Tokyo Daily Budget: How Much Does Tokyo Cost Per Day? (2025)
Tokyo costs ¥8,000–12,000 ($53–80) per day on a budget, ¥20,000–35,000 mid-range, and ¥80,000+ for luxury. It's more affordable than most visitors expect.
Tokyo has a reputation for expense that is largely undeserved — budget travellers who eat at convenience stores, ramen shops, and izakayas can get by on ¥8,000–12,000 ($53–80) per day including accommodation. The city's public transport is world-class and surprisingly cheap.
Tokyo Daily Budget Breakdown
Tokyo's Best Value Food Finds
- •**7-Eleven / FamilyMart / Lawson**: Onigiri ¥120–180, katsu sandwich ¥220–280, hot foods ¥150–300. Genuinely good food.
- •**Ramen**: ¥850–1,200 for a full bowl with chashu pork at chain restaurants (Ichiran, Fuunji, Afuri)
- •**Gyudon (beef rice bowl) at Yoshinoya/Sukiya/Matsuya**: ¥400–700 — fast, hot, filling
- •**Department store basement (depachika)**: Premium food at lunchtime discount — bento boxes from ¥600–1,200
- •**Expensive trap**: tasting menus and omakase sushi — extraordinary but ¥15,000–50,000pp
The Suica IC card (loaded at any JR station) works on all Tokyo trains, buses, and at convenience stores. Buy one on arrival at Narita or Haneda and load ¥3,000–5,000 — it removes the need to buy individual tickets and gives a small per-trip discount.
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Is Tokyo really expensive?
Less so than London or Zurich. Accommodation is where costs add up — decent 3-star hotels in central Tokyo cost ¥12,000–20,000/night. But food and transport are remarkably cheap. A ¥100 conveyor belt sushi restaurant exists in Akihabara.
Should I buy a JR Pass?
If you're doing day trips to Nikko, Kamakura, or Hakone, a Tokyo-area JR pass may be worthwhile. For Tokyo-only travel, a Suica card is more flexible. For travel to Kyoto or Osaka, the national JR Pass (7-day ¥50,000) pays off if you take 3+ Shinkansen journeys.
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