Tsukiji Market Street Food Tour
A 2-hour street-food walk through Tsukiji Outer Market — still Tokyo’s greatest food destination, with 400+ shops and stalls — guided by a local who knows which queues are worth it. Bring around ¥5,000 for tastings and graze your way through grilled seafood, tamagoyaki, and matcha sweets.
Instant confirmation · Book direct with the team who guides you
Why this tour
When the famous tuna auction moved to Toyosu in 2018, many travelers assumed Tsukiji was finished. The opposite happened: the outer market — the 400-plus shops and food stalls that always served Tokyo’s chefs and home cooks — kept thriving, and it remains the best street-food morning in the city.
The challenge is knowing where to spend your appetite. Some queues are an hour long for food that’s merely fine; some unmarked counters serve the best bite in the market. That judgment is what your local guide brings — along with the ordering help and the stories behind the knives, the tamagoyaki, and the families who’ve run their stalls for three generations.
Good to know
- Come hungry and skip breakfast — you’ll be grazing for two hours.
- Cash is king at the market: bring around ¥5,000 per person, in coins and small bills if possible.
- Pescatarians thrive here; vegetarians can also eat well (tamagoyaki, matcha sweets, grilled vegetables) — note your needs when booking.
- Mornings only — by mid-afternoon many stalls sell out and close.
Frequently asked questions
Is Tsukiji still worth visiting now that the fish auction moved to Toyosu?
Yes — and arguably more than ever. Only the inner wholesale auction moved in 2018. The outer market’s 400+ food stalls and kitchenware shops stayed, and that’s where the street food has always been. Toyosu is for watching an auction behind glass; Tsukiji is for eating.
How much cash should I bring?
Around ¥5,000 (about $32) per person covers a very full morning — individual tastings run ¥300–¥1,500. Many stalls don’t take cards, so cash is essential.
What will we actually eat?
It varies by day and season — that’s the point of a market — but expect fresh-grilled seafood, tamagoyaki (sweet rolled omelet), onigiri, seasonal fruit, and matcha desserts. Your guide tailors the route to what’s freshest and to your tastes.
Can vegetarians enjoy a fish-market tour?
Surprisingly well: tamagoyaki, grilled mochi, pickles, fruit stalls, and matcha sweets are all meat- and fish-free. Tell us when booking and your guide will plan the stops around it.
Why does the tour start at 08:00?
The market peaks mid-morning. Starting at 08:00 means shorter queues at the best stalls, everything still in stock, and cooler walking in summer. Sleeping in genuinely costs you food options here.