teamLab Planets TOKYO tickets & tours | Price comparison

teamLab Planets TOKYO

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teamLab Planets TOKYO, also known as teamLab Planets TOKYO DMM, is Toyosu's body-immersive museum where you walk barefoot through water, drift beneath falling flowers, and move through light rooms that react to you. The 2025 Forest expansion made the stop feel broader and more playful, not just photogenic.

For most first visits, book a standard timed-entry ticket; it is the simplest, best-value choice, and popular weekend or holiday slots tighten fastest.
Select a date to find available tickets, tours & activities:

Entry tickets

Choose these if you mainly want the full museum experience, from standard timed entry to a premium pass or a transit combo.
teamLab Planets Tokyo: Entry Ticket
4.6(298)
 
tiqets.com
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teamLab Planets Tokyo Admission & Tokyo Subway 24-hour Ticket
3.6(11)
 
viator.com
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teamLab Planets Tokyo: Premium Pass
5.0(1)
 
tiqets.com
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Guided combo tours

Choose these if you want teamLab Planets TOKYO wrapped into a wider Tokyo route with market, bayfront, or old-city context included.
Tokyo: TeamLab Planets & Odaiba Gundam Bay Tour
4.8(14)
 
getyourguide.com
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Tokyo: teamLab Planets & Toyosu Fish Market Guided Tour
3.7(6)
 
getyourguide.com
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Tokyo: 4-Hour TeamLab Planets & Asakusa Tour
5.0(6)
 
getyourguide.com
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Tokyo: TeamLab Planets Art & Tsukiji Market Food Tour
5.0(3)
 
getyourguide.com
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6 tips for visiting the teamLab Planets TOKYO

1
Book online, not on arrival
If this is a fixed-date Tokyo day, buy your timed entry before you leave the hotel. The official store does not sell tickets on-site, and popular evening or holiday slots can tighten first. That way you are choosing your pace, not accepting whatever is left.
2
Dress for water and mirrors
You will go barefoot, and adults can get wet up to knee height in the water zone. If you are wearing a skirt or wide-leg pants, borrow the free shorts before you enter, especially if you care about mirror-floor photos. That saves awkwardness later.
3
Give it a real time slot
If you want the whole museum rather than a quick social-media lap, plan about 2 to 2.5 hours from entry to exit. The rooms reward slow pacing, and staff may move people along faster at peak times. So you can settle into the changing light instead of sprinting through it.
4
Use Shin-Toyosu as your anchor
For most visitors, Shin-Toyosu Station is the cleanest arrival because the museum is about a 1-minute walk away. If you come from Toyosu Station, the approach is closer to 10 minutes and feels longer in rain or summer heat. That makes the start of the visit smoother.
5
Pack lighter than you think
Free lockers are useful but small, and strollers are not allowed inside the museum. If you are traveling with bulkier bags, sort them before you queue and treat this as a light-carry stop. That way you are thinking about the art, not your luggage.
6
Pair it with one nearby contrast
If you want market energy after the dreamlike rooms, continue to Tsukiji fish market; if you want a calmer reset, choose Hamarikyu Gardens; if you want an older Tokyo counterpoint later, save Sensō-ji for another leg. One smart pairing is enough. So the day feels shaped, not overloaded.

How to plan a teamLab Planets stop in Toyosu

teamLab Planets TOKYO feels best when the visit is paced on purpose. It is easy enough to reach, but it becomes much stronger when you choose the right arrival point, protect enough time, and build only one nearby add-on around it.

Start with the right ticket type

Best for most visitors: choose the standard Entrance Pass. It gets you into the full museum at the lowest entry price, and the timed slot is enough if your day is already defined. Move up to the Premium Pass only if you want easier peak-time flexibility, because it helps at the outdoor queue but not inside the rooms. Book now.

Protect a real 2 to 2.5 hours

The official visit estimate for the full venue is about 2 to 2.5 hours, and that feels right if you want the water, garden, and forest zones rather than a quick photo sprint. At peak times staff may nudge long-staying visitors forward, so arriving with enough margin matters more than trying to improvise on the fly. This works better as a real late-morning or early-evening anchor than as a rushed filler.

