Rental Properties in Tokyo
1,550 rental properties available · ¥2,200 – ¥648,000,000 · 328 new this month
Tokyo Metropolis is the world's largest urban agglomeration — 37 million people across the greater metropolitan area — and yet it contains more quietness, more neighbourliness, and more genuine community than most cities a fraction of its size. The western Tama region, which is administrative Tokyo but feels nothing like the image of the city most people carry, has tree-lined residential streets, local shotengai (covered shopping arcades), and a pace of life that is simply different from the central wards. Hachioji, the largest city in western Tokyo by population, has 600,000 people, its own full urban amenities, and houses that are 40% cheaper than comparable properties in Setagaya or Meguro. This is the Tokyo that most foreign buyers don't know exists.
Getting There
The train network is the densest and most reliable in the world. Hachioji is 50 minutes from Shinjuku on the Chuo express; Tama is 35 minutes from Shinjuku on the Keio. The Yamanote Loop covers all the major central wards. The entire prefecture is served by nine major rail operators running hundreds of lines. For international access, Haneda Airport — Tokyo's city airport, 30 minutes from the centre — has extensive international routes and has been significantly expanded. Narita Airport is also reachable from most of the prefecture in under 90 minutes.
Daily Life
Tokyo's cultural texture is impossibly dense. The central 23 wards contain world-class museums (Tokyo National Museum, Mori Art Museum, teamLab), the Tsukiji outer market and its tuna culture, the wood-craft shotengai of Yanaka, the designer chaos of Shibuya and Harajuku, the traditional merchant town of Koenji, and a nightlife ecosystem that ranges from intimate jazz bars in Shinjuku's Golden Gai to electronic clubs in Roppongi. Each neighbourhood has a distinct identity. Moving between them is effortless.
Festivals & Culture
The Sumida River fireworks festival (July), the Asakusa Sanja Matsuri (May — 2 million attendees over three days, one of Tokyo's great celebrations), and the neighbourhood matsuri that occupy every summer weekend across the city give Tokyo a festival calendar more varied than most countries. Cherry blossom season in Ueno Park and Shinjuku Gyoen is one of the great shared public events of the Japanese calendar.
Buying Property Here
For property buyers, western Tokyo is the entry point. Hachioji, Ome, Machida, and Tama offer older wooden houses from ¥5M–¥15M, with some akiya-category properties under ¥5M. These come with Tokyo address, full Tokyo infrastructure, and express train access. Mid-range wards (Suginami, Nerima) run ¥15M–¥35M. Central wards (Setagaya, Shibuya, Meguro) start at ¥50M and have no effective ceiling. Tokyo is the only place in Japan where property investment, lifestyle, employment, and international access all converge at the top of their respective scales.
Setagaya, Tokyo Prefecture
Lawson Store 100 - 1 min walk
Setagaya, Tokyo Prefecture
Family Mart - 2 min walk
Arakawa, Tokyo Prefecture
Family Mart - 2 min walk
Itabashi, Tokyo Prefecture
Family Mart - 3 min walk
Itabashi, Tokyo Prefecture
Lawson - 4 min walk / 1 min drive
Nerima, Tokyo Prefecture
Lawson - 4 min walk / 1 min drive
Itabashi, Tokyo Prefecture
Seven Eleven - 2 min walk
Nerima, Tokyo Prefecture
Family Mart - 7 min walk / 1 min drive
Adachi, Tokyo Prefecture
Lawson Store 100 - 3 min walk
Adachi, Tokyo Prefecture
Seven Eleven - 3 min walk
Adachi, Tokyo Prefecture
Mini Stop - 2 min walk
Adachi, Tokyo Prefecture
Mini Stop - 2 min walk
Adachi, Tokyo Prefecture
Seven Eleven - 6 min walk / 1 min drive