Tokyo has more bars per square kilometre than almost any city on earth. Whisky temples in Ginza where you wait months for a seat. Standing bars in Shinjuku where salarymen drink Sapporo at 6pm before missing the last train. Speakeasies hidden inside other bars, behind bookshelves, up staircases with no signage. A bar culture so serious that some bartenders train for years before being allowed to pour a drink solo.
This guide cuts through all of it. Whether you want one perfect cocktail, a neighborhood to bar-hop for the night, or the most iconic bar in the city — here's what actually matters.
The Lay of the Land
Tokyo bars cluster by neighbourhood, and each neighbourhood has a different character.
Ginza: Luxury. The best cocktail bars in Asia are here. Prices match. Require reservations. Worth it.
Shibuya: Craft cocktails, international bars, and accessible options for most budgets. Good for groups.
Shinjuku: Everything from dive bars to world-class whisky rooms to Golden Gai — 300 tiny bars in six alleys. The most concentrated bar district in Japan.
Ebisu/Daikanyama/Nakameguro: Local wine bars, standing bars, izakayas. Where Tokyoites actually drink rather than where tourists go to drink.
Roppongi: International crowd, higher prices, open late. Good for extended nights. Skip if you want local flavour.
Best Cocktail Bars
Star Bar Ginza (Ginza)
The single most respected cocktail bar in Japan. Hisashi Kishi has won world championships and trained a generation of Tokyo bartenders. The bar is small (maybe 15 seats), perfectly lit, built on the classical tradition. A cocktail here is ¥3,000–6,000. Reserve well in advance — weekends book out weeks ahead.
This is the Tokyo bar you'd recommend to a serious drinks person flying through for one night.
Bar High Five (Ginza)
Hidetsugu Ueno's bar is arguably the most influential Japanese cocktail bar in terms of its global impact. It's reservation-only, perpetually waitlisted, and genuinely unlike anywhere else. If you're the kind of person who plans bars the way other people plan Michelin restaurants, this is the one to try for.
Bar Benfiddich (Shinjuku)
Hiroyasu Kayama grows his own herbs on the roof. The cocktails are built around fresh botanicals, Japanese ingredients, and an approach that feels simultaneously antique and alive. Regularly appears on Asia's 50 Best Bars. More accessible than the Ginza legends — reservations recommended but not always essential on weeknights.
SG Club (Shibuya)
Shingo Gokan (also of bars in New York and Shanghai) runs SG Club in two parts: downstairs Guzzle is high-volume and casual; upstairs Sip is more refined. Good for groups of mixed seriousness. Downstairs doesn't need a reservation. Upstairs books out.
Gen Yamamoto (Minami-Aoyama)
A counter experience, not a conventional bar. Six seats. A four-to-six cocktail tasting menu built around seasonal Japanese ingredients. About ¥10,000–15,000 per person. Reservation-only, two weeks minimum. Think kaiseki for drinks.
Best Whisky Bars
Tokyo's whisky bar scene is world-class. Japanese single malts — Yamazaki, Hakushu, Hibiki — are scarce globally but still findable here, especially at specialist bars.
Bar Zoetrope (Shinjuku)
Over 300 Japanese whiskies. Friendly, knowledgeable staff. No attitude. Prices range from reasonable to expensive depending on what you order. One of the best whisky selections in the country. Go here specifically if Japanese whisky is what you're after.
Samboa Bar (Multiple locations — Ginza flagship)
A classic chain, but one of genuine quality. The Ginza flagship runs a serious whisky program alongside a broader spirits list. No reservation, good prices, old Tokyo atmosphere.
Cask Strength (Shibuya)
Younger, more international crowd. Serious whisky list including hard-to-find independent bottlings and Japanese releases. Good alternative if you want whisky in a Shibuya location after dinner.
For a deeper dive, see our full best whisky bars in Tokyo guide.
Best Hidden Bars and Speakeasies
Bar Trench (Ebisu)
Basement bar, no obvious signage. Known for its absinthe program and creative cocktails using unusual ingredients. One of the most consistently excellent bars in Tokyo that isn't in Ginza. Prices are fair (¥1,500–2,500 per cocktail), the bartenders are thoughtful, and it's walk-in friendly on most weeknights.
The SG Sip (Shibuya)
The upstairs half of SG Club feels like a different bar entirely from Guzzle below — quiet, serious, reservation-driven. Worth booking for the experience.
Bar Orchard (Ginza)
Hidden on the upper floors of a Ginza building. Fruit-forward cocktails using Japanese produce — seasonal menus that change regularly. Small, reservation-recommended.
