus LS. Driver meets at the gate with name card, handles bags, straight to your hotel. Hotel arranges through TBT.
Once you’re in.
Private car + English-fluent driver is your default — same driver every day of the trip, on call. Aman, Peninsula, and Bvlgari each have their own fleet (Peninsula’s Rolls-Royce program is the most refined; Aman’s black-car operation is the quietest). We extend the same driver across hotels if you split nights.
Shinkansen + private Green Car for day trips to Hakone, Mt. Fuji, Kyoto. Faster than helicopter for under 200km, more comfortable than any first-class flight cabin.
Walking works inside your anchor neighborhood — Ginza, Aoyama, Otemachi. Tokyo’s streets are pristine. Outside that radius: car.
What you’ll actually do in Tokyo.
What you actually need.
Required vs. recommended.
What to pack before you fly.
How Tokyo affects the body.
What we tell you that nobody else does.
Tokyo is bigger than you think. Plan in neighborhoods.
Tokyo’s metro area holds 37 million people across 23 wards. Trying to “see Tokyo” in 4 days will leave you exhausted and feeling like you missed everything. The locals don’t even attempt it.
What we do about it: anchor your stay in ONE neighborhood (Ginza for polish, Otemachi for institutional, Aoyama for design, Asakusa for old), let that neighborhood teach you the city’s logic, do 1–2 deep ventures elsewhere per day. Tokyo rewards depth in one zone over surface-skim across many.
Tokyo summer is harder than the temperature reads.
June–September looks like 75–89°F on paper. Reality: 80%+ humidity stacks on top, heat index pushes 100°F+. It feels like Hanoi in August. Avoid outdoor experiences mid-day.
The fix: if you must travel Jun–Sep, sunrise walks (5am Imperial Palace), mid-afternoon onsen reset, late-evening dining. Or just go in March/April or October/November instead.
August–September can disrupt.
Typhoon systems hitting Tokyo can shut down Shinkansen service for 24–48 hours, ground domestic flights, and force outdoor experiences indoors. Tokyo itself handles them fine (skyscrapers don’t care), but day trips to Hakone, Mt. Fuji, or Niseko get derailed.
The plan: if booking Aug–Sep, build flex into the itinerary. We monitor JMA (Japan Meteorological Agency) 7 days out and adjust day-trip timing.
English is thinner than you’d expect.
Tokyo’s English signage is excellent in tourist zones (Ginza, Asakusa, Shibuya). But step into a small ramen shop in Yanaka or a kissaten in Daikanyama and you may find no English menu, no English-speaking server, and a cash-only counter.
The fix: Google Translate works in Japan (unlike China). Save your hotel address in Japanese on your phone. For Michelin counters: book via concierge with explicit dietary/allergy notes in Japanese.
The ways you fly.
What locals notice.
The bespoke details.
Services not on any booking site.
- PRIVATE CHEFIn your suite at Aman, Peninsula, or Bvlgari. Tsukiji market run optional, recovery macros on request.
- HELICOPTER CHARTERMori Heliport · 25-min Tokyo loop, 90-min Fuji loop, or direct transfer to Hakone.
- TEA CEREMONY MASTERPrivate session at a Higashiyama-style tea room (Aoyama or Akasaka). Wabi-sabi tradition, English-explained.
- SUSHI COUNTER PRIVATE BOOKINGBuyouts of 8-12 seat omakase counters for groups. Includes 5pm seating with the chef.
- IN-SUITE WELLNESSMassage, shiatsu, breathwork, recovery — sent to your hotel by Aman Spa or Peninsula’s wellness team.
Doors before opening hours. After closing.
- SENSO-JI PRE-DAWN BLESSINGPrivate monk-led morning blessing inside the main hall — before 5:30am opening. Sanctum-only.
- IMPERIAL PALACE EAST GARDENSBefore-hours private tour with a TBT-vetted Edo-history guide. No crowds.
- TOYOSU TUNA AUCTION VIPPre-dawn private viewing platform access. The auction starts 5:30am — most visitors stand on the public viewing deck. We arrange ground-floor access.
