The best samurai museum in Tokyo to visit in 2026 is the Samurai Ninja Museum in Asakusa — open daily with English-guided tours from ¥3,000 — because the famous Shinjuku Samurai Museum has been closed since January 2022.
Key takeaways
- The Samurai Ninja Museum Asakusa opened in December 2023, spans four floors, and runs hands-on guided tours daily from roughly 9:00 to 19:00 — tours leave every 15 minutes.
- Entry with guided tour and ninja-star throwing costs ¥3,000 (~$23); the full samurai sword lesson with hakama and katana training is $53.
- The Shinjuku Samurai Museum (Kabukicho) closed in January 2022 and has not reopened — many map listings and older guides still point there by mistake.
- 4 bookable experiences carry a combined 2,188 GetYourGuide reviews, rated 4.6 to 4.9 stars; the kid-friendly ninja training scores 4.8 from families.
- For original Edo-period armor and National Treasure swords, pair it with the Tokyo National Museum in Ueno (¥1,000, closed Mondays).
- Booking online costs the same as the door price and adds free cancellation up to 24 hours before — weekend slots after 16:00 sell out first.
The Experiences
Which Samurai Museum Tokyo experience should you book?
Four official tickets, one museum. The difference is how much sword time you get — and who it's built for.
Guided Tour & Ninja Experience
The standard entry: English-guided museum tour, ninja-star throwing, and the samurai dress-up — real helmet, metal sword, photos included. About an hour. This is the ticket most first-time visitors mean when they search "samurai museum tokyo".
Ideal for: First visit, tight itinerary, anyone choosing one cultural stop in Asakusa.
Book from $23 →Samurai Sword Lesson & Tour
Suit up in a hakama and learn actual katana technique from an instructor, then tour the museum. Includes armor and helmet use, ninja weapons trial, and themed photo backdrops. Reviewers consistently call this the better-value upgrade.
Ideal for: Adults and teens who want to train, not just pose.
Book from $53 →Kid-Friendly Ninja Training
Full ninja outfit, shuriken-throwing competition, blowgun practice, and a treasure hunt built for short attention spans. Parents in the reviews are the most surprised group — it holds an 8-year-old and a 14-year-old at the same time.
Ideal for: Families with children roughly 4–12.
Book from $45 →Side by Side
How do the Samurai Museum Tokyo tickets compare?
| Experience | Rating | Price | Duration | Best for | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Guided Tour & Ninja Experience | ⭐ 4.6 (1,681) | $23 | ~60 min | First visit | Book → |
| Samurai Sword Lesson & Tour | ⭐ 4.8 (405) | $53 | ~2 h | Adults & teens | Book → |
| Kid-Friendly Ninja Training | ⭐ 4.8 (84) | $45 | ~60 min | Kids 4–12 | Book → |
| Family Samurai Sword Lesson | ⭐ 4.9 (18) | $53 | ~2 h | Parents + kids | Book → |
Prices are GetYourGuide rates as of June 2026 and match the museum's door pricing. All four include free cancellation up to 24 hours before. Full breakdown on the tickets & prices page.
Know Before You Search
Which "samurai museum" in Tokyo is which?
Tokyo has had several samurai museums, and search results mix them up constantly. Here is the 2026 state of play, so you don't navigate to a closed door.
Samurai Ninja Museum Tokyo (Asakusa) — the interactive one, opened December 2023, operated by cultural-experience company Maikoya. Guided tours, armor try-on, sword lessons. Open daily. This site's guides — and all four bookable tickets above — cover this museum.
Samurai Museum (Shinjuku, Kabukicho) — the museum most pre-2022 blog posts photographed. Closed since January 2022 and still not reopened. We track its status on our open-or-closed page.
Shinjuku Samurai Museum with Experience (new) — opened by Maikoya in December 2025 near Shinjuku Station, with live sword-demonstration shows and a more adult, theatrical slant. A different venue from the closed Kabukicho museum — here's how the two branches compare.
Tokyo National Museum (Ueno) — not a samurai museum, but its Honkan gallery "Arms and Armor of the Samurai" holds the country's best original armor and National Treasure swords for ¥1,000. Our Ueno guide covers what's on display.
Want the deeper background first? Our real history of samurai and ninja separates the documented record from the movie canon. Deciding between cities instead? The same operator runs a smaller, older branch in Kyoto — the differences are real, and we compare them in Tokyo vs Kyoto.
Practical
How does booking the Samurai Museum Tokyo work?

Pick a ticket, choose a timed slot, and show the voucher on your phone at the entrance — it's to the right of the FamilyMart, two minutes south of Sensō-ji temple in Asakusa. Tours depart every 15 minutes and run in English by default.
Booking through GetYourGuide costs the same as paying at the door, with two practical advantages: the slot is guaranteed (weekend afternoons sell out — the museum caps each group), and cancellation is free until 24 hours before. Online review volume also keeps the operator honest: the four tickets above carry 2,188 verified reviews between them.
A note on how we keep this page honest: we verified every price against the operator's direct rates at mai-ko.com and re-check museum status monthly — methodology details are on each guide page.
Going with children? Read the with-kids guide first — age cutoffs differ between the ninja training and the sword lessons. And if your goal is specifically to swing a katana, the sword experience guide explains what each lesson actually teaches.
FAQ
Samurai Museum Tokyo — frequently asked questions
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Ready for Asakusa?
All four experiences include free cancellation up to 24 hours before. Book your slot now and change it if plans shift.
Book Museum Entry from $23 →