SkillHub

tokyo

v1.0.0

Navigate Tokyo as visitor, resident, tech worker, student, or entrepreneur with neighborhoods, transport, costs, safety, culture, and local insights.

Sourced from ClawHub, Authored by Iván

Installation

Please help me install the skill `tokyo` from SkillHub official store. npx skills add ivangdavila/tokyo

When to Use

User asks about Tokyo for any purpose: visiting, moving, working, studying, or starting a business. Agent provides practical guidance with current data.

Quick Reference

Topic File
Visitors
Attractions (must-see vs skip) visitor-attractions.md
Itineraries (1/3/7 days) visitor-itineraries.md
Where to stay visitor-lodging.md
Tips & day trips visitor-tips.md
Neighborhoods
Quick comparison neighborhoods-index.md
Central (Minato, Shibuya, Shinjuku) neighborhoods-central.md
Residential (Meguro, Setagaya) neighborhoods-residential.md
East (Asakusa, Ueno, Sumida) neighborhoods-east.md
Outer (Kichijoji, Nerima) neighborhoods-outer.md
Choosing guide neighborhoods-choosing.md
Food
Overview & dining culture food-overview.md
Traditional (sushi, ramen, etc.) food-traditional.md
Markets & depachika food-markets.md
Best areas by cuisine food-areas.md
Etiquette & practical tips food-practical.md
Practical
Moving & settling resident.md
Transport (JR, Metro, IC cards) transport.md
Cost of living cost.md
Safety safety.md
Weather & seasons climate.md
Local services local.md
Culture
Etiquette & customs culture.md
Career
Tech industry tech.md
Students student.md
Startups startup.md

Core Rules

1. Identify User Context First

  • Role: Tourist, resident, tech worker, student, entrepreneur
  • Timeline: Short visit, planning to move, already there
  • Japanese level: None, basic, conversational, fluent
  • Load relevant auxiliary file for details

2. Safety Context

Tokyo is one of the world's safest major cities. Main concerns are minor: - Petty theft in crowded tourist areas (Shibuya, Asakusa, Akihabara) - Drink spiking in Roppongi/Kabukicho nightlife districts - Overcharging scams at some hostess/host clubs - Natural disasters (earthquakes, typhoons) See safety.md for detailed guidance.

3. Weather Expectations

  • Four distinct seasons
  • Summer (Jun-Sep): Hot, humid (30-35°C), rainy season in June
  • Winter (Dec-Feb): Cold, dry (5-10°C), rarely snows
  • Best months: March-May (cherry blossoms), October-November (autumn leaves)
  • Typhoon season: August-October See climate.md for monthly breakdown.

4. Current Data (Feb 2026)

Item Range
1K/1R rent (studio) ¥95,000-130,000 (central), ¥70,000-100,000 (outer)
1LDK rent ¥140,000-220,000
Senior SWE salary ¥7M-12M/year
Student budget ¥150,000-200,000/month
Suica/Pasmo fare ¥180-260/ride
Monthly transit pass ¥8,000-15,000

5. Tourist Traps

  • Skip: Overpriced tourist ramen in Shibuya crossing area
  • Do: Standing sushi near Tsukiji/Toyosu, local izakaya in Yurakucho
  • Watch: Roppongi "free drink" touts (lead to overcharging scams)
  • Free: Meiji Shrine, Imperial Palace East Gardens, Senso-ji Temple
  • Golden Gai bars welcome foreigners but have ¥500-1000 cover charges

6. Transit System

Tokyo has the most complex transit system in the world: - JR Lines: Yamanote loop, Chuo, Sobu (green Suica card) - Tokyo Metro: 9 lines (private, accepts Suica) - Toei Subway: 4 lines (city-operated, accepts Suica) - Private railways: Tokyu, Odakyu, Keio, etc. - IC cards: Suica/Pasmo interchangeable, use everywhere See transport.md for full guide.

7. Neighborhood Matching

Profile Best Areas
Young professionals Shibuya, Nakameguro, Ebisu
Families Setagaya, Meguro, Kichijoji
Budget-conscious Nerima, Adachi, Edogawa
Tech workers Shibuya, Roppongi, Shinagawa
Traditional vibes Asakusa, Yanaka, Kagurazaka
Nightlife seekers Shinjuku, Roppongi, Shibuya

Language Context

Japanese Language Reality

Unlike many global cities, English proficiency is limited:

Situation English Support
Tourist attractions Good signage, staff varies
Restaurants Menus sometimes, conversation rare
Train stations Excellent signage
Daily life Very limited
Business Depends on company
Medical Limited, bring translator

Practical advice: - Learn basic Japanese phrases - Google Translate camera mode works well for menus - Download offline Japanese in Google Translate - Major chains (Starbucks, McDonald's) have English menus - Hospital/clinic visits often need interpreter

Essential Phrases

Japanese Romaji English
すみません Sumimasen Excuse me / Sorry
ありがとうございます Arigatou gozaimasu Thank you
お会計お願いします Okaikei onegaishimasu Check please
これください Kore kudasai This please
英語メニューありますか Eigo menu arimasu ka English menu?
いくらですか Ikura desu ka How much?

Tokyo-Specific Traps

  • Roppongi touts — "Free drinks" lead to ¥50,000+ bills. Never follow strangers.
  • Kabukicho host/hostess clubs — Can run ¥100,000+ per visit. Avoid unless invited by locals.
  • Fake monks — Aggressive "donation" requests near Asakusa. Real monks don't approach tourists.
  • Rush hour (7:30-9:30am) — Trains packed 200%+ capacity. Avoid if possible.
  • Airport taxi — ¥20,000+ to central Tokyo. Use Limousine Bus (¥3,200) or train (¥1,200-2,500).
  • "No foreigners" signs — Some bars/establishments don't accept non-Japanese. Don't take it personally.
  • Cash is king — Many places still don't accept cards. Carry ¥10,000-20,000.
  • Tipping — Never tip. It's considered rude.
  • Walking while eating — Culturally inappropriate except at festivals.
  • Talking on trains — Keep conversations quiet; phone calls are prohibited.

Visa & Residency Quick Reference

Purpose Visa Type Duration
Tourism Visa-free (most Western countries) 90 days
Working Work visa (sponsored) 1-5 years
Tech/Startup Engineer/HSP visa 1-5 years
Student Student visa Duration of program
Digital nomad No specific visa (use tourist) 90 days max

Note: Japan has no digital nomad visa. Remote workers typically use tourist visa (no local employment allowed) or need proper work visa sponsorship.