Tea ceremony📍 Tokyo

东京茶道体验——银座、涩谷、浅草的英语友好茶室(与预约方法)

不出东京,在真正的茶室里亲手点一碗抹茶——银座、涩谷、浅草的英语讲解茶道体验,约 ¥3,500 起,线上即可预约。

东京护国寺内的传统茶道(茶人点抹茶)
KuboBella · CC BY-SA 4.0

At a glance

The honest go-info
Language
English-friendly — hosted or guided in English
Duration
45~60 分钟(仅茶道)/含和服约 90 分钟
Price
45 分钟体验约 ¥3,500 起(截至 2026 年 7 月);含和服的方案价格更高
Booking
Reserve in advance — walk-ins are not guaranteed
Nearest station
东银座站、涩谷站或浅草站(视茶室而定)
What to wear
穿日常服装即可。但请避免浓烈香水(会影响茶香);需要脱鞋,请穿干净的袜子——素净的白袜最为得体。请摘下可能刮伤茶碗的戒指和长项链。和服方案含穿戴服务。
Good for
初次体验者, 家庭与情侣, 不去京都的旅行者
Know the form first — 什么是日本茶道?为初次体验者讲解茶之汤(茶道) →

The way · 道

  1. Arrive东银座站、涩谷站或浅草站(视茶室而定)
  2. EtiquetteA few quiet manners go a long way — the etiquette
  3. DoTea ceremony
  4. BookReserve your slot below

The short answer

Yes — you can join a real Japanese tea ceremony without leaving Tokyo, fully guided in English. Expect about ¥3,500–¥7,800 per person (as of July 2026) for a 45–60 minute session, or around 90 minutes if you add kimono wearing. Three long-running, English-friendly tea rooms cover the city: Chazen next to the Kabukiza theatre in Ginza, Tokyo Chaan five minutes from Shibuya Station, and MAIKOYA in Asakusa and Shinjuku. All three require advance reservation — book online a few days ahead, earlier in cherry-blossom and autumn-leaves season.

If your itinerary also includes the old capital, we keep a separate guide to tea ceremony in Kyoto. But you don't need Kyoto for this: the ceremony is the same art wherever the tea room is, and Tokyo's sessions are the easiest to slot into a packed first trip.

Tokyo or Kyoto — does it matter?

Honestly: for a first, one-hour taste of chanoyu (the way of tea), no. The etiquette, the sweets, the whisking, the quiet — all identical. Kyoto wins on atmosphere around the tea room (temple gardens, Gion's streets); Tokyo wins on convenience, price and availability, with venues a few minutes from the stations you're already using. If you'll be in both cities, do the tea ceremony wherever you have a calmer afternoon — and if you want to understand the tradition itself before you go, start with what a tea ceremony actually is.

What actually happens, step by step

A typical Tokyo session runs like this:

  1. Welcome and a short introduction. The host explains the history of the ceremony and the meaning of the room — the scroll, the flowers, why everything is placed where it is.
  2. The host performs a temae (tea-making demonstration). You watch matcha being prepared with the full sequence of practised movements. This is the heart of the ceremony; it's quieter than you expect, and shorter too.
  3. A seasonal sweet (wagashi). You eat it before the tea — its sweetness is designed to balance the matcha's pleasant bitterness.
  4. You drink, then you whisk your own. After receiving a bowl, most Tokyo venues have you prepare a second bowl yourself with the bamboo whisk (chasen). Getting a fine foam is harder than it looks and genuinely fun.
  5. Questions and photos. Tourist-facing tea rooms expect questions and allow photos at set moments — ask first rather than shooting throughout.

Nobody expects you to know any of the etiquette in advance; the host cues every step. If you'd like to walk in prepared anyway, our tea ceremony etiquette guide covers the details — how to turn the bowl, what to say, what to do with your hands.