Use Shin-Toyosu, not guesswork

From Shin-Toyosu Station on the Yurikamome Line, the museum is about a 1-minute walk, which is the cleanest arrival if you want zero friction. Toyosu Station works too, but the 10-minute approach feels longer in rain, summer heat, or after dark. If you are pairing the visit with Toyosu Market, Shijoumae Station keeps the route especially tidy.

Build one contrast around the museum

If you want food and street energy, add Tsukiji fish market after your slot; if you want a softer waterside rhythm, choose Hamarikyu Gardens; if you want old Tokyo later, keep Sensō-ji for the second half of the day. Do not stack too much more onto the same ticket. teamLab Planets TOKYO works best when its atmosphere has room to linger.

Why teamLab Planets feels unlike a normal museum

The appeal here is not just digital spectacle. teamLab Planets TOKYO works because your body, the people around you, and even living material like orchids all become part of the artwork.

You enter the art with your body

Most museums ask for distance; the water rooms here erase it. In Drawing on the Water Surface Created by the Dance of Koi and People - Infinity, you step into the work itself, and the koi scatter into seasonal flowers when bodies cross their paths. That is why the museum stays memorable even after the photos have flattened it.

The garden is alive, not simulated

Floating Flower Garden: Flowers and I are of the Same Root, the Garden and I are One is packed with real orchids growing in mid-air, and even the fragrance changes across morning, day, evening, and night. That detail matters because it shifts the stop out of pure projection spectacle and into something more intimate, humid, and bodily. You are not just looking at nature-themed media here.

The 2025 Forest changed the scale

Since January 2025, the Forest addition has made the museum broader than the classic water-and-light highlight reel. Athletics Forest, Catching and Collecting Extinct Forest, and Future Park add more active, playful, educational energy, which is especially useful for families, repeat visitors, and anyone who wants more than a beautiful half-hour. The stop now lands as a fuller museum, not only a famous photo set.

Toyosu gives it a sharper mood

This is not a black-box attraction hidden anywhere in the city. teamLab Planets TOKYO sits in Toyosu, close to the market district and the bayfront, and that modern-waterfront setting sharpens the contrast between the dreamy interior and the practical city outside. The location is part of the mood, not just the logistics.

Ticket types at teamLab Planets

The mapped products here split cleanly between direct entry and guided Tokyo add-ons. Pick the format based on how much structure you want around the museum, not on fear of missing out.

Standard entry is the default

Best for most travelers: the regular timed Entrance Pass. It is the cleanest low-cost way to see the full museum, and it suits repeat visitors, couples, solo travelers, and anyone already comfortable using Tokyo transit on their own. If you mainly want the art itself, this is the obvious first buy. Book now.

Premium Pass buys flexibility, not a faster museum

Choose the Premium Pass if your priority is arrival flexibility on a busy date or if you strongly dislike standing in the outdoor entry queue. What it does not do is empty the exhibition for you: inside, you still move with everyone else through the same popular rooms. Pay for it when the queue advantage matters, not because it sounds more exclusive. Book now.

Guided combos are best for first-time Tokyo mixing

Choose this if you want the museum bundled into a broader half-day route. Current mapped products pair teamLab Planets TOKYO with Toyosu Market, bayfront Odaiba, Sensō-ji in Asakusa, or Tsukiji fish market, which is useful when you want fewer transfer decisions and a clearer city story around the art. If your day still feels unshaped, this is the smarter format. Book now.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long should I plan for teamLab Planets TOKYO?

For a full first visit, plan about 2 to 2.5 hours. You can move faster if you skip lingering and photos, but the water, garden, and forest zones work better when you let them breathe.
Read more.

Do I need to buy tickets in advance?

Yes, in practice you should. The official store does not sell tickets on-site, so you normally book a dated QR ticket online, and the most popular slots are the first to tighten.
Read more.

