Sumida Aquarium tickets & tours | Price comparison

Sumida Aquarium

TicketLens lets you:
Search multiple websites at onceand find the best offers.
Find tickets, last minuteon many sites, with one search.
Book at the lowest price!Save time & money by comparing rates.
Sumida Aquarium, locally すみだ水族館, is one of Tokyo's smartest rainy-day stops: a two-floor aquarium inside Tokyo Skytree Town where jellyfish drift through the 7 m (23 ft) Big Schale, penguins circle an open pool, and the Ogasawara zone gives the whole place a distinctly Tokyo identity.

For most visits, a standard timed-entry ticket is the best first choice because it skips the weekend ticket line, locks in your preferred slot, and keeps it easy to add Tokyo Skytree later if you want a bigger Skytree day. Book now.
Select a date to find available tickets, tours & activities:

Timed entry tickets

Choose this section if you want the cleanest first visit: secure your preferred slot, skip the entrance ticket line at busy times, and focus on the jellyfish, penguins, and the Ogasawara zone.
Tokyo: Sumida Aquarium Entry E-Ticket
4.5(91)
 
getyourguide.com
Go to offer
Sumida Aquarium: Entry Ticket
4.8(6)
 
tiqets.com
Go to offer

6 tips for visiting the Sumida Aquarium

1
Reserve your slot first
If you are coming on a weekend, a holiday, or late in the day, buy the web ticket before you go. Slots open up to 30 days ahead, and the on-site machines can run out of the times you actually want. That way you start with jellyfish, not a queue.
2
Follow the built-in route
The entrance sits on 5F, but the visit really starts upstairs on 6F. Go with the flow through the planted tanks, jellyfish, and Ogasawara displays first, then ease back down toward the penguins, Edorium, and the seals. This makes the aquarium feel coherent instead of split into floors.
3
Use the evening mood
If your priority is atmosphere rather than peak family energy, aim for after 6 pm. The lighting shifts into the aquarium's calmer Blue Night Aquarium setup, and penguins plus fur seals can feel surprisingly different once the mood softens. So you get the more cinematic version of the stop.
4
Stamp out for a break
You can re-enter on the same day if you get your stamp at the information counter before leaving. If you want coffee, dinner, or a quick loop through Tokyo Solamachi between the exhibits and Tokyo Skytree, use that stamp instead of rushing everything at once. It keeps the stop flexible.
5
Give it 90 minutes
The aquarium itself suggests lingering for about 90 minutes, and that feels right for a first visit. It gives you enough time for the 6F highlights, the penguin pool, and one slow pause by the windows or the cafe instead of speed-walking straight through. This is where the place becomes soothing rather than merely efficient.
6
Sort stroller and bags early
If you are visiting with a stroller or anyone who needs extra support, sort the logistics before you begin. There are baby rest rooms, stroller parking outside the 5F entrance, ramps, elevators, and a small supply of loan wheelchairs, but no stroller rental and no coin lockers inside the aquarium. Doing that first avoids an awkward reset halfway through.

How to plan a Sumida Aquarium stop as part of an east Tokyo day

This aquarium works best when you decide early whether it is your main indoor attraction or a calmer counterweight to the bustle of Sensō-ji and the height of Tokyo Skytree. Once that choice is clear, the timing and ticket decision get much easier.

Timed entry tickets are the easiest first choice

Best for almost everyone: choose a standard timed ticket, lock in the slot you want, and avoid gambling on the entrance machines at busy times. The mapped live offers for this POI are straightforward aquarium-admission products, so you usually do not need to overcomplicate the booking. If all you want is the aquarium itself, this is the clean, low-friction choice. Book now.

Use the Skytree option only when you want both stops

Great when you already know you want both water and skyline in one outing. Some live offers fold aquarium admission into a Tokyo Skytree day, which saves planning energy if your next move is the deck anyway. If not, keep the aquarium separate and let the slower pace do its job. Book now.

Build the visit from 6F down to 5F

After entering on 5F, the route naturally lifts you to 6F first. Start with the planted tanks, the jellyfish rooms, and the wide Ogasawara tank, then drift back down through the Kaleidoscope Tunnel, penguins, the goldfish zone, and the seals. Following that sequence keeps the aquarium readable, because the big mood-setters come before the social, photo-friendly zones.

Choose daytime for families, evening for atmosphere

If you are traveling with children and want the liveliest read of the exhibits, daytime usually feels easier. If you are visiting as a couple or solo and care more about mood, after 6 pm brings the aquarium's calmer Blue Night Aquarium lighting and a more reflective rhythm. Pick the version that matches your energy, not just the first slot you see.

What makes Sumida Aquarium feel different

Plenty of city aquariums have penguins and jellyfish. Sumida Aquarium stands out because the design keeps bringing you unusually close to them, while the Ogasawara story roots the whole visit in Tokyo rather than generic marine spectacle.

The jellyfish room is the signature moment

The 7 m (23 ft) oval Big Schale is not just another tank. Because it is built without the usual front acrylic wall, the jellyfish feel less like specimens in a case and more like something drifting in the room with you. This is the moment that gives the aquarium its dreamlike tone.

The penguin pool rewards a full two-floor loop

The Magellanic penguin pool is open and double-height, so the same colony reads differently from each level. On 6F you see the group from above; on 5F you catch the sideways glide and the under-view, which is why rushing past the lower floor is a mistake. Stay long enough and the exhibit starts to feel like a little social theater.

