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🌸 Nakameguro · Tokyo

Nakameguro — the Meguro River, Cherry Blossoms, Cafés & Chic Shops

The neighbourhood Tokyoites keep for slow days and quiet dates — a cherry-blossom tunnel along the Meguro River, riverside specialty cafés, the Starbucks Reserve Roastery by Kengo Kuma, vintage boutiques, and a stroll on to Daikanyama just minutes away.

Start Here

The Neighbourhood Tokyoites Keepfor Strolling and Dates

Picture a neighbourhood with a narrow little river running through it, both banks lined with cafés, sweet shops and indie clothing stores, and trees that arch their branches over the path — that's Nakameguro, a pocket of southern central Tokyo where locals come to slow down. It isn't as frantic as Shibuya or Shinjuku, but it has its own taste and quiet good looks. Honestly, if you're tired of the crowds and the neon, this is a lovely place to catch your breath.

Most people know Nakameguro from the photos of the cherry-blossom tunnel along the Meguro River in late March — but the truth is, the neighbourhood is a pleasure all year round: riverside specialty coffee, the largest Starbucks Reserve Roastery in the world, little vintage and design shops tucked down side streets, and Daikanyama just a ten-minute walk away. This page walks you through what to do, where to eat, and how to plan a half-day or full day to get the most out of it.

🌸 Straight up, before anything else: if you come during cherry-blossom season (late March–early April), the riverside gets seriously packed, especially in the evening when the lanterns are lit. If you'd rather walk in peace and take photos without crowds, come at another time of year — the cafés and chic shops are all still here. Bloom dates change every year with the weather, so check the latest forecast before you plan.
🌸
Riverside Cherry Blossoms
~800 trees line the Meguro River, blooming late March–early April.
Cafés + Specialty Coffee
Riverside cafés galore, plus the world's largest Starbucks roastery.
🛍️
Vintage & Boutiques
Indie fashion, design stores and homeware down the little side streets.
🚶
Walk On to Daikanyama
~10 minutes to Daikanyama and T-Site, with its beautiful bookstore.
Getting There — the Station

Which Station, and How to Get In from the Main Areas

Nakameguro is reached via Naka-Meguro Station, served by two train lines — and it's just one stop from Shibuya. From the station it's only a few minutes' walk to the river and the cafés.

FromLine / howApprox. timeNotes
ShibuyaShibuyaTokyu Toyoko~3 minOne stop south on the Toyoko Line straight to Nakameguro
GinzaGinzaHibiya Line~20 minThe Hibiya Line runs direct to Naka-Meguro, its terminus
RoppongiRoppongiHibiya Line~12 minOne ride on the Hibiya Line, no transfer needed
ShinjukuShinjukuJR + Toyoko~20 minJR to Shibuya, then one stop on the Toyoko Line
Haneda AirportHanedaTrain + transfer~40–50 minKeikyu/Monorail into the city, then the Hibiya/Toyoko Line
DaikanyamaDaikanyamaOn foot~10 minEasy walk linking the two areas — visit them back to back
🚉 Quick tip: Naka-Meguro Station is the transfer point between the Hibiya Line and the Tokyu Toyoko Line. The station exits sit right beside the Meguro River and several cafés, so you can start strolling the moment you step out. The times above are approximate and can vary with the train and the time of day.
What to See & Do

7 Things That MakeNakameguro, Nakameguro

From the cherry-blossom tunnel over the river and the riverside specialty cafés to the world's largest Starbucks roastery, the vintage shops down the side streets, and Daikanyama just up the hill — these are the things people come back and tell their friends about.

Cherry-blossom tunnel along the Meguro River in Nakameguro, with pink lanterns on both banks 🌸 Meguro River1
Meguro River Cherry Blossoms
Meguro River Cherry Blossoms

This is the image that put the neighbourhood on the world's radar — around 800 cherry trees lining a narrow river, their branches leaning in until they form a tunnel of blossoms over the water. During the festival, pink lanterns (bonbori) are strung up and lit after dark, and the blossoms reflected on the water are a different kind of beautiful.

