2,188 Verified Reviews · Updated June 2026

Samurai Museum Tokyo With Experience — All 4 Tickets Compared

Every bookable experience at the Samurai Ninja Museum in Asakusa, compared by what you actually do, what it costs, and who each one fits.

The Samurai Museum Tokyo with experience offers four tickets: a $23 guided tour with ninja-star throwing, a $53 samurai sword lesson, a $45 kid-friendly ninja training, and a $53 family sword lesson — all at the Asakusa museum, all with free 24-hour cancellation.

Key takeaways

  • All four experiences happen at the same four-floor museum in Asakusa, opened December 2023 — the difference is activity depth, not venue.
  • The $23 guided tour is the volume pick: 1,681 reviews at 4.6★, about 60 minutes, includes armor dress-up and shuriken throwing.
  • The $53 sword lesson adds real katana instruction in a hakama and rates higher (4.8★ from 405 reviews) — reviewers consistently call it worth the upgrade.
  • Families choose between kid-led ninja training ($45, ages ~4–12) and a parent-and-child sword lesson ($53, the best-rated ticket at 4.9★).
  • English guided tours leave every 15 minutes between roughly 9:00 and 19:00; weekend slots after 16:00 sell out a day or more ahead.
  • Door price and online price are identical — booking ahead only adds the slot guarantee and free cancellation. Full pricing on the tickets page.

Side by Side

How do the four experiences compare?

ExperienceRatingPriceTimeYou actually do
Guided Tour & Ninja Experience⭐ 4.6 (1,681)$23~60 minTour, shuriken throw, armor dress-upBook →
Kid-Friendly Ninja Training⭐ 4.8 (84)$45~60 minNinja outfit, blowgun, treasure huntBook →
Family Samurai Sword Lesson⭐ 4.9 (18)$53~2 hParent + child katana trainingBook →

Ticket 1 · Most Booked

What do you get on the Guided Tour & Ninja Experience?

Samurai Ninja Museum Tokyo guided tour group examining samurai armor and katana exhibits in Asakusa
The standard guided tour — exhibits, dress-up, and ninja-star throwing in about an hour.

This is the museum's core ticket and the one 1,681 of the 2,188 reviewers bought. An English-speaking guide walks your group through the exhibits — armor, helmets, swords, and the ninja floor — then the hands-on part starts: you throw real shuriken at a target, put on a samurai helmet and outer armor, and hold a metal (not foam) katana for photos.

“Everything was great, we were very pleased, thank you.”
— Ömür, verified GetYourGuide review

At $23 it's the cheapest way into the museum and the right pick if Asakusa is one stop among several that day. If you already know you want to swing a sword rather than hold one, skip straight to the lesson below — upgrading on-site isn't guaranteed when slots are full.

Check availability — from $23 →

Ticket 2 · Highest-Rated Upgrade

What happens in the Samurai Sword Lesson & Tour?

Samurai sword lesson at the Samurai Ninja Museum Tokyo — instructor correcting a student's katana stance
Katana instruction in a hakama — the two-hour version of the museum.

You change into a hakama, and an instructor teaches actual katana handling: stance, draw, cuts, and the etiquette around the blade. The package includes samurai helmet and armor use, a ninja weapons trial, themed photo backdrops, and the full museum tour. It rates 4.8 from 405 reviews — higher than the basic ticket — and the gap shows in what reviewers say:

“One of most fun and educational experiences. Will 100% recommend.”
— Poorva, verified GetYourGuide review

Budget about two hours. At $53 it costs a little over twice the basic entry, and it's the ticket we recommend for adults and teens in our sword experience guide.

Check availability — from $53 →

Ticket 3 · Built for Kids

What does the Kid-Friendly Ninja Training include?

Child in full ninja costume during kid-friendly ninja training at the Samurai Ninja Museum Asakusa Tokyo
Full ninja outfit, blowgun, shuriken competition, treasure hunt.

Children dress in a complete ninja outfit and work through a training course: ninja-star throw competition, blowgun practice, the "secrets of the ninja" briefing, and a treasure hunt through the museum, with a photo shoot included. It's structured so kids are doing something every few minutes — the usual museum failure mode with under-10s.

“My husband and our son's 14 year old and 8 year old all enjoyed this a lot. My husband was surprised how good it actually was!”
— Rachael, verified GetYourGuide review

It rates 4.8 from 84 reviews, almost all from parents. More detail — including age fit and what parents do during the session — in the with-kids guide.

Check availability — from $45 →

Ticket 4 · Newest

Who is the Family Samurai Sword Lesson for?

Family samurai sword lesson Tokyo — parents and children in hakama training with katana together
The adult sword curriculum, adapted for parents and kids together.

The newest ticket takes the adult sword lesson and rebuilds it for mixed ages: everyone wears a hakama, kids get casual armor, and parents and children learn the same cuts side by side, followed by the museum tour and ninja weapons trial. Early reviews put it at 4.9 — the highest of the four — from 18 bookings so far.

“Amazing tour, a fun samurai class as well as learning about the history of Tokyo and samurai culture”
— Baden, verified GetYourGuide review

Pick this over the kid-friendly ninja training when the adults want to train too, and the kids are roughly 6 and up — sword work needs a little more focus than the ninja course.

Check availability — from $53 →

How did we compare these experiences?

We pulled the listing data, inclusions, and the full review text for all four official GetYourGuide tickets (2,188 reviews as of June 2026), and we verified them against the museum's own pricing at mai-ko.com, and ranked by rating, review volume, and what each ticket actually includes. Prices shown are live GetYourGuide rates and shift slightly with the yen. We earn a commission on bookings made through our links — it never changes what we recommend, and the full disclosure is here.

FAQ

Booking the experiences — frequently asked questions

What is included in the basic Samurai Ninja Museum ticket?+
The $23 basic ticket includes museum entry, a guided tour with an English-speaking guide, the ninja-star throwing experience, and the samurai dress-up — you wear a real samurai helmet and hold a metal sword for photos. It runs about 60 minutes.
What is the difference between the sword lesson and the basic tour?+
The basic tour ($23) lets you hold a sword and dress up; the sword lesson ($53) teaches you to use one. You wear a hakama, learn katana cuts and stances from an instructor, then tour the museum. The lesson takes roughly two hours instead of one.
Can adults join the kid-friendly ninja training?+
Parents accompany their children and join the activities — the shuriken competition is usually parents versus kids. If the adults want their own training rather than a supporting role, the family samurai sword lesson is built exactly for that.
Are the experiences in English?+
Yes. Guided tours run in English by default, every 15 minutes. The instructors teaching sword lessons and ninja training also work in English.
Which Samurai Ninja Museum experience has the best reviews?+
The family samurai sword lesson rates highest at 4.9 stars, though from only 18 reviews so far. Among high-volume tickets, the sword lesson and tour holds 4.8 from 405 reviews, and the standard guided tour 4.6 from 1,681 reviews.
Can I cancel or reschedule my booking?+
All four experiences booked through GetYourGuide include free cancellation up to 24 hours before the start time, and you can usually rebook a different slot directly in the app.
Where exactly do the experiences start?+
All four take place at the Samurai Ninja Museum in Asakusa, Tokyo. The entrance is to the right of the FamilyMart, about a two-minute walk from Sensō-ji temple and five minutes from Asakusa Station.
Kenta Mori, Tokyo culture writer
Kenta Mori
Asakusa-based culture writer covering Tokyo's museums and samurai heritage sites since 2014.
Last updated: June 2026

Pick Your Ticket

Same museum, four ways in. All include free cancellation up to 24 hours before.

Book the Guided Tour from $23 →