Shibuya Sky tickets & tours | Price comparison

Shibuya Sky

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Shibuya Sky, locally called 渋谷スカイ, lifts you 229 m (751 ft) above Tokyo on the roof of Shibuya Scramble Square, with the scramble below, rail lines cutting through the district, and Mount Fuji sometimes appearing far to the west. The open-air roof and glass-edge corners make this one of the city's most immediate skyline moments, especially as day turns into neon.

For most TicketLens visitors, start with a guided Shibuya route that includes the deck, because it turns the crossing, Hachiko, and your skyline timing into one clean booking. Book now.
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Guided Shibuya skyline tours

Best for first-timers who want Shibuya Sky plus the neighborhood story around Hachiko, the scramble, and often Harajuku or Meiji Shrine in one guided route.
Shibuya: Crossing, Hachiko & Shibuya Sky Guided Tour
4.7(67)
 
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Tokyo: Shibuya Sky, Harajuku & Meiji Shrine Highlights Tour
4.5(11)
 
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Tokyo: Shibuya Sky, Crossing & Hachiko Guided Tour
4.8(25)
 
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Tokyo: Shibuya Sky Night View, Crossing & Local Vibe Tour
4.8(37)
 
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See all Guided Shibuya skyline tours

6 tips for visiting the Shibuya Sky

1
Choose the right format
If this is your first time in Shibuya, the guided format is usually the smoother buy because it bundles the crossing, Hachiko, and the deck into one clear route. If your priority is simply getting upstairs without station stress, the admission-plus-transfer option is the cleaner choice. Decide that first, so the rest of the day stops fighting you.
2
Book the sunset shoulder
If your dream is daylight, sunset, and neon in one visit, aim for a slot about 30 minutes before sunset. It is the most wanted window, so leave extra queue time and lock it in as soon as your date is firm. That way you get the full light change instead of arriving just after the best moment.
3
Use early-afternoon pricing
If budget matters more than golden-hour photos, the official adult web rate for entry from 10 am to 3 pm is ¥700 lower than later-entry pricing. Earlier windows also make it easier to keep the deck inside a wider Harajuku or Shibuya day. You save money and keep more flexibility.
4
Travel very light
The rooftop rules are stricter than many visitors expect. Travel luggage, food, drinks, loose hats and earphones, tripods, and selfie sticks do not belong on the deck, and small items often need the 46th-floor locker before you go outside. That way your skyline moment stays a skyline moment, not a locker mission.
5
Leave weather margin
If you are building the whole evening around Shibuya Sky, keep a backup plan nearby. High winds or bad weather can close the rooftop with little warning, and the day feels much less frustrating if dinner, Miyashita Park, or indoor time in Shibuya Scramble Square is already in your pocket. That way you do not gamble the entire evening on one roof condition.
6
Pair the deck with one calm contrast
The strongest same-day contrast is usually Meiji Shrine, not a second full skyline push. You get forest hush after Shibuya's noise, and the route also passes naturally by Harajuku. One quiet counterweight is usually more satisfying than trying to conquer all of western Tokyo in one go.

How to choose your Shibuya Sky format

This stop works best when you decide first whether you want a guided neighborhood story or simply the deck with the least navigation stress.

Guided Shibuya skyline tours

Best for first-time visitors who want the deck plus a readable piece of Shibuya in one move. These tours usually fold in the scramble, Hachiko, and often Harajuku or Meiji Shrine, so you are not spending your best hour decoding station exits and district geography. If you want one coherent introduction rather than a self-directed puzzle, this is the strongest first booking. Book now.

Admission with private transfer

Choose this if your real priority is simply getting to Shibuya Sky smoothly and keeping the skyline moment at the center of the outing. It suits couples on a short Tokyo stay, airport-day visitors, or anyone who would rather skip the station maze and arrive with energy left for the roof. You lose the guided neighborhood layer, but you gain a cleaner door-to-view transition. Book now.

Use timing to change the whole feel

The same deck feels different across the day. About 30 minutes before sunset is the classic slot if you want daylight, the orange drop, and then neon, but it is also the pressure point for queues and sellouts. Early afternoon is calmer and officially cheaper for adult web tickets, so choose based on mood, not habit.

Pair the deck with one nearby contrast

After a high-energy Shibuya slot, do not force five more headline stops. The cleanest nearby reset is Meiji Shrine; if your day is still skyline-led, use Roppongi Hills Observation Deck or Tokyo Tower as a second, more distant city-view chapter instead. One deliberate contrast feels curated; overstacking just makes the station maze feel longer.

What makes Shibuya Sky feel different

The appeal is not only height. It is the mix of rooftop air, station-core energy beneath you, and a visit design that turns the ride up into part of the spectacle.