📍Location: Along the Meguro River, around Naka-Meguro Station
🌸Bloom: late Mar–early Apr · lanterns roughly 17:00–20:00 during the festival
🚆Getting there: A few minutes' walk from Naka-Meguro Station to the river
💡Tip: Evenings get very crowded — for photos without crowds, come mid-morning on a weekday. Check the latest bloom forecast first.
Japan Cherry Blossom Guide →
☕ Riverside2
Riverside Specialty Cafés
Riverside Specialty Cafes

Nakameguro is a serious café neighbourhood. Both banks of the river are packed with specialty coffee shops, patisseries and pretty little cafés, many with seats facing the water. The local move is to grab a single cup and sip it while you wander along the riverside — genuinely relaxed, especially mid-morning.

📍Location: Spread along both banks of the Meguro River and the lanes around the station
Hours: Most open late morning to evening; each is different, so check before you go
💡Tip: Explore the small side streets a little off the river and you'll find quieter spots with fewer people.
Japan Food Guide →
🏛️ ☕ Riverside3
Starbucks Reserve Roastery
Reserve Roastery Tokyo · Kengo Kuma

The largest Starbucks roastery in the world — a four-story building beside the Meguro River designed by architect Kengo Kuma, using cedar wood and tall glass, with a copper coffee cask as its centrepiece. The ground floor is the Princi bakery from Milan, the second the Teavana tea bar, the third the Arriviamo cocktail bar, and the top a roasting floor with a lounge.

📍Location: By the Meguro River, ~10–14 min walk from Naka-Meguro Station
🎟️Entry: Free · you only pay for what you order · long queues during cherry-blossom season
💡Tip: For a water-view seat, come at opening or late afternoon on a weekday and avoid weekends.
Japan Food Guide →
🛍️ 🛍️ Side streets4
Boutiques, Vintage & Select Shops
Vintage & Select Shops

This is the playground for indie-fashion lovers. The lanes around the station and along the river are full of vintage clothing stores, select shops, design studios, homeware shops and tiny galleries run by owners who curate everything themselves. It's where Tokyoites come to find pieces no one else has — not chain malls.

📍Location: The lanes around Naka-Meguro Station and both banks of the river
Hours: Most small shops open from midday to evening; some close on weekdays
💡Tip: Wander slowly into the lanes — the good stuff often hides on a second floor or just off the main street.
Shopping in Ginza →
📚 📚 ~10 min walk on5
Daikanyama + T-Site
Daikanyama & Daikanyama T-Site

Walk about 10 minutes uphill from Nakameguro and you reach Daikanyama, the older-sibling chic district known for design. The highlight is Daikanyama T-Site, a beautiful Tsutaya bookstore complex with cafés, design shops and quiet corners to sit and read. People love stringing the two neighbourhoods together over a half-day to a full day.

📍Location: The Daikanyama side · T-Site is ~5 min from Daikanyama Station
🚶From Nakameguro: ~10 min on foot (or one stop on the Toyoko Line)
💡Tip: Plan one route — start by the river in Nakameguro mid-morning, then climb to Daikanyama in the afternoon.
Tokyo Guide →
🍶 🍶 Under the tracks6
Bars & Izakaya Under the Tracks
Under-the-Tracks Bars & Izakaya

Come evening, Nakameguro shifts into a grown-up drinking neighbourhood. Under the railway viaduct and in the little lanes you'll find bars, wine bars and tiny izakaya with only a handful of seats — quiet and friendly, nothing like the big nightlife districts. It's the kind of place to wind down the day over a relaxed drink.

📍Location: Under the tracks and in the lanes around Naka-Meguro Station
Hours: Most bars open evening to late
💡Tip: Small places with few seats fill up fast on Fri–Sat — plan to try a few, or arrive before dark.
Japan Food Guide →
📷 📷 Year-round7
Riverside Stroll & Photo Walk
Riverside Stroll & Photo Walk

Even outside cherry-blossom season, the path along the Meguro River is one of the best strolling routes in Tokyo. Little bridges, leafy shade, prettily arranged shopfronts and photo corners everywhere. People come to walk slowly, sip coffee, take photos and drop into whatever shop catches their eye — an unhurried, easy rhythm of a visit.

