teamLab Borderless tickets & tours | Price comparison

teamLab Borderless

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teamLab Borderless TOKYO, also known as teamLab Borderless: MORI Building DIGITAL ART MUSEUM, turns Azabudai Hills into a maze of light, mirrors, and shifting artworks that spill from room to room. You keep your shoes on, wander without a map, and discover spaces like Infinite Crystal World and EN TEA HOUSE almost by accident.

For most first visits, choose a guided combo tour that bundles the museum with nearby Roppongi, Tokyo Tower, or the wider art district, so the day feels easier to navigate and more rewarding.
Select a date to find available tickets, tours & activities:

Guided combo tours

Choose these if you want teamLab Borderless TOKYO folded into a wider Tokyo route with art-district context, skyline stops, and fewer transfer decisions.
Tokyo: teamLab, Azabudai Hills & National Art Center Tour
4.9(14)
 
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Tokyo: TeamLab Borderless & Imperial Palace History Tour
5.0(7)
 
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Tokyo: TeamLab Borderless & Roppongi Art Architecture Tour
4.7(3)
 
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Tokyo: TeamLab Borderless & Roppongi Hills Skyline Tour
4.0(4)
 
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6 tips for visiting the teamLab Borderless

1
Check the live closing time
The calendar changes more than most museum pages. As checked on April 8, 2026, some spring dates run until 10 pm, while May 26 closes at 5 pm and several May and June dates are closed entirely. If you want dinner or a skyline stop afterward, choose your slot only after checking that day's closing time. That way the rest of the evening still fits.
2
Use Kamiyacho, not street level
If you want the cleanest arrival, use Exit 5 at Kamiyacho Station and stay in the underground passage instead of surfacing too early. That small choice saves wandering around Azabudai Hills, especially in rain or after dark. So you start inside the complex, not circling it.
3
This is the shoes-on teamLab
Many travelers mix this up with teamLab Planets TOKYO. Here you keep your shoes on and roam freely; there you remove them and follow a more fixed route. If your priority is the city-center, wandering version of teamLab, you are in the right place. That helps you book the experience you actually mean.
4
Download the app first
There is no map and no normal caption trail, so the app matters more than it sounds. It helps you understand the work nearest to you, and it is also used for numbered access when spaces like Infinite Crystal World get crowded. Download it before you enter so you can focus on the rooms instead of troubleshooting your phone.
5
Travel lighter than usual
No strollers are allowed inside, and at busy times you may still wait outside before entry. If you are carrying shopping bags, a heavy daypack, or a full camera kit, the visit starts feeling cumbersome much faster. Pack lighter for this slot so you can move, look up, and linger comfortably.
6
Pair it with one contrast
If you want skyline drama, add Tokyo Tower; if you want another elevated view without leaving the district, choose Roppongi Hills Observation Deck; if your priority is more contemporary art, go on to Mori Art Museum. Pick just one. That way the museum still feels like the emotional center of the outing.

How to plan a teamLab Borderless stop in Azabudai Hills

teamLab Borderless TOKYO works best when you treat it as an anchor, not filler. The museum is easy to reach, but timing, arrival choice, and nearby pairings decide whether the visit feels calm or oddly rushed.

Guided combo tours suit this page best

Best for most first-time visitors: choose a guided combo tour. The current mapped products already connect teamLab Borderless TOKYO with Azabudai Hills, Roppongi, Tokyo Tower, or Imperial Palace East Gardens, which means less transfer guesswork and a clearer shape to the day. If you do not know Tokyo well yet, this is the smarter format. Book now.

Check the calendar before you build dinner around it

The hours are live, not fixed. As checked on April 8, 2026, some spring dates run until 10 pm, while May 26 closes at 5 pm and several May and June dates are closed entirely. If you want an evening tower view or a late dinner afterward, choose your slot only after you confirm that day's close.

Enter from Kamiyacho, not by instinct

Exit 5 at Kamiyacho Station is the cleanest approach because the underground passage feeds directly into Azabudai Hills. That sounds minor until rain, heat, or first-time wayfinding turns the plaza into an unnecessary detour. A neat arrival matters more here because the museum itself is intentionally disorienting.

Build one nearby contrast, not three

Choose one strong contrast after the museum: Tokyo Tower for classic skyline drama, Roppongi Hills Observation Deck for another polished view in the district, or Mori Art Museum if you want to stay inside contemporary art. If your ticket already folds in Imperial Palace East Gardens, let that be the second act. The point is to leave space for the museum's mood to linger.

Why teamLab Borderless feels made for wandering

The appeal here is not just that the rooms look good in photos. teamLab Borderless TOKYO is built around drift, surprise, and the small thrill of not knowing which work opens up next.

There is no map on purpose

Most museums help you tick rooms off. Here, the lack of a map is the point: works spill across boundaries, appear unexpectedly, and make the people around you feel like part of the atmosphere. The museum gets stronger when you stop treating it like a checklist.

Shoes stay on, and the city stays close

This is the central-Tokyo counterpoint to teamLab Planets TOKYO. You keep your shoes on, move through the space more casually, and then step right back into Azabudai Hills rather than emerging wet-footed in a separate bayfront district. That makes the visit easier to fold into an art or skyline day.

The app makes one room much better

Infinite Crystal World is not just a place to stand and stare. The app lets you participate, and when crowds build, it is also used to manage numbered access more smoothly. If you download it before entering, you get more meaning and less waiting.

