Akasaka is the upscale business and dining district of central Tokyo, sitting between the political corridors of Nagatacho and the nightlife hub of Roppongi in Minato Ward.
The name Akasaka (赤坂) means "red slope" in Japanese, a nod to the hilly streets that run through the area. During the Edo period, this was feudal lord territory, and that sense of old importance never really left. The district was once dotted with the grand residences of feudal lords and high-ranking samurai. It later became a favorite gathering spot for Tokyo's political and business elite during the Meiji era.
Akasaka's biggest draw is its food scene. The district has one of the highest concentrations of serious Japanese restaurants in Tokyo, particularly kaiseki multi-course dining and traditional ryotei restaurants that have been serving politicians and foreign dignitaries for decades. The strong diplomatic presence also means genuinely good Indian, Korean, Chinese, and European restaurants exist within a few blocks.
The district is equally well known for its jazz bars, small intimate spots tucked into basement floors and narrow alleyways that have been part of Akasaka's character for generations. Key landmarks include Akasaka Palace, Hikawa Shrine, Akasaka Sacas, and Hinokicho Park, all within easy walking distance of each other.
Spring brings cherry blossoms around Hinokicho Park and Hikawa Shrine, which are far less crowded than the famous spots in Ueno or Shinjuku Gyoen.
Walk through Akasaka on a weekday afternoon, and you will find suits, embassies, and serious business. Come back at 8 pm, and the same streets are full of after-work crowds spilling out of izakayas, with jazz drifting up from basement bars. It is the same neighborhood, but a completely different experience.
Weekends bring a quieter, more residential side of the neighborhood. The office crowd clears out, and it becomes a relaxed place to explore shrines and walk the hilly backstreets.
Unlike neighboring Roppongi, real families and long-term expats live here, giving it an authenticity that purely tourist-facing districts in Tokyo tend to lack.
The most convenient stations for accessing Akasaka are Akasaka-mitsuke Station on the Tokyo Metro Ginza Line and Marunouchi Line, Akasaka Station on the Chiyoda Line, and Tameike-Sanno Station on the Ginza Line and Namboku Line. A Suica or Pasmo IC card covers all lines and buses with no need for separate tickets.
Roppongi is a 15-minute walk south, and Nagatacho is right next door to the east.