📍Location: All along the Meguro River through Nakameguro
🌤️When: Year-round · green leaves in summer, autumn colour late in the season
💡Tip: Come in the evening for soft light as the shops start switching on their lights — great for photos and a quiet date.
Tokyo Attractions →
Eat & Drink

What to Eatin Nakameguro

This is a neighbourhood of cafés and pretty little places, not loud street food — come to sip coffee, eat cake, and round off the day with dinner or a relaxed drink.

Daytime · Cafés
Specialty Coffee + Sweets

The heart of the neighbourhood is its cafés — from tiny specialty coffee shops by the river to the Starbucks Reserve Roastery, the world's largest roastery, with the Princi bakery inside. Many places do their own pastries and cakes, perfect for a long sit-down by the water.

Main meals
Small Spots in the Lanes

The lanes around the station hold a real range of small restaurants — modern Japanese, pasta places, bakeries, and owner-run kitchens. Most have only a few seats, so expect a wait at weekend lunch and dinner, or come before the peak hours.

Evening · Drinks
Bars + Izakaya

After dark there are bars, wine bars and izakaya under the tracks and in the lanes — quiet and easygoing, ideal for a light drink to end the day. If you have a particular place in mind, check recent reviews first, as small spots open and close often.

🍽️ Want to know what to eat across the rest of Japan? Read on at the full Japan Food Guide — the standout dishes of each region and how to order without getting lost.
Blossom-Season Etiquette

Enjoying the Meguro Riverat Cherry-Blossom Time the Right Way

In season the riverside path gets packed, and unlike the big parks there's nowhere to spread a picnic mat here — it's a narrow walking route. A few simple courtesies keep the crowds moving and the trees healthy.

🚶
Keep Walking, Don't Block
The riverside is a thin path, not a picnic ground. Take your photo and keep moving so the crowd behind you can flow — don't camp on a bridge.
🌳
Don't Climb or Pull Branches
Never climb the trees or pull branches down for a shot, and don't shake them to make petals fall — it's disrespectful to the trees and to everyone else.
🍢
Mind the Food-Stall Mess
Festival stalls line the river — eat to the side, not mid-path, and never balance cups or plates on the railings above the water.
🗑️
Carry Your Rubbish Home
Bins fill fast or are scarce in season. Bring a bag, separate your waste, and take it with you or use only the designated points.
🏠
Respect the Residents
This is a lived-in neighbourhood. Keep off doorways and private frontages, and don't lean into shops or homes to frame a photo.
🤫
Keep the Noise Down
Evenings draw big crowds but it's still a quiet residential area — keep your volume in check, especially after the lanterns go off.
Map

Nakameguro & Daikanyamaon One Map

Everything in this guide sits within an easy walk of Naka-Meguro Station — the riverside, the Roastery, and Daikanyama just up the hill. Here's how it all lines up.

Know Before You Go

6 Things That Make a Nakameguro VisitSmoother

🕙
Mornings Are Calmest
Most cafés and shops open late morning, and the riverside is at its quietest then. Arrive mid-morning for an unhurried stroll before the afternoon crowd.
🌸
Pick Your Season
Cherry-blossom season (late Mar–early Apr) is gorgeous but very crowded, especially in the evening. For an easy walk, almost any other time works beautifully.
🚉
Pair It with Shibuya or Daikanyama
Nakameguro is one stop from Shibuya and a 10-minute walk from Daikanyama — easy to chain together into a half-day or full day.
💳
Carry a Little Cash
Bigger cafés take cards and IC, but some tiny shops, bars and izakaya are cash-only. Keep some yen and a charged Suica/Pasmo on hand.
📶
Get an eSIM Before You Fly
Half the fun here is finding shops down the lanes — you'll want live maps and a way to look up opening hours, which change often.
🏨
Where to Base Yourself
Few hotels sit right in Nakameguro itself, so most travellers stay in nearby Shibuya or Ebisu and pop over — both are minutes away by train.
Related Guides

Keep Planning Your Japan Trip — Cities, Sights, and Prep

More Tokyo and Japan guides to build out your trip around a day in Nakameguro.