Even tea becomes part of the artwork

EN TEA HOUSE is a small but memorable reason not to rush. A flower blooms inside the teacup and keeps blooming as long as the tea remains, which turns a simple break into part of the experience rather than an exit from it. That gently strange detail is very much the museum's personality.

Ways to visit teamLab Borderless

This page mostly maps guided combo products, but the museum itself also sells direct admission. The best choice depends on whether you want a self-shaped museum stop or a half-day Tokyo plan already stitched together.

Guided combo tours are best for first-time Tokyo days

Best for first-time visitors: choose a guided combo. Current products pair teamLab Borderless TOKYO with Azabudai Hills, Roppongi, Tokyo Tower, or Imperial Palace East Gardens, which saves mental energy and gives the museum stronger city context. If your itinerary still feels loose, this is the easiest win. Book now.

The Entrance Pass works when you only want the museum

Choose the dated Entrance Pass if your priority is simply seeing teamLab Borderless TOKYO and then making your own nearby plan. It is the cheapest official way in, and it suits repeat visitors, couples, and solo travelers already comfortable navigating Tokyo on their own. Book early.

The Flexible Pass buys timing freedom, not emptier rooms

Choose the Flexible Pass only if your day is hard to pin down or if you hate locking in an arrival time. What it does not buy is a quieter museum once you are inside, so it is a convenience upgrade, not a magic skip. Pay for it when flexibility matters more than price. Book early.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need to book teamLab Borderless TOKYO in advance?

Usually yes. Dated tickets can sell out, and the current mapped products already build the museum into wider Tokyo routes, so booking ahead gives you far more control over the day.
Read more.

Can I still buy a same-day ticket?

Sometimes. If the date is not sold out, same-day tickets can still appear online or at local-sale pricing, but you should treat that as a fallback, not the plan.
Read more.

How long should I plan for teamLab Borderless TOKYO?

For most first visits, plan about 2 hours, and closer to 2.5 hours if you want time for Infinite Crystal World, the app, or a stop at EN TEA HOUSE.
Read more.

What is the difference between teamLab Borderless TOKYO and teamLab Planets TOKYO?

Borderless is the shoes-on, map-free, free-roaming museum in Azabudai Hills. Planets is the more bodily, shoes-off, route-based experience in Toyosu.
Read more.

Can I re-enter after I leave?

No. Re-entry is not permitted, so do not step out assuming you can pop back in after coffee or photos.
Read more.

Can I bring a stroller or lots of luggage?

Strollers are not allowed inside and need to stay in the luggage room. If you are carrying a full shopping haul or a heavy daypack, this museum feels better after a quick repack.
Read more.

Is teamLab Borderless TOKYO manageable with a wheelchair?

Partly. Wheelchair entry is possible, but some works cannot be experienced, and capacity limits can cause waits at the entrance. It is workable with planning, but not fully seamless.
Read more.

Can I take photos inside?

Yes, for personal use. Flash, tripods, monopods, and selfie sticks over 30 cm are not allowed, and commercial shooting needs prior consent.
Read more.

What should I pair with it nearby?

If you want skyline energy, pair it with Tokyo Tower or Roppongi Hills Observation Deck; if you want another art stop, choose Mori Art Museum. If your guided combo already includes Imperial Palace East Gardens, let that be the big contrast of the day.
Read more.

Does teamLab Borderless TOKYO work well with kids?

Usually yes, especially if they enjoy dark, sensory spaces and walking. Children in elementary school and below need an adult aged 18 or above, and there must be one adult for every 5 children.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

As checked on April 8, 2026, the live calendar currently shows a standard day of 8:30 am to 9 pm, with several late-closing dates in April and early May running until 10 pm and an early 5 pm close listed for May 26, 2026. The current calendar also lists closures on May 19, June 10, June 16, June 23, and June 30, 2026. Last entry is 1 hour before closing, and EN TEA HOUSE opens 30 minutes after the museum and takes final orders 30 minutes before closing.

tickets

As checked on April 8, 2026, the dated Entrance Pass starts at JPY 3,600 for adults, JPY 2,800 for ages 13-17, JPY 1,500 for ages 4-12, and free for children under 3; the disability ticket for the visitor and one accompanying person is JPY 1,800, and the Flexible Pass is JPY 12,000. Adult and disability pricing is dynamic. Same-day tickets can still appear if the date is not sold out, but local sales are +JPY 200, so booking ahead is the safer move. Tickets bought directly can change date up to 3 times until 2 hours before admission.

website

address

teamLab Borderless: MORI Building DIGITAL ART MUSEUM
Azabudai Hills Garden Plaza B B1
1-2-4 Azabudai, Minato City
Tokyo
Japan

how to get there

The easiest arrival is Exit 5 at Kamiyacho Station on the Tokyo Metro Hibiya Line, about 2 minutes away if you stay in the underground passage. Roppongi-Itchome Station on the Tokyo Metro Namboku Line is about 6 minutes on foot. The museum has no dedicated parking, so rail is the low-stress choice; if you drive, use the Azabudai Hills P6 lot.

accessibility

Wheelchair entry is possible, but not every work can be experienced that way. Some installations remain inaccessible, and because only a limited number of wheelchairs can enter at once, you may have to wait at busy times. This is manageable with planning, but it is not a friction-free universal-design visit.

photography and filming

Personal photos and videos are allowed, and posting them is fine. Flash, tripods, monopods, selfie sticks or similar photographic aids over 30 cm, and commercial filming without prior consent are not allowed.
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