Halal guide
Prayer Rooms in Tokyo: Stations, Skytree, Disneyland & Airports (2026 Map)

© Guilhem Vellut / CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons · CC BY 2.0
You can pray in Tokyo without much stress: the most dependable options are the airport prayer rooms at Haneda and Narita, three central mosques (Tokyo Camii in Shibuya, Otsuka Masjid, and Asakusa's Darul Arqam), plus growing Muslim-friendly prayer spaces at Tokyo Skytree's Solamachi, the Tokyo Disney Resort area, and a few department stores. Tokyo is not yet blanketed with musalla the way Kuala Lumpur or Jakarta are, but the traveller touchpoints that matter most — airports, major sights, and one or two big shopping complexes — are covered. This is a practical, verified map of where to pray in Tokyo, paired with where to eat halal nearby.
This page is the go-info companion to our Tokyo halal guide, which is the pillar for everything Muslim-friendly in the city. For trip planning, pair it with Tokyo for Muslim travellers and our day-by-day Muslim-friendly Tokyo itinerary.
Prayer rooms in Tokyo at a glance (2026)
The table below is the fastest way to find where to pray in Tokyo. Because facilities are added and moved frequently, treat floor numbers as a starting point and confirm at an information desk when you arrive.
| Location | Where exactly | Notes (as of 2026) |
|---|---|---|
| Haneda Airport (HND) | Terminal 2: 3F landside (2 rooms) and 2F airside (2 rooms); Terminal 3: 3F. Terminal 1 has none | Ablution (wudu) facilities provided; Haneda Airport Garden by T3 has more space |
| Narita Airport (NRT) | Terminal 1: 5F before immigration, 2F after; Terminal 2: 1F both sides | Open roughly 6:00–23:00; wudu, mats and qibla marker in each |
| Tokyo Camii (Shibuya) | Ōyamachō 1-19, 5-min walk from Yoyogi-Uehara Stn | Japan's largest mosque; visitors welcome, generally ~10:00–18:00 |
| Otsuka Masjid (Toshima) | Minami-Ōtsuka 3-42-7 (〒170-0005), near Ōtsuka Stn | Japan Islamic Trust mosque; generally ~09:00–21:00 (as of 2026, check locally) |
| Darul Arqam / Asakusa Masjid | Higashi-Asakusa 1-9-12, Taito | Closest mosque to Skytree & Sensō-ji; call ahead, hours vary |
| Tokyo Solamachi (Skytree Town) | Prayer space inside Solamachi — ask the info desk for the current floor | Separate men's/women's areas, mats and qibla |
| Tokyo Disney Resort area | Ikspiari mall prayer room; "quiet rooms" near the parks | Ask Guest Relations; wudu space at some rooms |
| Department stores | e.g. Takashimaya Shinjuku (historically 11F) and info centres | Multi-faith rooms; status changes — check locally |
Where to pray at Narita and Haneda airports
The airport musalla are the single most reliable prayer spaces in the Tokyo area, and they are purpose-built with ablution facilities and a qibla marker.
At Narita (NRT), Terminal 1 has a prayer room on 5F before immigration and on 2F after security, while Terminal 2 has rooms on 1F on both the landside and airside. They are generally open about 6:00–23:00, with mats, prayer garments and wudu areas — though it's wise to bring your own mat during busy periods, as noted by the airport's official prayer-room page.
At Haneda (HND), Terminal 2 has two rooms on 3F (before security) and two airside on 2F, and Terminal 3 (international) has rooms on 3F. Terminal 1 (mostly domestic) has none, so pray before you transfer. All are equipped for wudu, per the official Haneda terminal guide.
Mosques in Tokyo: Camii, Otsuka and Asakusa
If you want a full congregational space with proper wudu and, on Fridays, Jumu'ah, head to a mosque.
Tokyo Camii in Shibuya is the largest mosque in Japan — a stunning Ottoman-style building beside Yoyogi-Uehara station. It welcomes non-Muslim visitors outside prayer times (generally around 10:00–18:00) and is a genuine sightseeing stop in its own right; check the official Tokyo Camii visitor page for current hours and etiquette. After prayer, the on-site TC Café serves Turkish coffee and halal bites — see our note on Tokyo Camii & TC Café.
Otsuka Masjid (3-42-7 Minami-Ōtsuka, Toshima, near Ōtsuka station on the Yamanote line) is run by the Japan Islamic Trust and is generally open around 09:00–21:00 (as of 2026; confirm locally), making it a dependable option in the north of central Tokyo.
Darul Arqam Masjid in Higashi-Asakusa is the closest mosque to Tokyo Skytree and Sensō-ji, roughly a 15–20 minute walk from either. Hours can vary, so call ahead. It pairs naturally with a day of sightseeing and a halal lunch — see our guide to halal restaurants in Asakusa.
Tokyo Skytree, Solamachi and where to pray nearby
Many travellers search for a musalla at Tokyo Skytree specifically. There is a dedicated prayer space inside Tokyo Solamachi, the shopping complex at the base of the tower, with separate men's and women's areas, mats and a qibla marker. The exact floor has moved between reports, so ask at the Solamachi information desk on arrival. If it's full or closed, Darul Arqam Masjid in Asakusa is the nearest mosque.
