Most Tokyo nightlife guides assume you've already checked into your hotel, showered, eaten, and now you're picking a bar. This guide is for a different traveler: the one whose plane is just touching down at 22:40, who doesn't want their first impression of Tokyo to be a hotel ceiling, and who wants to know — realistically — whether they can still go out.
The honest answer is "it depends, and it depends more than most travel guides will tell you." It depends on which airport you flew into. It depends on whether you cleared immigration in twenty minutes or ninety. It depends on whether your luggage is small enough to carry through Golden Gai. And it depends — most of all — on the exact hour your wheels stop moving.
This guide gives you the real playbook by landing hour, with last-train cutoffs, taxi costs, and which districts are actually open at 23:00, 00:00, 01:00, and 03:00. No "Tokyo never sleeps" hand-waving. Specific districts, specific times, specific moves.
The two-airport reality
Tokyo has two international airports, and treating them as interchangeable is the single biggest mistake first-time visitors make. Your late-arrival options are completely different depending on which one your flight came into.
Haneda Airport (HND) sits inside the Tokyo metropolitan area, about 16 km south of central Tokyo. From the Keikyu line or the Tokyo Monorail, you can be in Shinagawa in 14 minutes, Shimbashi in 25, and Shinjuku in roughly 35–45 minutes including transfers. Trains run until just before midnight on most lines. A taxi to central Tokyo costs around ¥7,000–¥12,000 and takes 30–45 minutes outside rush hour.
Narita Airport (NRT) is in Chiba Prefecture, about 60 km east of central Tokyo. It is, frankly, far. Even the fastest train (the Keisei Skyliner) takes 41 minutes to Nippori — and that's before you transfer to wherever you're actually going. The cheaper Keisei Limited Express takes 75 minutes. Realistic door-to-Shinjuku times from Narita are 90–110 minutes including transfers and walking. A taxi is ¥25,000–¥30,000 and 70 minutes minimum.
If your itinerary lets you choose, Haneda is dramatically better for late arrivals. An hour saved at the back end of a fourteen-hour flight is the difference between making last call somewhere good and ordering room service.
Last-train cutoffs: the cheat sheet
Tokyo's "last train" is more nuanced than a single number. There's a last train from the airport, and there's also a last train between districts once you're already in the city. The two often don't line up — meaning you can technically reach Shinjuku from the airport, but if you then want to move from Shinjuku to Ebisu after one drink, you're stuck.
Approximate last departures (these shift slightly seasonally; check your specific line on Google Maps the day-of):
From Haneda (HND), last departures toward central Tokyo:
| Line | Last departure (approx.) | Arrives | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tokyo Monorail to Hamamatsucho | 00:00 | 00:25 | Connects to JR Yamanote |
| Keikyu Line to Shinagawa | 23:55 | 00:14 | Rapid Limited Express; most flexible option |
| Keikyu Line to Sengakuji (then Asakusa Line through-service) | 23:38 | 00:30 | Direct to Higashi-Ginza, Nihombashi, Asakusa |
| Limousine Bus to Shinjuku/Shibuya | ~00:30 (last) | ~01:30 | Roads are clear at this hour |
From Narita (NRT), last departures toward central Tokyo:
| Line | Last departure (approx.) | Arrives | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Narita Express (N'EX) to Tokyo/Shinjuku | 21:44 | 22:53 / 23:25 | Earliest cutoff — easy to miss |
| Keisei Skyliner to Nippori/Ueno | 23:00 | 23:41 / 23:45 | Fast, premium |
| Keisei Limited Express to Ueno | 22:32 | 23:46 | Cheaper, slower |
| Limousine Bus to Tokyo/Shinjuku | ~22:30 (last) | ~00:30 | Last bus is earlier than people expect |
The takeaway: at Haneda you have until roughly midnight to get on a train. At Narita you don't. If you're landing at Narita after 21:30, assume you're either taking the Skyliner (if you can make 23:00) or paying for a taxi. There is no "I'll figure it out at the airport" plan that works at Narita after 23:00.
For a fuller breakdown of how Tokyo's transit shuts down and starts back up overnight, see our Last Train & Night Transit Playbook.
Itinerary by landing hour
This section assumes "landing hour" means wheels-down, not "out of customs." Add 30–60 minutes for immigration, baggage, and SIM/Suica setup. If you're a first-time visitor at Narita on a busy summer night, immigration alone can be an hour. Build the buffer in.
