Step off the train at Ueno Station and one side is a huge park packed with national museums and a zoo, while the other is Ameyoko Market, alive with bargain food and shopping right through the evening — we've boiled down what to do, the entry fees, the opening hours, and how to get there, all on one page.
Picture a district where, minutes after walking out of the station, you can choose between standing in front of an Egyptian mummy in a national museum, watching polar bears at the zoo, or diving into a market alley where vendors shout out crab and bags of fruit — that's Ueno, the northern Tokyo district that packs astonishing variety into a space you can cover entirely on foot. One side of the station is the leafy Ueno Park, home to several national museums; the other is Ameyoko Market, which never seems to go quiet.
Ueno is also one of the best-value districts in Tokyo — the park itself is free, so you can wander all day without spending a yen, while the museums and zoo cost only a few hundred yen each, and the food in Ameyoko runs cheaper than in other tourist districts. On this page we'll walk you through what to do spot by spot, with entry fees, opening hours, and how to get there, so you can plan a half-day or a full day in Ueno without any confusion.
Ueno Park has one of the highest concentrations of national museums in Japan, and almost all of them close on Mondays — here's a summary of each one's entry fee and opening hours so you can plan ahead (permanent-collection prices may change in 2026, so always check the official site first).
| Museum / Place | Known for | Entry (adult) | Hours | Closed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tokyo National MuseumTokyo National Museum | Japan's largest collection of art and antiquities | ~¥1,000 | 9:30–17:00 (Fri–Sat to 19:00) | Mon |
| Nature & Science MuseumNature & Science | Dinosaurs · science, a hit with kids | ~¥630 | 9:00–17:00 | Mon |
| Museum of Western ArtNat. Museum of Western Art | Le Corbusier building (World Heritage) · Monet, Rodin | ~¥500 | 9:30–17:30 | Mon |
| Ueno ZooUeno Zoo | Polar bears · elephants · the shoebill | ~¥600 | 9:30–17:00 | Mon |
| Ueno Park + Shinobazu PondUeno Park & Shinobazu | Strolling · cherry blossoms · summer lotuses | Free | All day | — |
From the big park and its national museums to the bargain food-and-shopping alleys — these are the spots people keep recommending as can't-miss when you come to Ueno. You can fit them all into one day because everything is within walking distance.
The large public park that anchors the whole district, free to enter, and home to national museums, a zoo, a pond, and a shrine all in one place. Shaded by big old trees, it's the best spot to take a break and the natural starting point for exploring. From late March to early April it becomes one of Tokyo's most popular cherry blossom grounds.
Tokyo Attractions →The oldest and largest museum in Japan, holding more than a hundred thousand works of Asian art and antiquities — from samurai swords and ceramics to Buddhist statues and hanging scrolls. History lovers can spend a whole day here; if you're short on time, focus on the main Honkan building, which tells the story of Japanese art era by era.
Tokyo Attractions →Two museums standing close together in the park — the National Museum of Nature and Science has dinosaur skeletons and hands-on, push-button exhibits that kids adore, while the National Museum of Western Art holds works by Monet and Rodin in a building designed by Le Corbusier that's listed as a World Heritage Site.
Tokyo Attractions →Japan's oldest zoo, open since 1882, known for its variety of animals right in the middle of the city — polar bears, elephants, tigers, and the rare shoebill. It's ideal for a half-day out with children. Note: the giant pandas all returned to China in late January 2026, so there are no pandas on display at the moment.
Tokyo Attractions →A quiet corner of the park that many people overlook — Shinobazu Pond is a wide natural marsh with the red Bentendo hall sitting at its centre, and in summer it fills with lotus blooms until it turns lush green. A short walk on is Ueno Toshogu Shrine, built to honour Tokugawa Ieyasu and decked in gold. You can also rent a swan pedal boat on the pond.
Tokyo Attractions →
🛍️ Market · Food6
A market street under the railway tracks running from Ueno Station to Okachimachi, buzzing into the evening with fresh seafood, bags of fruit, sweets, and street snacks, alongside cosmetics, sneakers, and cheap souvenirs. It's old-Tokyo charm (shitamachi) still very much alive — wander, taste, and haggle like a local.
What to Eat in Japan →From late March to early April, the central path of Ueno Park turns into a long tunnel of cherry blossoms with hundreds of trees, making it one of Tokyo's most famous spots for a hanami picnic. It's extremely crowded on peak weekends, and at night the trees are lit up for a different kind of beauty — not to be missed if you come in this season.
Japan Cherry Blossom Guide →Ueno is known for tasty food at friendly prices, because it's an old market quarter — from seafood you eat as you walk through Ameyoko to the izakaya under the railway tracks where office workers stop in after work.
Street snacks in Ameyoko range from skewered grilled scallops/crab and little cups of sashimi to kebabs and bags of freshly sliced fruit, mostly a few hundred yen — perfect to nibble as you stroll. Want to know what else in Japan is worth a try? Open our guide to what to eat in Japan.
Under the railway tracks around Ueno are old izakaya that open from the afternoon, where locals settle in for beer and yakitori as a matter of course — genuinely old-Tokyo atmosphere. To get the hang of ordering and izakaya etiquette, read our izakaya guide before you go.
Around Ueno Station there are plenty of ramen shops and rice-bowl spots — both famous old institutions and budget chains — ideal for refuelling before or after the museums. To pick a ramen shop like a pro, open our Japan ramen guide and learn the broth styles first.
Ueno is a great-value, convenient base for several kinds of traveller, especially anyone flying in through Narita or planning to take the shinkansen north.
Ueno Station is one of the big hubs for northern Tokyo, with city trains, the shinkansen for trips out of town, and a direct airport train all in one place.
See clearly how everything is within walking distance — the park and museums on one side of the station, Ameyoko on the other, and Asakusa and the Skytree just a few stations away.
Old Tokyo still alive — Senso-ji temple, the Kaminarimon gate, and Nakamise street, just a few stations from Ueno.
Asakusa District →The upscale quarter of fine dining — brand-name shopping, top-tier sushi counters, and the Kabuki theatre.
Ginza District →The district that never sleeps — the world's busiest scramble crossing, the Hachiko statue, and Shibuya Sky's 360° view.
Shibuya District →All the top sights across Tokyo with how to get there — plan a full trip in the capital on one page.
Tokyo Attractions →A ready-made 5-day Japan route, from Tokyo to the cities around it, with a day-by-day timeline.
5-Day Plan →Ramen, sushi, izakaya, and the dishes you have to try — with how to order and table manners.
Japan Food Guide →Want to wake up and walk the park in the morning, eat your way through Ameyoko at dinner, and catch the shinkansen north all in one day? Open our hand-compared round-up of hotels near Ueno Station, or start looking for a base here well ahead of time.