Where to book — an honest comparison

Tea roomAreaEnglishPrice (as of July 2026)DurationVibe
ChazenGinza — 1 min from Higashi-Ginza StnYes (English sessions)¥3,500 shared / ¥5,000 private (2+)45 minFormal tea room beside Kabukiza; the most "pure tea" option
Tokyo ChaanShibuya — 5 min from Shibuya StnYes (full English guidance)¥3,900 shared / ¥7,800 private; children 5–11 ¥3,00045–60 minSmall groups (max 8), relaxed, family-friendly
MAIKOYAAsakusa & ShinjukuYes (English-speaking hosts)Varies by plan (kimono included)~90 min with kimonoKimono-first and photo-friendly, near Sensō-ji

Chazen sits on the 5th floor of a building right next to the Kabukiza theatre in Ginza, a one-minute walk from Higashi-Ginza Station. Sessions run 45 minutes in Japanese or English, at ¥3,500 per person for a shared seat or ¥5,000 for a private session (two people or more). Reservation is through a form with advance payment, so book a few days out. If you want the ceremony itself, undiluted, this is the pick.

Tokyo Chaan is a small tea room on Dogenzaka, five minutes' walk from Shibuya Station. The shared plan (up to 8 guests) is ¥3,900 for adults and ¥3,000 for children aged 5–11; a private plan for just your group is ¥7,800 per adult. Guidance is fully in English, sessions last about 45–60 minutes, and cancellation is free up to 24 hours before — the most flexible option here, and the natural choice if you're staying around Shibuya or travelling with kids.

MAIKOYA runs cultural houses in Asakusa (6 minutes from Asakusa Station) and Shinjuku, with fluent English-speaking hosts. Its signature plan combines kimono dressing with the tea ceremony (about 90 minutes), and you can keep the kimono on afterwards to stroll the streets around Sensō-ji (confirm the return deadline when you book). Prices vary by plan and season, so check the current rate on the official page or its Viator listing. If the kimono is half the appeal, this is your venue — and pairs naturally with our guide to kimono rental in Asakusa.

Prices and schedules change; confirm on the operator's page before you pay.

Etiquette and what to wear

The short version: come clean, come curious, and let the host lead. Skip strong perfume (it competes with the aroma of the tea), wear socks without holes because shoes come off at the door, and take off rings or long necklaces that could knock against the tea bowl. Formal kneeling (seiza) is not forced on visitors — every tourist-facing tea room offers a comfortable alternative. Eat the sweet completely before drinking, turn the bowl a little before you sip, and you've covered ninety percent of it. The rest is in the etiquette guide.

Who it's good for — and who should skip it

Great for: first-time visitors who want one genuinely calm, cultural hour in a loud city; couples and families (Tokyo Chaan takes children from age 5); anyone whose itinerary skips Kyoto but who still wants the tea ceremony box ticked — properly, not at an airport pop-up.

Think twice if: you can't sit still for 45 minutes, or you're expecting a show. The ceremony is deliberately quiet and slow — that is the experience. If you want something more active in the same trip, a calligraphy class or a samurai experience scratches a different itch.

Plan the rest of your day

A tea ceremony takes an hour, which leaves the day open. In Asakusa, MAIKOYA's kimono plan flows straight into the Sensō-ji streets; in Ginza, Chazen sits beside the Kabukiza theatre if you fancy a kabuki single-act ticket afterwards. And if your dates line up with a festival or seasonal event, check Japan-Event for what's on while you're in town.

亮点

  • 配着时令和果子,品尝自己亲手点的抹茶
  • 银座、涩谷、浅草的真正茶室——无需专程去京都
  • 每个步骤都有英语讲解,欢迎提问
  • 部分场馆可加选和服(可穿着逛浅草)

实用须知

无需提前了解任何规矩——主人会逐步引导。只需记住几点:以舒适的姿势就座(不会强制正座)、饮用前将茶碗稍稍转动、先吃完点心再喝茶。请提前 5~10 分钟到达;不必保持沉默,但手机请调至静音。

The MICHI Desk
  • Japanese-culture experience editor

Verified, English-friendly guides to experiencing Japanese culture.

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