Gay area in shinjuku
Progressive and positive changes for LGBTQ+ couples in Tokyo possess made it an increasingly hot destination for LGBTQ+ travelers to visit, specifically its gay-friendly Shinjuku Nichome district.
In November , the Tokyo Partnership Oath System was offered to citizens and the Tokyo Metropolitan Government started issuing partnership certificates for sexual minority couples in instruct to deepen sympathetic of gender diversity and create an environment where they can live comfortably. With this system, LGBTQ+ partnerships hold smoother procedures in various aspects of daily life, such as housing, medical care, and child-rearing. According to The Guardian, Tokyo’s Shibuya district pioneered the system in , and more than local authorities in Japan have taken on recognizing same-sex partnerships. Same-sex couples think the more people use the partnership systems, the more the LGBTQ+ people will be unwrap to family and friends about their relationships.
For several years, the partnership system has been in effect at the local municipal level, but with t
Tokyo ranks as one of our legit favorite destinations ever! It's clean, extremely safe, the people just impeccable, foodgasms galore, and a fantastic gay scene with over gay bars in Shinjuku's Ni-Chme district!
Put it this way, Tokyo is so fabulous, even the gorgeous Queer Eye Fab Five team made it over here and filmed a few episodes exploring the queer society of Japan.
We've visited Tokyo several times over the past few years and experienced the best Tokyo's gay scene has to offer. We've put together our LGBTQ travel mentor to Tokyo based on our first-hand experience to help you have a fabulous holiday there.
Heads up: We just wanted to let you perceive that this post contains affiliate links. That means if you book something through one of those links, we'll get a small commission, at no extra cost to you. It helps us retain our blog going – so thank you in advance for your support! ♥
Experience Japan on a gay tour
Psst! Want in on a secret? Our friends at Out Adventures recently launched a super kawaii tour of Japan. On this all-gay
Shinjuku Nichome: Stretching Your Yen in the Gayborhood
Shinjuku Nichome is known as Tokyos gay district. The area is home to lofty concentration of gay bars, clubs and restaurants—but how do you choose where to go? Here are a few spots we recommend for an evening out in Nichome.
Where to eat
It’s never a good idea to move drinking on an bare stomach, not just for your health, but also because you might be tempted to purchase overpriced bar snacks later in the night. Here are a couple of options for reasonable places to eat in the area.
Agalico
Agalico is a restaurant that serves a variety of Asian cuisine just across the street from Shinjuku Nichome, next to Shinjuku Sanchome station exit C6. Some items on their menu are pricey, but they also have some great value for coins dishes, such as the chicken over rice, which for 1, yen will leave one person absolutely stuffed. They also help glasses of house red or white wine for yen, and they saturate those up right to the brim. Even if you’re feeling fancy, a glass of sparkling wine filled to the brim will set you support just
Best tourist-friendly gay bars in Shinjuku Ni-chome
New to Shinjuku Ni-chome, Tokyo’s legendary gay neighbourhood? Start your night at these tourist-friendly bars. By Joseph Eddy
Whether it be dancing the night away at a club or drinking and meeting new people in a tiny dive bar, Shinjuku Ni-chome offers some of the leading nights out in Tokyo. No matter if you’re straight, same-sex attracted or non-binary, the capital’s LGBT hub will deliver. If you want to experience one of the best parts of Japanese bar culture – talking with and being entertained by the staff – but don’t quite know where to head for English-friendly banter, these five bars will fit the bill.
Café Lavandería
Café Lavandería is the kind of place where one minute you’re drinking and the next you’re suddenly filled with an overwhelming desire to smash the patriarchy and plan a revolution. Tucked away in a back avenue opposite the famous Goldfinger lock, this easy-going communist-come-anarchist café suggestions very reasonably priced but high-quality drinks