Shinjuku Gyoen (新宿御苑)
Type: National Garden City: Tokyo Neighborhood: Shinjuku / Sendagaya Address (EN): 11 Naitomachi, Shinjuku City, Tokyo 160-0014 Hours: 9:00 AM – 6:00 PM (last entry 5:30 PM); closed Monday Entry: ¥500/person - buy online in advance at env.go.jp/garden/shinjukugyoen (recommended in spring) Photography: ✅ Full access Alcohol: ❌ Not allowed (enforced) Who It’s For: All travelers - especially relevant for late cherry blossoms and spring flowers
Why It’s on the List
The single best place in Tokyo for late-April cherry blossoms. While Somei-yoshino (the classic pale pink variety) peaks in late March and will be gone by the time we arrive, Shinjuku Gyoen has an extraordinary collection of late-blooming varieties that peak in mid-to-late April - right during the Tokyo phase.
The garden also simply looks excellent in spring. Three distinct sections (formal French, English landscape, and Japanese traditional) across 58 hectares means a full morning of photography and walking without covering the same ground.
Late-April Cherry Varieties
| Variety | Japanese | When | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| Yaezakura | 八重桜 | Mid–late April | Double-petaled, full, deep pink - more dramatic than Somei-yoshino |
| Ichiyo | 一葉 | Mid April | Pale pink double, with distinctive leaf-turned-petal at center |
| Ukon | 鬱金 | Mid April | Rare yellow-green cherry - unusual and photogenic |
| Kanzan | 関山 | Late April | Deep pink double; the most common yaezakura variety |
| Fugenzo | 普賢象 | Late April | White-pink double with two green leaves at center |
For our April 15–19 window: Yaezakura should be at or near peak. The garden has over 1,000 cherry trees of 65+ varieties - something is always blooming.
What to See
- French Formal Garden - geometric layout, good for the double-petal cherry photos; clean backgrounds
- English Landscape Garden - large open lawn with mature cherry trees; where most people sit and look up
- Japanese Traditional Garden - ponds, stone lanterns, wisteria pergola (may be opening late April); quiet and atmospheric
- Greenhouse (separate entry ¥200) - tropical and subtropical plants; worth skipping unless very cold
Photography approach: The garden is large enough that you can find empty compositions even on busy days. Go early, work the less-trafficked sections first (Japanese garden, north entrance area), then circle back through the main lawn.
Crowds & Timing
Cherry blossom season at Shinjuku Gyoen is popular but manageable because:
- No alcohol keeps picnic crowds down
- Large area disperses people better than Ueno Park
- Weekday mornings are calm
Best: Weekday, opening time (9 AM), or late afternoon (after 3 PM when some groups leave). Avoid: Weekend noon during bloom peak.
Getting There
From Ikebukuro (Tokyo base): Marunouchi Line → Shinjuku-Sanchome (新宿三丁目) → 5 min walk to Shinjuku Gate (main entrance)
Or: JR Yamanote → Shinjuku → 10 min walk through Shinjuku south exit
IC card covers transit.
Entrance options:
- Shinjuku Gate (most common) - from the Shinjuku commercial side
- Sendagaya Gate - quieter entrance, closer to Japanese garden
- Okido Gate - southern entrance, nearest to Yoyogi
Day Shape
Pairs well with:
- Shinjuku exploration (Omoide Yokocho, Kabukicho, department store food halls) - same area
- Meiji Shrine - 20-min walk via Harajuku; combine for a full Shinjuku/Harajuku/Meiji day
- Afternoon coffee and wander in Ura-Harajuku (vintage boutiques)
Energy level: 🟢 Low - flat garden walking, fully outdoors, no stairs
Tips
- Buy tickets online - spring crowds can cause queues at the gate; online purchase skips the line (env.go.jp/garden/shinjukugyoen)
- Bring a picnic - no alcohol, but food is allowed; konbini snacks + the garden = an excellent slow morning
- The greenhouse is skippable - unless it’s cold or rainy
- Maps available at the gate - free English map shows which areas have which tree varieties by name