The Ogasawara zone gives the aquarium a Tokyo identity

This is the part many visitors do not expect inside a city complex. The Ogasawara displays link the aquarium to islands about 1,000 km (621 mi) south of Tokyo, and the 2023 Ogasawara Base expansion turned that connection into one of the clearest stories in the building. You are not just looking at tropical species; you are reading Tokyo's far-flung Pacific geography in aquarium form.

Edorium and the tunnel change the pace

After the big tanks, the shift into Edorium and the Kaleidoscope Tunnel matters more than it sounds. The goldfish displays, mirrors, and softer lighting slow the visit down and make the aquarium feel designed, not merely filled. It is one reason this stop works especially well for dates, rainy afternoons, and visitors who prefer mood over checklist speed.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long should I plan for a first visit?

The official guidance is about 90 minutes, and that is a very good target for a first pass through both floors. It gives you time for the jellyfish, the penguins, and one slower pause instead of a rushed lap.
Read more.

Do I need to book ahead?

It is strongly recommended on weekends, holidays, and desirable late-day slots. Web tickets open 30 days ahead, while same-day machines are still available but can run out of the times you actually want.
Read more.

Is Sumida Aquarium a good rainy-day stop?

Yes. The entire visit is indoors, so you do not need umbrellas once you are inside the route. That makes it one of the easiest bad-weather add-ons to an Asakusa or Tokyo Skytree day.
Read more.

Can I re-enter on the same day?

Yes. Before you step out, get your ticket stamped at the information counter, then show that stamped ticket when you return. It is especially useful if you want to break the visit with food or shopping in Tokyo Solamachi.
Read more.

Is it good for kids and strollers?

Yes, but with a little planning. There are baby rest rooms on both floors and stroller parking outside the 5F entrance, but no stroller rental inside the aquarium.
Read more.

Is the aquarium accessible for wheelchair users?

Largely yes. The route uses ramps and elevators, accessible restrooms are available, and the aquarium lends wheelchairs free of charge in limited numbers. Assistance dogs are allowed, but handlebar mobility scooters are not admitted.
Read more.

Can I take photos or video inside?

Yes, for personal use. Flash, extra lights, tripods, and other camera supports are not allowed, and commercial, monetized, or unapproved livestream filming is off limits.
Read more.

What pairs best with Sumida Aquarium nearby?

If you want one clean skyline add-on, pair it with Tokyo Skytree. If you want a fuller east-Tokyo half-day, do Sensō-ji and Asakusa Shrine first, then use the aquarium as the calm indoor finish. Trying to squeeze the whole district and the tower into one short slot usually makes the aquarium feel rushed.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

Current official visitor info retrieved 2026-04-10:
- Monday to Friday 10 am to 8 pm
- Saturdays, Sundays, and Japanese public holidays 9 am to 9 pm
- Last entry 1 hour before closing
The aquarium is open daily, but maintenance closures or temporary schedule changes can still happen, so a same-day check is smart.

tickets

Official price table retrieved 2026-04-10 and marked effective from 2026-02-10:
- Adults, including university students: 2,700 yen
- High school students: 2,000 yen
- Elementary and junior high students: 1,400 yen
- Ages 3 and up: 900 yen
Web tickets open 30 days ahead, same-day ticket machines are available, and visitors with a disability certificate plus 1 companion pay half price.

address

Sumida Aquarium
Tokyo Skytree Town Solamachi 5F-6F
1-1-2 Oshiage, Sumida City
Tokyo 131-0045
Japan

website

how to get there

The simplest rail access is straight from Tokyo Skytree Station, or about 5 minutes on foot from Oshiage (Skytree-mae) Station on the Hanzomon, Asakusa, and Keisei lines. From the Asakusa side, it is an easy 1-stop hop on the Tobu Skytree Line, which is why the aquarium pairs so well with Sensō-ji and Asakusa Shrine. If you drive, use the parking facilities in Tokyo Skytree Town; there is no dedicated aquarium lot.

accessibility

The route uses ramps, elevators, and universal-design planning so wheelchairs and strollers can move through it comfortably. There are accessible restrooms, baby rest rooms on both floors, and free loan wheelchairs in limited numbers, though they cannot be reserved in advance. Assistance dogs are allowed, but handlebar mobility scooters are not.

photography and filming

Personal photos and videos are allowed inside Sumida Aquarium. Flash, extra lighting, tripods, and other camera supports are not allowed, and commercial or monetized filming is not permitted without authorization. Keep other visitors out of your frame where possible so the route stays relaxed for everyone.

lockers

There are no coin lockers inside the aquarium. If you arrive with shopping bags or cabin-size luggage, use the locker facilities in Tokyo Skytree Town before you enter; the aquarium may refuse items it considers too large or awkward for the route. This saves a frustrating detour later.
How useful was this page?
Average rating 0 / 5. Vote count: 0.
Compare prices for more top sights in Tokyo:
Tsukiji fish market23 tickets & guided tours
Meiji Shrine8 tickets & guided tours
Samurai museum2 tickets & guided tours
Tokyo National Museum2 tickets & guided tours
Language
English
Currency
© 2020-2026 TicketLens GmbH. All rights reserved. Made with love in Vienna.