Tokyo Disneyland, DisneySea and Ikspiari
For the Tokyo Disney Resort, the most reliable prayer facility is inside the Ikspiari shopping mall, which sits between Maihama station and the parks. Both Tokyo Disneyland and Tokyo DisneySea have also added "quiet rooms" that visitors use for prayer; ask Guest Relations at the entrance for the current location, as these are periodically updated. Note that, as of 2026, no restaurant inside the parks holds halal certification, so plan meals around Ikspiari or bring your own food where permitted.
What about Tokyo Station and the big stations?
Honest answer: as of 2026 there is no widely confirmed dedicated public musalla inside Tokyo Station itself. Your most reliable central options near the big stations are the department-store prayer rooms — historically Takashimaya Shinjuku had a multi-faith room (reported on 11F) with wudu — and the three mosques above. Because a single store can open or close a room without notice, always check locally or with staff rather than assuming a station has one. When in doubt, plan your salah around a mosque or an airport if you're transiting.
Eat, then pray: pairing halal food with prayer
The smartest way to travel Tokyo as a Muslim is to cluster a halal meal with a prayer stop. Yoyogi-Uehara (Tokyo Camii) and Asakusa (Darul Arqam) both sit near clusters of halal-friendly eateries. Use our Tokyo halal guide to line up certified and Muslim-friendly restaurants, and the Muslim-friendly Tokyo itinerary to sequence eat-and-pray stops across a day. Always distinguish "halal-certified" from "no pork, no alcohol, Muslim-owned" — many Tokyo restaurants are the latter, which is fine for many travellers but not certified; ask directly.
Places we’ve confirmed
Tokyo Camii TC Cafe & Halal Market
Turkish sweets and spiced tea, with an attached halal market
A Muslim-friendly Turkish patisserie/cafe inside Japan's largest mosque, the Tokyo Camii & Diyanet Turkish Culture Center, serving halal confectionery alongside an attached halal market. The mosque is open to non-Muslim visitors outside prayer times.
- Halal
- Casual
- Solo
Sources
- Prayer Room — Haneda Airport Passenger Terminal (official)
- Prayer Room — Narita International Airport (official)
- For Visitors — Tokyo Camii and Diyanet Turkish Culture Center (official)
- Japan Islamic Trust — Otsuka Masjid (official)
- 5 Tokyo Sightseeing Spots with Prayer Facilities Nearby — JNTO Japan Muslim Guide
FAQ
- Where can I pray in Tokyo as a Muslim?
- The most reliable prayer rooms in Tokyo are at Haneda and Narita airports, plus three mosques: Tokyo Camii (Shibuya), Otsuka Masjid, and Darul Arqam in Asakusa. There are also Muslim-friendly prayer spaces at Tokyo Skytree's Solamachi, the Tokyo Disney Resort's Ikspiari mall, and some department stores. Confirm the exact floor locally, as of 2026.
- Does Narita or Haneda airport have a prayer room?
- Yes. Narita has prayer rooms in Terminal 1 (5F before immigration, 2F after) and Terminal 2 (1F both sides), open roughly 6:00–23:00. Haneda has rooms in Terminal 2 (3F landside and 2F airside) and Terminal 3 (3F); Terminal 1 has none. All provide wudu (ablution) facilities and a qibla marker, as of 2026.
- Is there a prayer room at Tokyo Skytree?
- Yes. There is a dedicated prayer space inside Tokyo Solamachi, the mall at the base of Tokyo Skytree, with separate men's and women's areas, prayer mats and a qibla marker. The floor has changed between reports, so ask at the Solamachi information desk. The nearest full mosque is Darul Arqam in Asakusa, about a 15–20 minute walk away.
- Can I pray at Tokyo Disneyland or DisneySea?
- Yes. The most reliable prayer facility is inside the Ikspiari mall between Maihama station and the parks. Tokyo Disneyland and DisneySea have also added quiet rooms used for prayer — ask Guest Relations at the entrance for the current location. Note that, as of 2026, no restaurant inside the parks is halal-certified, so plan meals around Ikspiari.
- Is Tokyo Camii open to visitors?
- Yes. Tokyo Camii, Japan's largest mosque, welcomes non-Muslim visitors outside prayer times, generally around 10:00–18:00. Dress modestly (women should cover their hair; scarves are lent at the entrance). It sits by Yoyogi-Uehara station in Shibuya, and the on-site TC Café serves halal Turkish food. Check the official Tokyo Camii site for current hours before visiting.
- Are there prayer rooms in Tokyo Station or department stores?
- As of 2026 there is no widely confirmed public musalla inside Tokyo Station itself. Your best central options are department-store prayer rooms — Takashimaya Shinjuku historically had a multi-faith room with wudu — and the city's mosques. Store rooms can open or close without notice, so always check locally with staff rather than assuming one exists.

