teamLab Planets
You take your shoes off at the door, roll your trousers up, and then walk through knee-deep water in a dark room while koi made of light swim around your legs and burst into flowers when you touch them. That is the whole experience here, and it is genuinely unlike a normal museum visit. It is also one of the most photographed places in Tokyo right now, which means timed tickets sell out and the rooms can feel busy. Come for the sensation, not for solitude.
A genuinely physical art experience that earns its hype, as long as you accept the crowds and the wet feet. Book ahead and go before the 2027 closure window.
Worth it for
- Someone who wants one memorable, sensory thing to do on a Tokyo trip and does not mind walking through water
- Photographers chasing the mirror rooms and the floating-orchid space
You can skip if
- You dislike crowds and being moved along, or you cannot comfortably go barefoot in water
- You only have time for one digital-art venue and prefer the maze-like Borderless format instead
Tickets & tours for teamLab Planets
Which ticket should you buy?
What it actually is
teamLab Planets is a set of large walk-through rooms in Toyosu where the floors are water, soft, or mirrored, and projected art reacts to where you stand. You go through barefoot the whole way. Part of the appeal is that you are physically inside the work rather than looking at it on a wall, so the water rooms and the room of hanging orchids land differently in person than they do in photos.
It is run by the same art collective as teamLab Borderless (now over in Azabudai Hills), but Planets leans harder into the body-in-the-art idea. The two are separate venues with separate tickets, so do not assume one ticket covers both. If you only have time for one and you like the idea of wading through water and lying down under projections, Planets is the one to pick.
The barefoot, water-room reality
Wear something you can roll above the knee, or a skirt. There are spots where the water comes up past your calves, and there is no way to skip them without missing the point of the place. They provide free lockers for your shoes and bags, and there are wraps available if your clothing does not work for the water sections. Phones survive fine if you are careful, but this is not the visit to be precious about staying dry.
Mirrored floors are a known thing here, so skirts and dresses are a practical concern. Many people switch to shorts. The staff hand out cover wraps and there are usually signs and attendants pointing this out, but it catches first-timers off guard, so plan your outfit before you go rather than at the locker.
Tickets and timing
Entry is by timed slot, booked online in advance, and popular slots disappear early in cherry blossom season, Golden Week, and through the summer. Buying at the door during a busy stretch is a gamble you will usually lose. Book a few days out at least, and pick a weekday morning or a late evening slot if you want the rooms a little less packed.
Plan for roughly 90 minutes to a couple of hours inside, more if you stop to photograph everything. After a 2025 expansion added garden areas, some people spend closer to three hours. There is no fixed route speed, but staff do keep people moving in the busiest rooms, so it is not a place to linger indefinitely in one spot.
The closure you should know about
Planets was originally meant to be temporary. Its run has been extended more than once because of how popular it stayed, and the current public timeline has it open through the end of 2027. That is the date to plan around: if seeing it matters to you, treat 2026 and 2027 as your window rather than assuming it will be here indefinitely.
teamLab has not published a confirmed relocation or a guarantee that the same installations carry over to a future site, so do not bank on a like-for-like reopening somewhere else. Closure dates for venues like this do shift, so check the official site for the latest before you build a trip around it. The safe read: go while it is open in Toyosu.
teamLab Planets: FAQs
Yes. The whole route is barefoot, including the water rooms. You store shoes and bags in a free locker at the entrance, so there is no way around it.
Below the knee, yes, in the water sections. Wear shorts or something you can roll up. They provide wraps if your outfit does not suit the water, but plan ahead.
No. They are two different venues now (Borderless moved to Azabudai Hills), with separate tickets and a different feel. Planets is the barefoot, water-and-mirror one in Toyosu.
Sometimes, but slots sell out during busy seasons and it is risky. Book a timed ticket online in advance to be safe, especially in spring and summer.
The current public timeline has it open through the end of 2027. The run has been extended before, so check the official site, but do not assume it will stay open beyond that.
Around 90 minutes to two hours for most people, longer if you stop to photograph everything or after the 2025 expansion areas. Build in time for lockers and the queue.
Explore more in Tokyo
Plan your trip
- Best time to visit Tokyo
- Day trips from Tokyo
- 3 Days in Tokyo: A Realistic First-Timer Itinerary
- Free Things to Do in Tokyo You Won't Feel Cheated By
- Tokyo with Kids: Robots, Trains, and Quiet Wins
- Tokyo After Dark: Where to Go at Night
- Tokyo When It Rains: Indoor Plans That Don't Feel Like Settling
- Tokyo Skytree vs Shibuya Sky: Which Tokyo View Is Worth It?
Where to next?
One short email, twice a month: handpicked experiences, hidden-gem cities, and the best windows to book them.