Read Shibuya Sky in three zones

The visit is built as more than one elevator to a platform. SKY GATE handles the transition upward, the roof-level SKY STAGE delivers the exposed 360-degree view, and SKY GALLERY on the 46th floor gives you an indoor loop when you want glass, light, and a calmer pace. Knowing that rhythm helps you avoid treating the place like a one-photo stop.

What you actually see from the roof

The first thrill is local. You look straight down at Shibuya Scramble Crossing, Center-Gai, and the rail lines threading through the district, then the horizon opens wider to Tokyo Skytree, other central towers, and, on clear days, Mount Fuji. That near-to-far shift is why this deck feels cinematic even before night falls.

Why this view belongs to Shibuya

This rooftop makes sense because the district beneath it was shaped as a rail and culture node for generations. Shibuya Station first opened in 1885, the area accelerated into a bigger terminal after the 1927 arrival of the Toyoko Line, and the district was already a full shopping-and-entertainment magnet by 1934. When Shibuya Scramble Square and Shibuya Sky opened in 2019, the deck did not invent a center; it gave that center a new vertical stage.

How it compares with other Tokyo decks

If you want pure height, Tokyo Skytree wins. If you want the old-school landmark silhouette, Tokyo Tower still has the stronger iconography. But if your priority is feeling outside, hovering above Tokyo's busiest crossroads, and folding the view into a west-side city day with almost no transfer overhead, Shibuya Sky is the sharper choice.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Shibuya Sky exactly?

Shibuya Sky is the observation facility at the top of Shibuya Scramble Square, spread across the 14th, 45th, and 46th floors plus the roof. Its signature is the open-air rooftop at 229 m (751 ft), backed up by the indoor SKY GALLERY level.
Read more.

When is the best time to visit Shibuya Sky?

For most visitors, the sweet spot is around 30 minutes before sunset, because you get daylight, the color drop, and the first neon. If you care more about price and pace than golden-hour photos, early afternoon is easier and cheaper.
Read more.

How much time should I plan for the visit?

Most visitors spend about 90 minutes at Shibuya Sky. There is no strict time limit once you are inside, so if you want to wait for better light or clearer weather, keep roughly 1.5 to 2 hours free.
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Do I need to book a timed ticket in advance?

Yes. Regular admission works on timed entry, and official web tickets are cheaper than the counter. The most popular late-afternoon and sunset windows are the first to disappear.
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What happens if the weather turns bad?

The rooftop can close, or the operating day can tighten, in strong wind or bad weather. Recheck conditions shortly before you go, and keep a nearby backup idea so the whole evening does not collapse around one roof decision.
Read more.

Can I bring luggage, food, or a tripod?

Not onto the rooftop. Travel luggage, food, drinks, tripods, selfie sticks, and loose items like hats and earphones are all bad fits for the deck, so plan to use lockers before you step outside.
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How do I reach the entrance from Shibuya Station?

Shibuya Sky is directly connected to Shibuya Station. Depending on your line, you enter the building from B2, the first floor, or the third floor, then follow the signs up to the 14th-floor ticket counter and entrance.
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Can I see Mount Fuji from Shibuya Sky?

Yes, on clear days you can, especially toward the southwest. In the opposite direction, you can also pick out Tokyo Skytree. Treat both as weather bonuses, not guarantees.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

As of 2026-04-08, published regular hours for Shibuya Sky are 10 am to 10:30 pm, with last admission at 9:20 pm. Shibuya Sky closes on January 1, and the rooftop can close or hours can shrink in bad weather or strong winds, so check again close to your visit.

tickets

As of 2026-04-08, official timed-entry web tickets for visitors age 12 and above start at ¥2,700 for 10 am to 3 pm entry and ¥3,400 for 3 pm to 9:20 pm entry. If availability remains, the 14th-floor counter starts at ¥3,000 and ¥3,700 for the same time bands. Elementary-school tickets are ¥1,200 at the counter, including 12-year-olds still in elementary school, and children age 5 and under enter free.

address

Shibuya Sky
Shibuya Scramble Square
2-24-12 Shibuya
Shibuya City, Tokyo
Japan

how to get there

Shibuya Sky is directly connected to Shibuya Station. The Toyoko, Den-en-toshi, Fukutoshin, and Hanzomon lines feed into the building from B2, while JR, Inokashira, and Ginza line users connect from the first or third floor. Follow the signs up to the 14th-floor ticket counter and entrance. Public transport is the easiest choice here.

security

The rooftop runs under stricter weather and safety rules than a normal indoor viewpoint. Tripods and similar equipment are not allowed on the roof, loose items must be secured, and the rooftop can close without much notice in strong wind or bad weather. Check the forecast again shortly before you go.

luggage

You cannot take travel luggage onto the deck. Small belongings that do not belong on the roof usually go into the 46th-floor locker before you step outside, while larger suitcases are better sorted in station-area lockers before you enter Shibuya Scramble Square.
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