
teamLab Borderless vs Planets Tokyo — Which One to Visit? (2026)
teamLab Borderless vs Planets in Tokyo — tickets, locations, what's inside, and which one is worth your time. Visited both and compared.
teamLab Borderless vs Planets Tokyo — Which One Should You Visit?
Tokyo has two teamLab exhibitions: teamLab Borderless (Azabudai Hills) and teamLab Planets (Toyosu). teamLab is a creative art collective started by University of Tokyo graduate students in 2001, known worldwide for immersive digital art installations.
I've been to teamLab in Macau and Osaka before. On this Tokyo trip, I visited both Borderless and Planets. Bottom line: both are worth it, but they're different. Want hands-on experiences? Planets. Want relaxed viewing? Borderless.
Quick Comparison
teamLab Borderless — Azabudai Hills
Location: Azabudai Hills Garden Plaza B1, Minato City, Tokyo, Japan. Close to Roppongi and Ginza by subway. Good to combine with Tokyo Tower on the same day — I walked from Tokyo Tower directly.
teamLab Borderless means no fixed path. There are no arrows, no route markers. You just walk through whatever door catches your eye. It feels disorienting at first, but you end up seeing everything naturally. Visit the same room twice and the projections will have changed — the art literally moves between rooms. Each space also has a distinct scent, which is a subtle but nice touch.
Free lockers at the entrance for bags and heavy items. If you've been to Arte Museum in Korea, it's a similar concept — but the quality and scale here are on another level. I booked the 5pm slot; entry was allowed within a 1-hour window around your time.

Main hall — The largest space. A small hill in the center, with LED projections covering every surface — floor, walls, ceiling. Themes cycle through nature, flowers, water. People sit or lie on the floor to watch. I stayed 10–20 minutes. When the projections flow under your feet, it genuinely feels like you're sitting in a moving landscape.

LED string lights room — The most impressive room at teamLab Borderless. Thousands of LED-tipped strings hang from the ceiling, pulsing and changing color to music. It looks like a scene from The Matrix. You walk between the strings (don't touch them) surrounded by light on all sides. Best photos are when the lights brighten — it's too dark otherwise.

Mirror room — Mirrors and lights create an infinite, sparkling space. Looks like Summit NYC. Only 3 minutes allowed — staff will tell you to leave. Start shooting the moment you walk in.
Overall, Borderless is a relaxed, wander-at-your-pace experience. Not physically demanding. Easier to get tickets than Planets, and the central location makes it easy to add last-minute to your itinerary.
teamLab Planets — Toyosu

Location: 6-1-16 Toyosu, Koto City, Tokyo, Japan. Near Shin-Toyosu Station, but that station isn't on regular subway lines. Walk 15 minutes from Toyosu Station to save on transit — worth it if you're using a subway pass.
teamLab Planets has 4 zones (Forest, Water, Garden, Open Air) with a set route through each. Unlike Borderless, you follow a path: finish one zone, exit, enter the next through a door right next to it. No free-roaming.
Timed entry here too. Arrive at your exact booking time — early arrival won't get you in.
The biggest difference: you walk through water. You take off shoes and socks at the entrance, switch to slippers, and enter. In the Water zone, there's knee-deep water you wade through barefoot. Honestly, sharing the water with dozens of other tourists felt a bit unsanitary, and the whole exhibition space had a faint pool-like chlorine smell. That said, it's unlike anything you'll experience elsewhere.

Water exhibition — The centerpiece of teamLab Planets. A dark room with knee-deep water and LED projections on the floor beneath the surface — fish and flowers drift under your feet as you walk. Borderless has LED floors too, but actually being in the water is a Planets-only experience. Wear shorts or pants you can roll above the knee.

Flower room — The photo that comes up when you search "teamLab Planets." Real flower sculptures rise and fall on sensors, filling the entire space. Expect it to look like the poster? In practice, it's crowded and hard to get a clean shot. Still beautiful in person.

Interactive exhibits — Wall sensors that react to your touch like a game. Draw a fish on paper, scan it, and watch your fish swim into the LED display. Kids love this section.
Forest zone — Slippers not allowed here. You borrow sneakers from staff to enter. More physically interactive than other zones.
Overall, Planets is much more hands-on than Borderless. Families with kids were everywhere. The popularity means tickets sell out faster — often a week in advance. Plan on spending 30–60 minutes more here than at Borderless.
Which One to Pick?
If you can only pick one: Borderless for relaxed art viewing, Planets for doing things yourself.
Tickets
Both are timed-entry — advance booking required. You can only enter at your reserved time, not earlier or later.
Planets sells out much faster. Popular dates are gone a week ahead. Borderless is more flexible but still worth booking early.
Book teamLab Borderless TicketsBook teamLab Planets TicketsCheck latest exhibitions on the official teamLab site.
Tips From Visiting Both
If you're building a Tokyo itinerary, try the TripFlowy planner to combine teamLab with other Tokyo highlights in a single day. Borderless is near Roppongi — pair it with Shibuya Sky for a night view. For another immersive experience, see our Harry Potter Studio guide.
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