Doors the city keeps closed.
- MICHELIN RESERVATIONSSushi Yoshitake, Joël Robuchon, Ryugin, L’Effervescence — 2-3 months out, the counter seats first.
- PARTNER GMsAman Tokyo, Peninsula Tokyo, Bvlgari Hotel Tokyo — direct GM intros at check-in.
- OFF-LIST PROPERTIESTownhouses and machiya in Kagurazaka or Yanaka — not on any aggregator. Available on request.
- HOTEL UPGRADESQuietly arranged before arrival, not negotiated at the desk.
The fluent people behind every visit.
- PRIVATE GUIDESTokyo historians, art curators (teamLab + Mori), food experts — matched to your interest.
- DRIVERSEnglish-fluent. Mercedes V-Class or Lexus LS. Same driver every day of the trip.
- FIXERSFor complex needs — medical, last-minute reservations, sensitive errands, language translation at counters.
- CULTURAL BRIEFSSent ahead of arrival, tailored to your itinerary — including kaiseki menu translations and tea-ceremony etiquette primers.
We don’t ship itineraries.
The other guides give you a day-by-day plan. We don’t. A bespoke trip starts with what’s true for you: your training schedule, your dietary protocols, your sleep window, the experience you’d fly for. You answer. We build.
What we ask before we build.
The questions that shape your trip more than any itinerary ever could.
- 01.What time do you wake at home? Do you want to keep that here, or use the jet lag to shift earlier?
- 02.Are you training during the trip? If so — what’s the schedule, what equipment do you need, and what climate adjustments matter?
- 03.Any dietary protocol — macros, recovery nutrition, fasting window, allergens, religious or cultural restrictions?
- 04.The one experience you’d fly for. Is it a meal, a place, a person, a quiet morning, something we haven’t mentioned?
- 05.Density or quiet? Do you want a full city day, or the slow afternoon and the long lunch?
- 06.Anniversary, milestone, recovery trip, work trip — what’s this trip for?
- 07.Solo, couple, family, or group? Each shape differently.
The moments we build around.
Not a checklist — a list of the kinds of anchors that often appear in a TBT-built trip.
- The sunrise at Senso-jiThe single most Tokyo-specific morning. Pre-5:30am Asakusa, the incense smoke, the empty Nakamise pilgrimage street.
- The Michelin mealUsually Sushi Yoshitake, Ryugin, or L’Effervescence — sometimes a 3-star + a counter night across two evenings. The pacing of the trip orbits these dinners.
- The 3-eras walkGinza Wako → Aoyama → Shibuya Sky. Three Tokyos — Meiji wealth, mid-century design, contemporary chaos — in one afternoon.
- The slow afternoonThe 2-4pm window — Aman Spa onsen, Peninsula rooftop, or Hoshinoya’s natural hot spring. Tokyo’s mid-day reset ritual.
- The Region Arc launchOne of the 5 routes beyond — Hakone (onsen), Nikko (autumn shrines), Mt. Fuji (icon), Niseko (powder), or Naoshima (art island). Built into the trip if it fits.
Tell us about you. We build the rhythm.
Sanctum members answer the 7 prompts above. We build the trip from there. Flights, hotels, drivers, restaurants, private chef, motorcycle tour, paragliding, all pre-arranged before you land. No template. No itinerary you didn’t ask for.
REQUEST A SANCTUM ROUTEWhat Tokyo taught me.
Want Tokyo handled?
Sanctum members can request a custom Tokyo route — flights, hotels, drivers, omakase reservations, private chef, helicopter charter, tea ceremony master, region arc extension — pre-booked, the whole rhythm of the trip mapped before you land.
REQUEST A ROUTETokyo is the launch pad.
Within a half-day’s reach by train, shinkansen, or short flight, you can land in 5 different versions of Japan — onsen valleys, autumn-foliage shrines, the icon mountain, powder-snow peaks, and an art island in the Seto Inland Sea. Each gets its own dedicated guide.