Lands at 20:00–21:30 (any airport): you're fine, treat it like an early evening
You have full normal options. Drop bags at the hotel, shower if you need to, and head to whichever district you'd visit on a regular night. Shibuya, Shinjuku, Roppongi, Ginza — everything is in business. This isn't really a "late arrival" scenario; it's just a delayed arrival. Skip to the dinner-then-bars version of any of our city guides.
Lands at 21:30–22:30 at Haneda
Realistically out of the airport by 22:30–23:00. You have time for one solid stop, maybe two, before the city's transit graph starts collapsing.
Best play: Take the Keikyu Line to Shinagawa, then Yamanote to Shimbashi or Yurakucho, and walk into a yokocho. Shimbashi's salaryman alleys are humming until last call. Or stay on Yamanote one more stop to Shibuya and dive into a standing bar near the station — most close at 02:00 or later.
Skip: Roppongi. The clubs don't really get going until midnight, and you'll be exhausted before they peak.
Skip: Anywhere requiring a transfer to the Keio or Odakyu lines after 23:30 — those will already be drying up.
Lands at 21:30–22:30 at Narita
You are racing the Skyliner. The 23:00 departure to Nippori is your last realistic train into central Tokyo. If immigration takes 45 minutes and you have to claim luggage and buy a Skyliner ticket, you'll be jogging.
Best play, if you make the train: Get to Nippori at 23:41, transfer to the Yamanote Line (still running), and head straight to Ueno or Akihabara. Ueno has a tight cluster of late izakaya around Ameyoko that stay open until 02:00–03:00, and you don't need to go far from the station.
Best play, if you miss the train: Don't try to be a hero. Take the limousine bus or a taxi to a hotel near a 24-hour district (more on this below) and drop your bags. If you still want to go out, walk out the front door and into the bar strip. Don't try to traverse Tokyo at this hour.
Lands at 22:30–23:30 at Haneda
You have time for exactly one move, and it needs to be efficient. By the time you're out of the airport (likely 23:15 at best), most train lines will be on their final 30 minutes.
Best play: Limousine bus straight to Shinjuku. The 00:00–00:30 buses arrive at Shinjuku Station West Exit around 01:00 — exactly the hour Golden Gai is at its peak. Drop your luggage at hotel reception (most Shinjuku hotels accept bag-drop without check-in if you have a reservation), then walk to Golden Gai. You're now drinking in a 200-bar warren three minutes after stepping off the bus.
Alternative: Take the Keikyu rapid limited express to Sengakuji, change to the Asakusa Line, and ride through-service to Higashi-Ginza. Walk to Ginza Corridor or stay on the train two more stops to Asakusa. This is a great move if your hotel is on the east side.
Skip: Anything in Shibuya. By the time you arrive, the in-station transfers will have stopped working and you'll be reliant on taxis to move within the district.
Lands at 22:30–23:30 at Narita
You've missed the last Skyliner if you're cutting it close, and you've definitely missed the last N'EX. You have three options.
- Limousine bus to Shinjuku. The last bus is around 22:30 from Narita, so this only works if you cleared customs fast. Arrives ~00:00–00:30 at Shinjuku. Same Golden Gai play as above.
- Taxi. ¥25,000–¥30,000, 70 minutes. Painful, but it's the only way to be in central Tokyo before 01:00 if everything else is missed.
- Stay near Narita and start fresh tomorrow. This is the smart option for most travelers. There are nine hotels on the airport campus, four reachable in under 10 minutes by free shuttle. Crash, sleep, and start your trip in the morning when transit is wide open.
For most people landing in this window at Narita, option 3 is the right answer. A bad first night is worse than no first night. We say this as a nightlife site.
Lands at 23:30–01:00 (any airport)
You're not making any train. Period. Plan for taxi or bus, and keep it simple.
From Haneda: Limousine bus or taxi to Shinjuku, Shibuya, or Roppongi. Of these, Roppongi is the most useful in this window because the clubs and bars there are explicitly built for late traffic. Geronimo, V2, and the laneway bars off Gaienhigashi-dori are at peak between 00:00 and 03:00. Taxi from Haneda to Roppongi is ¥9,000–¥11,000.
From Narita: Taxi only. ¥25,000–¥30,000. Decide whether the trip is worth it. If you have one fixed reason to be out (meeting friends, anniversary, can't-miss DJ set), pay it. Otherwise, the airport hotels are right there.
Lands at 01:00–03:00 (any airport)
You're not going out. We're saying this directly because it's true.
By 01:00, your hotel check-in window is mostly gone unless you pre-arranged a late arrival. Trains are dead. Taxi prices are at their late-night surcharge (~20% premium between 22:00 and 05:00). The body is running on adrenaline that's about to crash hard.