For a full guide to Tokyo's hidden bar scene, see Hidden Bars & Speakeasies in Tokyo.
Best Bars in Golden Gai
Golden Gai is six alleyways in Shinjuku containing roughly 300 bars, most with 8–12 seats. It's one of the most concentrated drinking experiences in the world, and largely unchanged since the 1960s.
How it works: Most bars have a cover charge (¥500–1,000). Walk in, order a drink, stay as long as you like. Most bars have a theme — jazz, punk, cinema, sumo — and the bartender is usually the owner. Foreigners are welcome in most of them; a small number are locals-only (indicated by Japanese-only signs and a closed feel).
Recommended approach: Come after 9pm. Start on the less-touristy northern alleys (closest to Shinjuku station). Try three to four bars in a night. Avoid the obvious tourist traps near the south entrance.
Bars worth finding: Bar Albatross is the most photogenic. Furyo is a good starting point for first-timers. Deathmatch in Paradise is loud and odd and worth 45 minutes.
See our full Golden Gai guide for more depth.
Best Tachinomi (Standing Bars)
Tachinomi — literally "drinking while standing" — is Tokyo's working-class drinking tradition. Counter bars, no seats, cheap drinks, high volume, fast turnover. Mostly izakayas in format, but some are pure drink stops.
Nonbei Yokocho (Shibuya)
A narrow alleyway called "Drunkard's Alley." Old wooden buildings, tiny bars spilling onto the street. The vibe is pre-bubble Tokyo. Good for early evening before moving somewhere more formal.
Yurakucho Under the Tracks (Ginza/Yurakucho)
The bars beneath the Yamanote Line tracks in Yurakucho are classics — old, cheap, always busy with salarymen. Yakitori, beer, and sake. Not polished. Genuinely local.
Omoide Yokocho (Shinjuku)
"Memory Lane" — the best-known of Tokyo's alley bar streets. Tiny yakitori stalls crammed together. Touristy but deservedly so: the atmosphere is real, the food is good, and the beers are cold. Come before 8pm to find a seat.
See our full tachinomi guide for more.
Best Rooftop Bars
New York Bar — Park Hyatt (Shinjuku)
Famous from Lost in Translation. 52nd floor views, live jazz, excellent cocktails. Expensive (cover charge after 8pm on weekends). Worth experiencing once. See our rooftop bars guide for more options.
Trunk (Hotel) Rooftop (Shibuya)
Younger crowd, good views of Shibuya crossing area, more accessible pricing. Pop-up bar format in summer.
Andaz Tokyo Rooftop Bar (Toranomon)
Hotel rooftop with panoramic views and a solid drinks menu. Better value than the Park Hyatt and less crowded.
Best Budget Bars
Drinking well on a budget in Tokyo is easier than it looks.
Izakayas are the obvious answer — most have solid sake, beer, and shochu for ¥500–800 per drink with food available. Uotami and Torikizoku are chains with locations everywhere and drinks from ¥300.
Convenience store drinking is a Tokyo institution. SevenEleven, Lawson, and FamilyMart all sell excellent canned cocktails, Strong Zero, and craft beers at ¥200–400. Many spots near Shinjuku and Shibuya have public benches or park areas that locals use for outdoor drinking.
Happy hour is a real thing at most international-style bars (usually 5–8pm, buy-one-get-one or discounted cocktails). Bars around Shibuya and Roppongi typically advertise these.
See our Tokyo nightlife budget guide for more strategies.
Practical Notes
Last trains: Tokyo's train network stops around midnight–1am. Plan your night around it or plan to stay out until 5am when trains restart. See what to do when you miss the last train.
Dress codes: The Ginza cocktail bars expect smart casual. Golden Gai doesn't care. Most bars are somewhere in between. Overdress rather than underdress if unsure.
Cash: Many smaller bars (especially Golden Gai and tachinomi spots) are cash-only. Bring ¥10,000–15,000 in cash for a bar-heavy night.
Cover charges: Common in smaller bars (¥500–1,500). Usually includes a small snack (otoshi). Not a scam — standard practice.
Language: English is manageable at most international bars and increasingly at craft cocktail places. In Golden Gai and neighbourhood bars, some Japanese is helpful but hand-pointing and friendliness get you a long way.
Connecting the Night
Bars are one half of Tokyo's nightlife offering. The other half is the club scene — and the two can combine seamlessly. After Golden Gai, many people head to WOMB in Shibuya or the techno spots around Roppongi to keep going.
Check tonight's events in Tokyo to see what's on — from underground club nights to DJ sets at bars.