Wards · Inner ward
Shinjuku
Tokyo's loudest, most multi-personality ward — neon chaos, corporate towers, and quiet literary side streets all crammed into one transit megahub.
Shinjuku is the ward that contains multitudes. Its station is the busiest on Earth, and everything radiates out from it in wildly different directions. West is a wall of corporate skyscrapers and government towers; east is department stores, then the largest red-light district in Asia. Walk fifteen minutes in any direction and the ward changes its clothes completely.
For investors and relocators, that variety is the whole point. You can find a polished executive rental in a Nishi-Shinjuku tower, a French-flavored hillside flat in Kagurazaka, a student-cheap room near Takadanobaba, or a calm family base by Shinjuku-Gyoen — all under one ward office. Connectivity is unmatched: nearly every major line passes through, plus the Narita and Haneda airport buses.
The trade-off is intensity. Central Shinjuku is crowded, loud, and at night a little raw around Kabukicho. But pockets of genuine calm survive — old temple lanes, the giant national garden, the bookshop-and-cafe culture around Kagurazaka and Yotsuya — and they're what make long-term living here work. This is a ward you pick for energy and access, then carve out your own quiet corner within it.
Key neighbourhoods
- Shinjuku (station core)
- The beating heart — department stores, endless dining, and the world's busiest station. Pure convenience, never quiet.
- Kabukicho
- Asia's most famous nightlife and red-light district: host clubs, izakaya, neon. Thrilling to visit, not where most choose to live.
- Nishi-Shinjuku
- The skyscraper district — the twin-towered Metropolitan Government building, five-star hotels, corporate HQs. Executive towers and serviced apartments.
- Kagurazaka
- Cobbled hillside lanes, French bistros, geisha-era alleys and hidden restaurants. Tokyo's most romantic, Euro-flavored neighborhood — coveted and pricey.
- Yotsuya
- Buttoned-up and central, with embassies, schools, and easy access to the Imperial moat. Quiet, professional, well-connected family territory.
- Takadanobaba
- Student town anchored by Waseda University — cheap eats, ramen, secondhand books. Lively, young, and the ward's best-value rentals.
- Okubo
- Tokyo's Koreatown and most international quarter — Korean BBQ, halal groceries, every accent. Diverse, dense, and inexpensive.
- Shinjuku-Gyoen
- The streets ringing the vast national garden — leafy, calm, and surprisingly residential for somewhere this central. A green oasis worth the premium.