Step out of Nippori Station and it's like stepping back in time — Yanaka Ginza smells of frying croquettes, stray cats nap in the sun on the Yuyake Dandan steps, and all around you stand old temples that survived the war. This is one of the slowest, most genuine corners of Tokyo left.
Picture a Tokyo with no glass towers spearing the sky and no giant LED screens — just narrow lanes, two-storey wooden houses, grocery shops handed down through generations, and stray cats cutting across the road whenever they please. That's Yanaka, an old quarter in the north of the city, the kind of place the Japanese describe with the word "shitamachi" (literally "low town") — the traditional working-class districts where the pace of life still moves slowly. What makes Yanaka special is that it survived both the fires of the 1923 Great Kanto Earthquake and the wartime air raids, so it has held onto the look of pre-war Tokyo better than almost anywhere else.
This guide walks you through Yanaka without getting lost — from Yanaka Ginza, a 170-metre street-food heaven, to the Yuyake Dandan steps, the neighbourhood's go-to sunset photo spot; from Yanaka Cemetery, which turns into a tunnel of cherry blossoms in spring, to a temple town of more than 70 temples, and even an art gallery inside a former public bathhouse. We cover the must-eat snacks, how to walk the route, and the time of day to come.
The neighbourhood is small — you can cover it all on foot in half a day. This table sums up where each highlight is and who it suits, so you can sketch your route before you leave the house.
| Highlight | Type | Where it is | Good for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Yanaka GinzaShopping street | Shop & eat | Top of the street by the Yuyake Dandan steps | Street food · cat-themed gifts |
| Yuyake DandanSunset Steps | Photo spot | Nippori Station side (main entrance) | Evening shots · cat-spotting |
| Yanaka CemeteryYanaka Reien | Strolling | Near Nippori · Sakura-dori avenue | Cherry blossoms · quiet calm |
| Old temple townTemple town | Culture | Spread across Yanaka (70-plus temples) | Lane-wandering · old atmosphere |
| SCAI the BathhouseGallery in a former bathhouse | Art | In the temple town, near Nippori/Uguisudani | Art lovers · free entry |
| Cafés & craft shopsOld wooden houses | Rest & relax | Down the lanes of Yanaka–Nezu | Chilling out · handmade goods |
People who've walked it say the same thing — Yanaka is to be taken slowly, looked at slowly. These are the six things at the heart of the neighbourhood; do them all and you'll see why people fall for this corner of old Tokyo.
🛍️ Yanaka Ginza1
The heart of the neighbourhood — an old shopping street roughly 170 metres long with around 60 shops, many open for more than a century. Walk in empty-handed and just graze as you go. The stars are hot, freshly fried menchi-katsu and beef croquettes (Niku no Suzuki is famous enough to draw long queues), plus senbei crackers, Japanese sweets, and snacks on skewers to eat on the move.
Japanese Food Guide →The stone staircase at the Nippori end of the street, whose name translates literally as "sunset steps" — in the evening, golden light floods the whole of Yanaka Ginza below until it becomes the image that defines the neighbourhood. Stand at the top looking down and you've got Yanaka's postcard view, and you'll often find stray cats settled on the steps.
Tokyo Attractions →The name might give you a shiver, but it's really a park-like graveyard where people stroll quite normally — calm, leafy, and very peaceful. Its central avenue, Sakura-dori, is lined with cherry trees on both sides, and come spring it turns into a tunnel of pink blossoms — a spot locals know to be beautiful and far less crowded than the big city parks.
Japan Cherry Blossom Guide →Yanaka has an unusually dense cluster of temples — said to be more than 70 in a single quarter — because it escaped the fires of the 1923 earthquake and the wartime bombing, so its wooden walls, temple gates, and back lanes have survived intact as old Tokyo. Walking with no destination, finding little temples between wooden houses, is the best way to see it.
Tokyo Travel Guide →One of Yanaka's most surprising corners — a contemporary art gallery converted from an Edo-era public bathhouse (sento). The outside still looks like the old bathhouse, tall chimney and all, but step inside and it's an exhibition space for contemporary art from Japanese and international artists. It's old meeting new in a way you rarely get to see.
Tokyo Attractions →Yanaka has long had plenty of stray cats, to the point they've become the neighbourhood's symbol — there are shops selling cat-themed goods, cat-shaped sweets, and around seven hand-carved wooden cats hidden on shop roofs and awnings to track down. When your feet get tired, duck into one of the stylish cafés set in old wooden houses converted into coffee shops and craft stores, at that easy Yanaka pace.
Japanese Food Guide →Yanaka sits in northern central Tokyo, next to Ueno, with three stations ringing the area. Pick the one that matches where you want to start — but if you want our pick, get off at Nippori and come in via the Yuyake Dandan steps for the best first impression.
The JR Yamanote Line (plus Keihin-Tohoku/Joban/Keisei). It's a 5–8 minute walk from the west exit to the Yuyake Dandan steps right at the top of Yanaka Ginza. This is the entrance with the best atmosphere and the most convenient one if you're coming from Ueno or Tokyo Station.
The Chiyoda subway line (green) brings you out at the far end of Yanaka Ginza and the temple town. Handy if you'd rather loop the whole Yanaka–Nezu–Sendagi area (Yanesen) and come out the other side.
Also on the Chiyoda line, close to Nezu Shrine — stop to see its rows of red torii gates before heading north into Yanaka. Great if you want to take in all three Yanesen neighbourhoods.
The joy of eating in Yanaka is homestyle food, cheap prices, and the fun of grazing on the move — not hard-to-book fine dining. These are the things people rave about most after a walk through the neighbourhood.
The area is compact, all within walking distance — see where Yanaka Ginza, the Yuyake Dandan steps, Yanaka Cemetery, and Nippori Station sit, and your route falls into place.
Ueno Park, the museums, the zoo, and Ameyoko market — the neighbourhood next to Yanaka that you can pair in the same day.
Ueno →Senso-ji Temple, Nakamise Street, and another slice of old Tokyo — pair it with Yanaka for a full day of shitamachi atmosphere.
Asakusa →Every major Tokyo neighbourhood, where to stay, what to see, and how to get around — all in one place.
Tokyo Guide →The best spots across Tokyo, from headline landmarks to quiet corners, with how to get there and photo tips.
Tokyo Attractions →Get to know Japan's signature dishes, how to order, and how to eat — prep before you dive into Yanaka's street food.
Japanese Food Guide →Visa · eSIM · IC cards · JR Pass · yen · power plugs · Japanese etiquette — everything before you fly.
Travel Prep →Open the Tokyo travel guide to pick the right neighbourhood, with hotels, sights, and transport all in one place — or start looking early for a place to stay near a main station, so Yanaka and the rest of the city stay easy to reach.