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Senso-ji Temple, Japan
Senso-ji Temple

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Senso-ji Temple

How to visit Senso-ji in Asakusa: why entry is free, when to go to dodge the Nakamise-dori crush, and whether the kimono and rickshaw add-ons are worth the yen.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 7 Jun 2026

Where

Tokyo, Japan

Opening hours

Grounds open 24/7. The main hall (Hondo) opens 06:00 Aprilโ€“September and 06:30 Octoberโ€“March, closing at 17:00. Nakamise-dori shops mostly run roughly 09:00โ€“18:00, so an early visit means quiet temple grounds but shuttered stalls.

Tickets

Free. No ticket, no booking, no gate queue. Extras are optional: an omikuji fortune is ยฅ100 (about ยฃ0.50), kimono rental from around ยฅ3,300 (ยฃ15), and a rickshaw ride from about ยฅ3,000 per person for 12โ€“13 minutes (ยฃ14).

Time needed

45 minutes to an hour for the gate, Nakamise-dori, the main hall and the five-storey pagoda. Add an hour or two if you do a kimono fitting or a rickshaw circuit of old Asakusa.

In short

Visiting Senso-ji Temple

Senso-ji is free and needs no booking, so the only real decision is when to turn up. Go before 8am: the Kaminarimon lantern and the 250-metre Nakamise-dori shopping street are walkable and photographable then, but by 9:30 the gate is shoulder-to-shoulder and stays that way until late afternoon. Forty-five minutes to an hour covers the whole site at a relaxed pace; the kimono rental and rickshaw rides clustered around it are the bit you'd actually pay for.

Go for free, just go early

Senso-ji costs nothing to enter โ€” no ticket, no online booking, no gate queue โ€” so the only real decision is timing. The grounds are open around the clock and the main hall opens at 06:00 from April to September (06:30 in winter), which is the window worth setting an alarm for. Walk through the giant red Kaminarimon lantern and down the 250-metre Nakamise-dori before 8am and youโ€™ll have the place close to yourself, with clean photos and morning incense drifting across an empty forecourt. By 9:30 the gate is filling fast, and from roughly 10am to 4pm itโ€™s shoulder-to-shoulder โ€” a Tuesday morning here has perhaps a fifth of the foot traffic of a Saturday afternoon, so come midweek if you can.

The trade-off with an early start is that the Nakamise-dori shops mostly donโ€™t roll up their shutters until about 09:00. If the street food and souvenir stalls are the draw, youโ€™ll want to come back through later or accept the crowds. Inside, allow 45 minutes to an hour for the gate, the shopping street, the Hozomon inner gate, the main hall and the five-storey pagoda โ€” itโ€™s a compact site, and you donโ€™t need longer than that.

The bit youโ€™d actually pay for

Since the temple itself is free, the spend is all optional and clustered in the lanes around it. Draw an omikuji paper fortune for ยฅ100 (about 50p) โ€” if you get a bad one, the local custom is to tie it to the rack and leave the luck behind. The genuine experiences are the dress-up ones: kimono rental from around ยฅ3,300 (ยฃ15) including hair styling from shops a few minutes off the temple, and rickshaw rides from about ยฅ3,000 per person for a 12โ€“13 minute spin, rising to roughly ยฅ7,000 for a half-hour circuit of old Asakusa. Both are touristy and both are good fun in this particular setting, where the low-rise backstreets still feel like an older Tokyo.

Visit early, walk it in an hour, and donโ€™t overthink it โ€” this is a free sight that rewards good timing more than money. Pair it with the riverside walk over to Tokyo Skytree (visible from the temple grounds) rather than stacking another big sight on top the same morning. The crowds, not the cost, are the only thing that can spoil Senso-ji, and beating them is entirely within your control.

Planning the rest of your trip? See the Tokyo city guide.

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Senso-ji Temple FAQs

Is Senso-ji Temple free to visit?
Yes โ€” entry to the grounds and the main hall is completely free, with no ticket and no booking. The only costs are optional: a ยฅ100 omikuji fortune, food and souvenirs on Nakamise-dori, or paid extras like kimono rental and rickshaw rides around it.
What is the best time to visit Senso-ji?
Before 8am. The grounds are open 24/7 and the main hall opens at 06:00 in summer (06:30 in winter), so an early start gives you the Kaminarimon gate and Nakamise-dori almost empty. By 9:30 it fills fast and stays packed until about 4pm; weekday mornings (Tuesday to Thursday) are quietest.
Is Senso-ji worth visiting?
Yes, and the price helps โ€” it's free. It's Tokyo's oldest temple and the Asakusa district around it is one of the few places the city feels genuinely old. Go early to enjoy it, skip the midday crush, and treat the kimono or rickshaw add-ons as the paid part of the day if you fancy them.