The honest move: Get to your hotel, get a 24-hour ramen or konbini meal on the walk, and sleep. The city will be there tomorrow. If your hotel is in Shibuya, Shinjuku, or Roppongi, you can do a quick walk-through after you drop bags — see what the late-night street looks like, get a sense of the geography — but don't try to commit to a real session.
The exception: if you specifically planned a late-night arrival because you have a reservation at a 24-hour ramen shop or want to see Tokyo's pre-dawn fish market era (which has mostly moved to Toyosu and isn't really a tourist activity anymore), proceed as planned. Otherwise, sleep.
Districts still alive by hour
Knowing what's open is half the battle. Tokyo's districts have wildly different closing rhythms.
At 23:00
Almost everything is still open. Standing bars (tachinomi), yokocho alleys (Omoide Yokocho, Nonbei Yokocho, Shimbashi alleys), izakaya, and most non-club bars are all in normal operation. Department-store food halls are closed, but you knew that. Last orders in many izakaya start ringing around 23:30.
At 00:00
The shape of the city changes. Most chain izakaya start closing or doing last-orders. Yokocho alleys thin out — Shimbashi mostly winds down by midnight, Omoide Yokocho's older stalls close, but Golden Gai is just hitting its peak and runs until 04:00–05:00. Roppongi's bars and clubs are warming up. Shibuya's club row is busy. Ebisu is mostly done.
At 01:00
This is the Golden Hour for serious nightlife. Golden Gai, Kabukicho's (legitimate, non-host) bars, Roppongi's club strip, and Shibuya's Dogenzaka are all full. Standing bars near Shibuya Station are still serving. Ebisu, Daikanyama, and most "neighborhood drinking" districts are over. If you want to be out at 01:00, you want to be in Shinjuku (specifically Golden Gai) or Roppongi.
At 02:00–03:00
Now you're in 24-hour territory. The list shrinks to roughly: Roppongi, Kabukicho (be careful, see below), Golden Gai, scattered late spots in Shibuya, and a few specialty bars in Shinjuku 2-chome (the gay district). Ramen shops in all these districts are 24-hour and become the social hub. Konbini are always open. Most bars stop seating new customers around 02:30, even if their official close time is 04:00.
At 03:00–05:00
Almost nothing legitimate is opening fresh. You're either still in a place that's been open all night (a Roppongi club, a Golden Gai bar, an after-hours ramen shop) or you're heading to morning options like Tsukiji's outer market, which starts coming alive around 05:00.
Hotels near 24-hour bar strips
If you know your flight lands late, book proximity. The "save ¥3,000/night by staying in Asakusa instead of Shinjuku" math doesn't work when you'd then spend ¥3,000 on a taxi back at 03:00.
For Golden Gai and Kabukicho proximity (best for late arrivals):
- Hotel Gracery Shinjuku — inside Kabukicho, 5-minute walk to Golden Gai
- Sotetsu Fresa Inn Shinjuku — quiet block, 7-minute walk to Golden Gai
- Tokyu Stay Shinjuku — east side, walkable to Golden Gai and Shinjuku 2-chome
For Roppongi proximity:
- Grand Hyatt Tokyo (Roppongi Hills) — premium, but you can walk drunk back to your room from Heartland or any of the laneway bars
- Mitsui Garden Hotel Roppongi Premier — mid-tier, walkable to the strip
For Shibuya proximity:
- Shibuya Stream Excel Hotel Tokyu — inside Shibuya Station's new Stream complex
- Shibuya Granbell Hotel — three minutes from the strip
The pattern: don't optimize for nightly rate when you're picking the late-arrival hotel. Optimize for "can I walk back to my room when public transit is dead." That's the whole game.
Taxi cost expectations
Tokyo taxis are fair, metered, and almost always honest, but they are not cheap. Late-night surcharge (22:00–05:00) is ~20% on top of the meter.
| Route | Approx. cost (incl. late-night surcharge) | Time |
|---|---|---|
| Haneda → Shinagawa | ¥6,500–¥8,500 | 25–35 min |
| Haneda → Shibuya | ¥7,500–¥10,000 | 30–40 min |
| Haneda → Shinjuku | ¥8,500–¥11,000 | 35–45 min |
| Haneda → Roppongi | ¥9,000–¥11,000 | 35–45 min |
| Narita → any central Tokyo | ¥25,000–¥30,000 | 70–90 min |
| Narita → Tokyo Disney area | ¥10,000–¥14,000 | 35–50 min |
A few hard-earned tips:
- Pay by card or Suica. Most taxis accept both. You don't want to be counting yen at 02:00 with a sleeping driver waiting.