🌸

Japan Cherry Blossom Guide

When sakura blooms, this year's forecast, the best viewing spots and hanami etiquette — read it alongside the Meguro River.

Sakura Guide →
🌃

Shibuya

One stop from Naka-Meguro on the Tokyu Toyoko line — the scramble crossing, Shibuya Sky, youth shopping and nightlife.

See the guide →
🎀

Harajuku

Teen fashion, Takeshita Street, Omotesando and Meiji Shrine — another of Tokyo's stylish districts.

See the guide →
🗼

Tokyo Attractions

Senso-ji, Skytree, Shinjuku Gyoen, the Meguro River and the rest of the city's must-see spots, all in one place.

Tokyo Attractions →
🏨

Top 10 Tokyo Hotels

Recommended hotels across Tokyo — pick a base near the sights and major stations, with booking links.

See ranking →
ℹ️

Japan Travel Prep

Visa · eSIM · IC cards · JR Pass · yen · power plugs · etiquette — everything before you fly to Japan.

Travel Prep →
Frequently Asked Questions

Questions AboutNakameguro

Where is Nakameguro in Tokyo, and how do I get there?
Nakameguro sits just south of central Tokyo. Get off at Naka-Meguro Station, which is served by two lines — the Tokyo Metro Hibiya Line and the Tokyu Toyoko Line. From Shibuya it's a single stop on the Toyoko, about 3 minutes. From the station it's only a few minutes' walk to the Meguro River and the cafés.
When do the cherry blossoms along the Meguro River bloom, and are there evening lights?
The roughly 800 cherry trees lining the Meguro River bloom from late March to early April, in step with central Tokyo. During the festival, pink lanterns (bonbori) are hung along both banks and lit from about 17:00 to 20:00 for around 15 days after the blossoms open. The exact bloom dates change every year with the weather, so check the latest forecast before you go.
What's inside the Starbucks Reserve Roastery Tokyo?
It's the largest Starbucks roastery in the world, a four-story building beside the Meguro River designed by architect Kengo Kuma. The ground floor is the Princi bakery from Milan, the second floor is the Teavana tea bar, the third is the Arriviamo cocktail bar, and the top floor is the roasting area with the AMU lounge. Entry is free, and it gets very busy during cherry-blossom season.
Who is Nakameguro for, and what kind of visit suits it?
It suits anyone who likes a relaxed mood — strolling and taking photos by the water, sipping specialty coffee, browsing indie boutiques and vintage shops, and quiet dates. It's the chic neighbourhood locals love, far calmer than Shibuya or Shinjuku. It's at its liveliest during cherry-blossom season, but it's still easy to walk and full of charm the rest of the year.
Can you walk between Nakameguro and Daikanyama?
Yes, easily. From Naka-Meguro Station it's about a 10-minute walk to the Daikanyama district. The highlight of Daikanyama is the Daikanyama T-Site, with its beautiful Tsutaya bookstore, cafés, and design shops. Most people pair the two neighbourhoods over a half-day to a full day.
Is Nakameguro worth visiting outside cherry-blossom season?
Absolutely. The neighbourhood's main draw is its specialty cafés, vintage and boutique shops, the bars and izakaya under the railway tracks, and the leafy riverside walk — all of which are there year-round. Cherry-blossom season just adds a short burst of beauty; come at any other time and you'll get a quieter, easier stroll instead.
Ready to Explore Nakameguro?

Build Your Tokyo Days Around It
and Book a Base Nearby

Open the full Tokyo guide to plan the neighbourhoods around a day in Nakameguro, or start searching for a hotel close by in Shibuya or Ebisu so you're only minutes from the river.

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