From Akihabara's neon glow and the Ghibli museum you have to fight for tickets to the shrine steps you recognise from your favourite anime — we've pulled together the spots every fan needs, how to score the tickets that sell out fast, and the photo etiquette you can't skip, all on one page.
Picture yourself standing in the middle of Akihabara after dark, neon spilling down from the game-store towers, surrounded by figures, trading cards, and anime posters as tall as the buildings — this is why fans fly in from all over the world. Here, anime and manga aren't just entertainment; they're a culture woven right into the real city, from specialist shopping districts and the museums of legendary studios to the actual places that appear as scenes in the shows you know by heart.
The goal of this page is to help you travel as an anime fan and not miss the hard-to-get stuff — we walk you through the best districts (Akihabara, Nakano, and Ikebukuro), show you how to book the Ghibli Museum and Ghibli Park tickets that vanish fast, explain maid-cafe and photo etiquette, and point you to anime-scene pilgrimage (seichi junrei) done without disturbing the locals.
Before you plan your day, scan this table — each district has a clearly different character, and knowing what's best where saves you from wandering into the wrong place. Almost all of them are in Tokyo, except Ghibli Park, which is in Aichi Prefecture.
| District / Destination | Location | Known for | Best for | Quick tip |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AkihabaraAkihabara | Tokyo | Electronics, figures, trading cards, maid cafes | First-timers, new goods | Best at night for neon |
| Nakano BroadwayNakano Broadway | Tokyo | Secondhand collectibles, rare and vintage goods | Collectors | Mandarake, many floors |
| Otome RoadIkebukuro | Tokyo | Women-oriented goods, BL, otome, voice actors | Women fans | Flagship Animate |
| Ghibli MuseumMitaka | Tokyo | Behind-the-scenes Ghibli, no photos inside | Ghibli fans | Advance booking only |
| Ghibli ParkNagakute | Aichi | 5-area theme park recreating film scenes | Nagoya trips | Take the Linimo |
| Pokemon CenterSeveral branches | Tokyo | Pokemon goods + branch-limited items | Families | Shibuya/Skytree |
These are the places anime fans come back raving about — shopping districts, the museums you have to win tickets for, and visits to the real-life scenes. We've ordered them with the most first-timer-friendly first.
🔌 Tokyo1
The capital of otaku culture — a whole district of buildings packed with figure shops, trading-card stores, arcades, secondhand stores, and maid cafes. Big names like Animate, Mandarake, Super Potato (retro games), and Yodobashi (a giant electronics store) are all within walking distance of each other. Come at night, when the neon is at its best.
Tokyo Guide →A small museum that Hayao Miyazaki designed himself, taking you deep into the behind-the-scenes of Ghibli animation, with the robot from Laputa on the rooftop and short films screened only here. The key thing: entry is for advance-booking holders only, nothing is sold at the door, and photography is not allowed inside.
Tokyo Guide →A large theme park near Nagoya, divided into five areas that recreate the scenes and atmosphere of various Ghibli films. The highlights are the Grand Warehouse area and the house of Satsuki and Mei. Unlike the Mitaka museum, this is an open-air park you can roam for a full day. It also requires advance tickets, with nothing sold at the door.
Kansai Attractions →The official Pokemon stores, each with branch-exclusive items you can't buy online. Tokyo has several — Shibuya (Parco 6F, with a life-size Mewtwo statue), Skytree Town (Solamachi) paired with the observation tower, and Tokyo DX in Nihonbashi, which has a Pokemon Cafe right next door.
Tokyo Guide →If Akihabara is the place for new goods, this is the paradise of secondhand collectibles and rare finds — an old multi-floor mall crammed with over 30 small Mandarake branches under one roof, selling used manga from ¥100–300 a volume, vintage figures, 1980s–90s toys, and sometimes rare animation cels.
Tokyo Guide →Akihabara's counterpart for women fans — a street around Sunshine City lined with shops for otome games, male voice actors (seiyuu), BL manga, and doujinshi. The main store is the flagship Animate (a tall multi-floor building), backed by K-Books, Mandarake, and Lashinbang for secondhand goods and cosplay.
Tokyo Guide →Standing in the real-life places that appear as scenes in anime — fans call it seichi junrei. Famous spots include the Suga Shrine steps in Shinjuku from Your Name, the Enoden railway near Kamakura from Slam Dunk, and Lake Suwa in Nagano Prefecture, which inspired the lake in Your Name.
Japan Travel Guide →Tickets for the Ghibli Museum and Ghibli Park sell out fast, and plenty of people miss out because they didn't prepare — follow these three steps and your odds of getting them go way up (2026 conditions may change — check the official site first).
Tickets go on sale on the 10th of every month for the following month — the Mitaka museum opens sales at 10:00 (via Lawson Ticket), while Ghibli Park opens at 14:00, two months ahead. Every time is Japan time, so convert it correctly to your own time zone.
Create a Lawson Ticket account in advance and fill in your details and card before the sale opens, because every second counts when it's live. Some people open it on several devices at once to improve their odds · have your preferred date and entry slot in mind (Mitaka has 10/12/14/16 slots).
Both tickets are for a fixed date and time that can't be changed, so lock in your Ghibli day first and arrange everything else around it — don't book the whole trip and then gamble on tickets. If you miss this round, you can try again next month.
Maid cafes (and anime-themed concept cafes) in Akihabara are great fun, but the rules are taken seriously — know them beforehand and you'll relax into it without accidentally crossing a line or getting asked to leave.
You can see clearly that most of the anime districts cluster in Tokyo, walkable and linkable within a few days, while Ghibli Park sits over towards Nagoya — one to save for a Kansai-Chubu trip.
The home base for anime fans — Akihabara, Nakano, Ikebukuro — with hotels, attractions, and how to get around the city.
Tokyo Guide →Home to the Pokemon Center Shibuya and Parco — the district's sights, shopping, and cafes in one place.
Shibuya Guide →A well-placed base and the Your Name pilgrimage spot (the Suga Shrine steps) — hotels, food, and sights all covered.
Shinjuku Guide →A 7-day route you can slot an anime day into — Tokyo, Kansai, and the major cities in one trip.
7-Day Plan →A Kansai base before Ghibli Park in Aichi — Dotonbori, Osaka Castle, and the food the city is famous for.
Osaka Attractions →Visa · eSIM · IC cards · JR Pass · yen · power plugs · Japanese etiquette — everything before you fly.
Travel Prep →Start by securing your Ghibli Museum or Ghibli Park tickets, then open the Tokyo guide to map out the anime districts, your hotel, and the train routes — or start hunting for a place near a major station early.