What is the difference between the Entrance Pass and the Premium Pass?

The standard Entrance Pass gives you a timed entry window. The Premium Pass lets you enter without joining the outdoor entry queue and with more arrival flexibility inside your slot, but it does not skip queues inside the exhibition.
Read more.

Can I still enter if I miss my time slot?

For regular web tickets, late same-day arrival is still accepted during open hours. Still, do not push it too far because last admission is 1 hour before closing.
Read more.

Do I have to go barefoot, and will I get wet?

Yes. Shoes, socks, and tights come off in the locker area, and in the water artworks adults can get wet up to about knee height.
Read more.

Is teamLab Planets TOKYO manageable with a wheelchair?

Partly. Wheelchair access is available and some water works can be experienced with a special wheelchair, but several rooms are inaccessible or view-only, so it helps to come with a companion and expect route adjustments.
Read more.

Can I bring a stroller or large luggage?

Strollers are not allowed inside. Free lockers are small, and larger bags are secured outside near stroller storage, so this stop works best when you pack lighter than an all-day Tokyo itinerary usually demands.
Read more.

Can I take photos inside?

Yes, for personal use. Commercial photography or filming needs prior consent, and mirror floors plus strong light changes mean clothing choices matter almost as much as camera settings.
Read more.

What should I pair with it nearby?

The cleanest same-day contrasts are Tsukiji fish market for market energy, Hamarikyu Gardens for a calmer waterside-garden reset, and Sensō-ji if you want a much older Tokyo mood later in the day.
Read more.

Does it work well with kids?

Yes, especially since the 2025 Forest addition made the museum more active and playful. But it is not a drop-off attraction: children under 13 need a guardian, and there must be one adult for every 3 children, including children who enter free.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

Opening hours change by date and month, so treat the official ticket calendar as the live source. As checked on April 8, 2026, admission is sold in timed slots rather than one simple daily schedule, and same-day late arrival is still accepted during that day's open hours. Last admission is 1 hour before closing. Two current notices matter: Soft Black Hole - Your Body Becomes a Space that Influences Another Body is scheduled to end on May 10, 2026, and Waterfall of Light Particles at the Top of an Incline is scheduled for maintenance from May 18 to May 27, 2026.

tickets

As checked on April 8, 2026, the official web Entrance Pass starts at JPY 3,800 for adults, JPY 2,800 for junior/high school students, and JPY 1,500 for children ages 4-12; children under 3 enter free. A Premium Pass is JPY 12,000 and lets you enter without joining the outdoor entry queue, but it does not skip queues inside. Individual tickets are online-only, standard web tickets can be changed up to 2 hours before the admission start time, and Premium Pass dates can be changed until 8:30 am on the day of admission.

address

teamLab Planets TOKYO
6-1-16 Toyosu, Koto-ku
Tokyo 135-0061
Japan

how to get there

The easiest rail arrival is Shin-Toyosu Station on the Yurikamome Line, about 1 minute away on foot. From Toyosu Station on the Tokyo Metro Yurakucho Line, plan about 10 minutes on foot; from Shijoumae Station, it is about 5 minutes and works especially well if you are pairing the stop with Toyosu Market. There is no general parking at the venue, so train or bus is the low-stress choice.

accessibility

Wheelchair access is available, and accessible toilets are inside, but not every artwork works the same way. Some rooms are inaccessible, some water-area works require a special wheelchair and a companion, and several active Athletics Forest pieces are view-only from designated areas. This is manageable with planning, but it is not a friction-free universal-design museum.

lockers

Free lockers are available after the entrance gate, but they are small: 23 cm wide x 34 cm deep x 37 cm high (9 in x 13.4 in x 14.6 in). Strollers stay outside the building, and oversized bags are secured at the stroller area rather than checked into a cloakroom. Travel light if you can.

wifi

Free Wi-Fi is available as teamLab Planets. If you want to use the interactive app inside works such as The Infinite Crystal Universe, connect before you disappear into the darker rooms. That avoids fiddling with your phone when everyone else is already glowing.
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