Samurai📍 Tokyo

Samurai experience in Tokyo — English sword classes, prices, and how to book

Learn real samurai sword forms from a trained instructor in English — dress in hakama or armour, and at some studios cut a tatami mat (tameshigiri).

Antique Japanese samurai ō-yoroi armour on display
AlkaliSoaps / CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons

At a glance

The honest go-info
Language
English-friendly — hosted or guided in English
Duration
About 60 minutes (longer for private or group plans)
Price
From ¥11,000 per person for a guided sword class at SAMURAI EXPERIENCE; museum-style sessions vary — confirm on each operator's page.
Booking
Reserve in advance — walk-ins are not guaranteed
Nearest station
Kitasandō or Harajuku (SAMURAI EXPERIENCE); Shinjuku-sanchōme (Samurai & Ninja Museum)
What to wear
Comfortable clothes you can move in; you'll usually change into hakama or armour over them. Flat, easy-to-remove shoes — sessions are on tatami or studio flooring in socks.
Good for
first-timers, families (ages 6+ at some studios), groups, photography

The way · 道

  1. ArriveKitasandō or Harajuku (SAMURAI EXPERIENCE); Shinjuku-sanchōme (Samurai & Ninja Museum)
  2. EtiquetteA few quiet manners go a long way — read the form first
  3. DoSamurai
  4. BookReserve your slot below

The short answer

You can train with a real katana in Tokyo in English, guided by an experienced instructor — no martial-arts background needed. Studios teach you the etiquette of the sword, a few cutting forms (iaido or kenbu sword-dance), and at some you finish with tameshigiri, cutting a rolled tatami mat. Most sessions run about 60 minutes. Prices start from ¥11,000 per person at a dedicated sword studio; museum-style sessions vary.

This page is the honest go-info: which English-friendly studios to book, what each includes, and how to behave around the blade.

Where to book (English-friendly)

StudioAreaWhat you doFrom
SAMURAI EXPERIENCESendagaya / HarajukuSword forms, hakama, photo session; private plans¥11,000 pp (¥8,800 child)
Samurai & Ninja Museum TokyoShinjukuArmour, katana lesson, tameshigiri mat-cuttingSee operator
Tokyo Samurai KenbuCentral TokyoKenbu sword-dance lesson with fan & swordSee operator

Book SAMURAI EXPERIENCE on its official plans page, the Samurai & Ninja Museum via its official tour page, and Tokyo Samurai Kenbu on its official Tokyo page. All are English-guided; weekends and peak weeks sell out, so reserve ahead. Confirm current prices and minimum ages on each page before you pay.

What actually happens

You bow in, change into hakama (and sometimes light armour), and learn how to hold, draw and sheathe the katana safely. The instructor walks you through a short kata — slow, deliberate movements that are as much about posture and breathing as the cut. At studios that offer tameshigiri, you'll then cut a rolled tatami omote mat, which is genuinely satisfying and the photo everyone wants.

The respect that matters

The samurai code (bushidō) is built on composure and respect, and that shows in how you handle the blade: bow to the sword, never point it at anyone, keep it sheathed until told, and follow the instructor exactly. It's safe and beginner-friendly precisely because everyone follows the same etiquette.

Make a day of it

Pair a sword session with a kimono rental in Asakusa for a full day in old-Tokyo dress. If the philosophy behind the discipline interests you, the same stillness runs through a zazen meditation in Kyoto and the aesthetic of wabi-sabi. For samurai festivals and parades by date, see japan-event.info.

Highlights

  • Learn iaido or kenbu cutting forms from a trained instructor
  • Dress in hakama or light samurai armour
  • Tameshigiri (tatami-mat cutting) at some studios
  • English-guided — no Japanese needed

Good to know

Treat the katana as a real blade even in practice: bow to it, never point it at people, keep it sheathed until told, and follow the instructor's grip and footwork exactly. Composure and respect matter more than force.

The MICHI Desk
  • Japanese-culture experience editor

Verified, English-friendly guides to experiencing Japanese culture.

More experiences in Tokyo

Tea ceremonyTokyo

Tea ceremony in Tokyo — English-friendly tea rooms in Ginza, Shibuya & Asakusa (and how to book)

Where to experience a tea ceremony in Tokyo with English guidance — honest prices (from about ¥3,500), how long it takes, what actually happens, kimono options, and real booking links for Ginza, Shibuya and Asakusa.

English-OK · 45–60 minutes (tea only) / about 90 minutes with kimono · From about ¥3,500 (as of July 2026) for a 45-minute session; kimono plans cost more

Taiko drummingTokyo

Taiko drumming class in Tokyo — play the big drums, English-friendly (and how to book)

Where to take a taiko drumming class in Tokyo with English support — honest prices, what the 60–90 minutes actually feel like, what to wear (it's a workout), and real booking links.

English-OK · 60 minutes (TAIKO-LAB) / 90 minutes (Daikanyama workshop) · From about ¥15,000 per person for a 60-min group session (3+; solo/duo cost more — confirm the exact current rate on the operator's booking page) or a confirmed ¥16,500 for a 90-min Daikanyama workshop (as of July 2026)

Sushi makingTokyo

Sushi making class in Tokyo — press nigiri with a chef, English-friendly (and how to book)

Where to take a sushi making class in Tokyo, English-guided — hands-on nigiri with a chef vs Tsukiji market-tour combos, honest prices, what you'll actually make, and direct ways to book.

English-OK · 1.5–2 hours (class only) / 3–4 hours (market tour + class) · From about ¥13,000 for a 1.5-hour class; about ¥17,600 with a Tsukiji market tour (as of July 2026)