- Have your destination written in Japanese or pre-saved on Google Maps. Drivers are professional and patient, but smartphones make it instant.
- Uber works in Tokyo, but it's mostly just regular taxis with a different app on top. Prices are similar to street taxis, occasionally a bit higher. See our Uber in Tokyo guide for the full picture.
- The fixed-fare option from Haneda to certain wards is sometimes cheaper than meter — ask at the airport taxi stand.
Whether to just crash
We've spent this whole guide on "how to go out after a late landing," but the most useful section may be this one: when not to.
You should just check into your hotel and sleep if any of these are true:
- You haven't slept on the plane and your total awake-time exceeds 24 hours
- You have a packed sightseeing schedule starting before 10:00 the next morning
- You're traveling with kids or someone who's miserable
- You've eaten only airline food in the last 12 hours and you're hungry but not specifically craving anything
- You're at Narita and would have to taxi
- You're solo and don't speak any Japanese and have never been to Tokyo before — give yourself one anchored day before going out
Tokyo's nightlife will reward you ten times more on night two than night one. Jet lag and dopamine don't cooperate. There's nothing romantic about being half-conscious in Golden Gai at 02:30, having paid ¥4,000 in cover charges to bars you'll forget by morning.
If you decide to crash, do it well: a 24-hour conbini run for water, onigiri, and a beer; a long shower; the curtains drawn against Tokyo's bright urban night. Wake up to a real first day.
The packing-for-arrival mini-list
A few things that make late arrivals dramatically easier:
- Pre-loaded Suica or Pasmo in your phone's wallet (Apple Pay supports both natively)
- Hotel address in both English and Japanese in your notes app, ready to show a taxi driver
- A small day bag so you can stash your big suitcase at hotel reception and walk out unburdened
- A power bank — your phone will be your translator, navigator, and payment method
- Comfortable shoes — Tokyo nightlife is a walking sport, even when you're tired
If you missed the last train entirely, our companion guide on what to do when you miss the last train walks through the cheaper alternatives — manga cafés, capsule hotels, and the morning-train routine.
FAQ
Can I leave my luggage at Haneda or Narita and pick it up later? Yes. Both airports have 24-hour coin lockers and staffed luggage storage. Lockers are ¥600–¥1,000 per day depending on size. This is useful if you want to hit the city fast and pick up bags in the morning before catching a domestic flight.
Is it safe to wander Tokyo alone at 02:00? Tokyo is one of the safest large cities in the world at any hour, with the standard caveat that "safe" means "low violent crime" — not "no one will try to scam you in Kabukicho." Avoid the touts in Roppongi and the touts on Kabukicho's main drag. Stick to Golden Gai, established bars, and conbini-lit streets. See our Kabukicho safety guide for specifics.
What if my flight is delayed and I land at 03:00? Plan as if you're not going out and treat any nightlife as a bonus. Pre-book a hotel near the airport (Haneda has the Royal Park Hotel and First Cabin inside the terminal; Narita has nine on-campus options) for that exact contingency. Better to pay for two hotels than to be stranded.
Do limousine buses run later than trains? Sometimes. The last airport limousine buses to Shinjuku are usually 00:00–00:30 from Haneda, which is later than most direct trains. From Narita the last bus is earlier (~22:30), so the bus is not a fallback for very late arrivals from Narita.
What's the best 24-hour food after a late arrival? Ichiran ramen in Shibuya, Shinjuku, or Roppongi is the foreigner-friendly default — solo booths, ticket machines, no Japanese needed. Sushi Zanmai in Tsukiji is open 24 hours and is one of the few legitimate sushi options in the small hours. Conbini onigiri and karaage are honestly excellent and are what most Tokyoites would eat at 02:00.
Should I prioritize a hotel with a 24-hour front desk? Yes, absolutely, especially for first-time visitors. Confirm before booking. Some boutique and capsule hotels lock the front door at 23:00 or 00:00, and you do not want to discover this at 02:30 with luggage on a Tokyo sidewalk.
The bottom line
Landing late in Tokyo doesn't have to mean a wasted first night — but it requires honesty about which hour you're actually arriving and which airport you're working with. Haneda gives you flexibility until midnight. Narita doesn't. Match your hotel to your nightlife, not your nightlife to your hotel. And know when to fold: a great night two beats a mediocre night one.
If you do go out, do it close to your hotel, on a single train line, with one anchor stop instead of three. That's the entire late-arrival playbook. Everything else is detail.
Related guides: