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Tokyo, Japan Worth it with caveats

Shibuya Sky

A genuinely great open-air view of Tokyo and a top-down look at the famous crossing, as long as you land a clear evening and a good time slot. Bad weather or a flat midday booking turns it into a fine but ordinary observation deck.

Photo: Akonnchiroll (CC BY-SA 4.0), via Wikimedia Commons

You ride an elevator up the side of Shibuya Scramble Square, step out onto an open roof about 230 meters over the train tracks, and the whole western half of Tokyo just opens up in front of you with nothing taller in the way. Look straight down and there it is: the Shibuya Scramble Crossing, the swarm of people you usually stand in, now a tiny pulsing knot of bodies far below. The roof is genuinely the point here, not the indoor floor. Get a clear evening and a sunset slot and it is one of the better views in the city. Get bad weather or a midday slot and you have paid for a nice-but-ordinary observation deck, which is the honest tension you should know about before you book.

Is Shibuya Sky worth it?Worth it with caveats

Worth it for

  • Booking a sunset slot weeks ahead and watching the crossing and city lights come on from the open roof
  • A clear winter day when you want a shot at Mount Fuji on the western horizon

You can skip if

  • The forecast is windy or stormy and the open Sky Stage is likely to close
  • What you really want is the street-level energy of standing in the Scramble Crossing itself

Our pick for Shibuya Sky

The current primary in this menu has almost no review history at a price far above anything comparable, making it impossible to trust on logistics or value. The walking tour with the strongest review base and rating moves through the streets and elevated spots that give Shibuya its identity, including a view point over the famous crossing, at a price well below any of the packaged alternatives. For most visitors, experiencing Shibuya on foot first is the right starting point before heading to the observation deck independently.

If our pick doesn't fit

Buy it direct

Shibuya Scramble Square sells timed Shibuya Sky admission on its own site, and the daytime slots cost less than the sunset ones.

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Ratings and review counts come from each provider.

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Straight from recent visitors

What travelers flag about Shibuya Sky

We weighed recent Tokyo traveler opinion on Shibuya Sky against the provider reviews. These are the themes that came up again and again.

  • Book a sunset slot earlyReported by many

    Shibuya Sky's draw is the open-air rooftop deck, and the sunset time slots are the ones everyone wants, so they sell out weeks ahead, book online as soon as you can. The rooftop closes in bad weather, so if it is windy or stormy you may be kept to the indoor level, and refunds/rebooking rules vary, so check before you buy a fixed date.

  • If it's booked out, the free deck existsReported by several

    It is the trendiest Tokyo view and priced accordingly. If you cannot get a slot or want to save the money, the Metropolitan Government Building deck nearby is free, and the crossing itself is free to watch from street level or the windows of the station and nearby cafes.

Sourced from recent traveler discussions, not provider reviews. We only flag what several visitors independently reported, and the bars show how widely each point came up.

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Which ticket should you buy?

Buy the online timed-entry ticket through the official Shibuya Scramble Square site or a recognized reseller, and if you want sunset, set a reminder for when slots release a couple of weeks out and book the instant they do.

TicketWhat's includedBest for
Online timed-entry ticket A guaranteed entry slot at your chosen time, access to the indoor Sky Gallery and the open-air Sky Stage roof, at the lower advance price. Almost everyone, and the only reliable way to secure a sunset slot.
Sunset slot The same access, booked for the window around sundown, the most in-demand time of day. Best if a sunset slot is the main reason you are going, and you can book the moment tickets release.
Same-day counter ticket Walk-up entry bought on the 14th floor, subject to that day's remaining quota. Spontaneous visits on quieter days, knowing peak-season slots often sell out by midday.
2-24-12 Shibuya, Shibuya City, Tokyo 150-6145, Japan View larger map
© OpenStreetMap

What it actually is

Shibuya Sky sits on top of Shibuya Scramble Square, the tower that went up right over the station in 2019. The attraction is split into a few parts. Sky Gate is the elevator ride up, with a short projection-tunnel bit on the way. Sky Gallery is the indoor observation corridor on the 46th floor, all glass and air-conditioned. And Sky Stage is the open-air rooftop deck above that, roughly 230 meters up, which is where almost everyone wants to be.

Sky Stage is what sets this place apart from Tokyo's other towers. It is a flat open roof with a 360-degree sweep, stepped seating you can sprawl on, a grass-edged lounge feel, and helipad markings that people line up to photograph. The famous spot is Sky Edge, a glass corner on the western side where you stand right at the lip with the city dropping away below you. There is no roof over your head, which is exactly why it feels different and also exactly why the weather can shut it down.

Shibuya Sky is a 360° open-air observation deck located on the 46th floor roof of the Shibuya… Photo: Stephen Kelly from San Francisco, CA, USA (CC BY 2.0), via Wikimedia Commons

The view, including looking down on the crossing

The signature angle is straight down at the Shibuya Scramble Crossing. From street level the crossing is chaos you are inside of. From up here it reads as a clean pattern, hundreds of people flooding the intersection every time the lights change, then draining away. It is a different thing from the crossing itself, and worth being clear about: down on the pavement you feel the scramble, up here you watch it. Both are good. They are not the same experience.

Turn west and on a clear day you get the Tanzawa mountains on the horizon and, if the air is cooperating, Mount Fuji showing up behind them. Fuji is never guaranteed. Winter and early-morning clarity give you the best odds, and summer haze usually hides it. The rest of the panorama is solid Tokyo sprawl: Shinjuku's towers, Tokyo Tower and Skytree off to the sides, and after dark the whole grid lighting up. Night is the safer bet for a reliably good view, sunset is the prize if you can get it.

Photo by Louie Martinez on Unsplash

Tickets and how sunset works

Entry is timed. You book a specific slot (they run in short windows, around 20 minutes), and that slot only controls when you go in, not how long you stay. Once you are up there you can linger as long as you like until closing, so a common move is to enter in late afternoon and just stay through the sunset. Buying online ahead of time is both cheaper and the only way to lock a slot. There is a same-day counter inside the building, on the 14th floor, but it works off a daily quota and routinely sells out by midday in busy months.

Sunset is where it gets competitive. Those slots are the first to go, they open for sale a couple of weeks out, and on a nice-weather weekend they can vanish within minutes of release. If you are set on sunset, set a reminder for when tickets drop and book the moment they do. If they are already gone, the workaround is to grab a slot 60 to 90 minutes before sundown and ride it through, since there is no time limit once you are inside. Book through the official Shibuya Scramble Square site or a recognized reseller, not a random link.

Getting there and the rooftop rules

Access could not be easier: the building is welded onto Shibuya Station, so you go up from the concourse without ever really going outside. JR lines, the Tokyo Metro, and the private railways all feed straight in. You take elevators up to the 14th floor, where the entrance and ticket counter are, then continue up to the roof from there. If you are coming from the crossing, it is a two-minute walk through the station complex.

The open roof comes with real rules, and they enforce them. Before you go up to Sky Stage you lock everything loose into free lockers: bags, luggage, anything that could blow off the edge. No food or drinks up top. No umbrellas, tripods, monopods, selfie sticks, or strollers. Hats and scarves come off. Cameras and phones are fine but they want a strap, and the railings are high and angled inward, so it is safe, just be ready to travel light for that part. The indoor Sky Gallery has none of these restrictions if you would rather keep your stuff with you.

Shibuya Sky observation deck, Tokyo Photo: Syced (CC0), via Wikimedia Commons

The honest downsides

Weather is the big one. Because Sky Stage is genuinely open to the sky, strong wind, rain, or storms can close it. When that happens they usually keep the indoor Sky Gallery open, so you are not turned away entirely, but you came for the roof and the roof is what gets shut. Check the forecast, and know that a same-day booking on an iffy day is a gamble.

The other downside is the crowd-and-cost math around sunset. Those slots sell out fast and a clear evening packs the deck, so Sky Edge can mean queuing for your photo and the lounge spots fill early. If you are visiting on a budget or hate crowds, a weekday daytime or late-night slot is calmer and cheaper-feeling for the same view minus the golden hour. And if you specifically want the at-ground energy of the scramble itself, this is not that. This is the view from above it.

Shibuya Sky open-air observation deck, Tokyo Photo: Kakidai (CC BY-SA 4.0), via Wikimedia Commons

Shibuya Sky: FAQs

Yes, and it is the standout angle. Look straight down from the western side of the roof and you watch the whole Scramble Crossing fill and empty with each light change. It is a different experience from standing in the crossing, not a replacement for it.

For any specific time, yes. Online tickets are cheaper and guarantee your slot, and sunset windows in particular sell out fast, often within minutes of release. There is a same-day counter on the 14th floor, but it runs on a daily quota and frequently sells out by midday in peak season.

Sometimes. Fuji sits to the west and shows up on clear, low-haze days, best odds in winter and early in the day. It is never guaranteed, and summer haze usually hides it, so treat a Fuji sighting as a bonus rather than the reason you go.

You store all bags and loose items in free lockers before going up. No food or drinks, umbrellas, tripods, monopods, selfie sticks, or strollers on Sky Stage, and they ask you to remove hats and scarves. Phones and cameras are fine, ideally on a strap.

Strong wind or storms can close the open-air Sky Stage for safety. The indoor Sky Gallery on the 46th floor usually stays open, so you still get a high view through glass, but you lose the open roof that most people come for. Check the forecast before booking a same-day slot.

Your timed slot only controls entry. Once inside you can stay until closing, with no time limit. Most people spend around 60 to 90 minutes, and many enter in late afternoon and stay through sunset into the night view.

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