
Tokyo Skytree Guide — Tickets, Night View & Observatory Tips (2026)
Tokyo Skytree tickets, 350m vs 450m decks, best time for night views, and how it compares to Shibuya Sky. Tips from visiting Japan's tallest tower.
Tokyo Skytree Observatory — Views From Japan's Tallest Structure
Tokyo Skytree is a 634m broadcasting tower in Oshiage, Sumida City, Tokyo, Japan. When completed in 2012, it was the tallest tower in the world. It's still the tallest structure in Japan. Inside, there are two observation decks: the Tembo Deck at 350m and the Tembo Galleria at 450m.
Shibuya Sky is the go-to Tokyo observation deck, but getting night view tickets there requires an opening-day rush 2 weeks in advance. Skytree sells same-day tickets and offers early-bird discounts on Klook — much easier to plan around.
Key Info
- Location: 1-1-2 Oshiage, Sumida City, Tokyo (near Asakusa)
- Height: Tower 634m / highest deck 450m (Galleria)
- Hours: 10:00–21:00 (last entry 20:00)
- Getting there: Tokyo Skytree Station or Oshiage Station — direct walk
- Official prices: Date-based pricing — Deck + Galleria ¥3,000–4,400 / Deck only ¥1,800–2,700 (weekends/holidays cost more)
- Klook prices: Deck + Galleria ~$20 / Deck only ~$12
Getting There
Get off at Tokyo Skytree Station (Tobu Skytree Line) or Oshiage Station (Hanzomon/Asakusa Line) — both connect directly to the building. Follow signs for "Skytree Town."
It's close to Asakusa's Senso-ji temple, so you can combine both in one day. Take the elevator to the 4th floor for the ticket counter.

Tickets
Unlike Shibuya Sky, same-day walk-up tickets are available. But booking on Klook in advance gets you early-bird discounts.
Book Tokyo Skytree TicketsBooking tips:
- Buy on Klook → scan QR at kiosk on-site → receive physical ticket

- Get the 450m Galleria ticket — the 100m difference in view is significant
- Official prices vary by date — weekdays are cheaper, weekends/holidays cost more
- Check the official Skytree site for date-specific pricing
350m Tembo Deck
The elevator takes you to 350m, where three floors (340m, 345m, 350m) offer panoramic views of Tokyo.


Easier booking means more people inside than Shibuya Sky. Window spots fill up, especially near sunset.
There's a small cafe (coffee ~¥600) and Korean/English information boards showing which buildings are in each direction. One floor down (340m), there's a glass floor section — double-layered glass with a gap, so less scary than you'd expect.

450m Tembo Galleria
From 350m, take another elevator to 445m, then walk up a ramp to the highest point: 451.2m.

Smaller than the deck below, which means fewer people and better views. The railings have cloud-shaped cushions so you can lean forward comfortably.

Free photo spot available.
I expected 100m difference to feel similar — it's noticeably different. If it's your first visit, the Galleria ticket is worth it.
The elevator queue for Galleria gets long, especially near sunset. Go up before the evening rush.
Night View
Best time: 40 minutes to 1 hour before sunset. You'll catch the transition from daytime to night view. Check sunset time for your visit date in advance.
On clear days, you can see Mt. Fuji. The Sumida River toward Asakusa, high-rises in Shibuya/Shinjuku — everything is visible from here. The night view was just as impressive as Shibuya Sky.

Shibuya Sky vs Skytree
| Tokyo Skytree | Shibuya Sky | |
|---|---|---|
| Height | 350m Tembo / 450m Galleria | 230m rooftop |
| Style | Indoor, glass walls, weather-proof | Outdoor rooftop, open-air |
| Adult ticket (tax in) | ~$12 Tembo / ~$20 combo (Klook) | ¥2,700 daytime / ¥3,400 evening |
| Booking difficulty | Low — same-day walk-up OK | High — 2-week advance rush |
| Best for | Highest view, clear-weather days, flexible plans | Atmosphere, social photos, sunset slot |
Prices as of 2026-04. Skytree is the dependable pick when Shibuya Sky is sold out or the weather is iffy.
If you can, visit both. They feel completely different.
Tips From Visiting
- Klook early-bird tickets from ~$20 (Deck + Galleria)
- Get the 450m Galleria ticket — worth the extra cost vs 350m only
- Enter 40min–1hr before sunset for the best timing
- Galleria elevator has a queue — go up before the evening rush
- If Shibuya Sky night tickets are sold out, Skytree is a strong alternative
- Combine with Asakusa (Senso-ji) on the same day
- Restaurants below the tower are good for dinner after
- Prices vary by date — check the official site
If you're building a Tokyo itinerary, try the TripFlowy planner to combine Skytree and Asakusa into a full day. For an outdoor rooftop experience, see our Shibuya Sky guide.
Book Tokyo Skytree Tickets
via Klook
FAQ
How much does Tokyo Skytree cost?
Can I buy Tokyo Skytree tickets on the same day?
Tokyo Skytree 350m or 450m — which ticket should I buy?
Shibuya Sky or Tokyo Skytree — which is better?
What time is best for Tokyo Skytree night view?
How do I get to Tokyo Skytree?
Does Tokyo Skytree have a glass floor?

Written by
Huiwon Kim (Check Kim)
Founder, TripFlowy · Travel Creator
Travel creator covering Asia since 2007. Known as Check Kim (책킴) in Korea, boarded 64 flights in 2025 alone. 20+ trips to Japan, with personally tested spots across 50+ cities in 15+ Asian countries. Writes about theme parks, airport transit, observation decks, and day-trip routes from major cities.
Plan a trip to this destination
Start PlanningBook Tokyo Skytree Tickets
From ~$12


