Yokohama in a Day
Itinerary · Yokohama · 6 min
A morning-to-evening walking route through Yokohama's waterfront, Chinatown, and the Minato Mirai district.
Koku Travel · April 8, 2026
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Yokohama is 30 minutes from Tokyo but feels like a different city entirely. The waterfront is wide. The architecture has a 19th-century port-town confidence. And the food reflects 160 years of international trade, from Cantonese dim sum to Neapolitan-style pizza to the invention of instant ramen.
Morning: Chinatown
Yokohama Chinatown is the largest in the world outside of Asia's Chinese-majority cities. Over 500 restaurants, shops, and food stalls fill a grid of streets marked by ornate Chinese gates. Go early, before 10 AM, when the dim sum restaurants open for brunch service and the streets are still manageable.
The main drag is loud and commercial. Turn down the side streets for the serious restaurants. Cantonese roast meats, hand-pulled noodles, and Sichuan hot pot all operate at a level that rewards exploration. Nikuman (steamed buns) from the street vendors are the walking food.
Kanteibyou, the Chinese temple at the district's heart, burns incense thick enough to taste. The temple is dedicated to Guan Yu, the Chinese deity of commerce and loyalty. The carved stone and ceramic ornamentation is elaborate even by Chinese temple standards.

Yokohama Chinatown
Yokohama · Kanto
Japan's largest Chinatown with 600+ shops, restaurants, and ornate Chinese gates and temples.
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Midday: The Waterfront
Walk from Chinatown toward the harbor. Yamashita Park runs along the waterfront for about 700 meters, with views across the bay to the Minato Mirai skyline. The park was built on rubble from the 1923 Great Kanto Earthquake, Yokohama's defining disaster, which destroyed 90% of the city.
The Hikawa Maru, a 1930 ocean liner, is permanently docked here and open for tours. The art deco interiors give a sense of the Pacific crossing experience that connected Japan to North America.

Minato Mirai
Yokohama · Kanto
Central Yokohama district with open space and plenty to eat, see, and do, excellent base for exploring the city.
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Afternoon: Minato Mirai
The reclaimed waterfront district of Minato Mirai holds Yokohama's modern landmarks: the Landmark Tower (once Japan's tallest building), the red-brick warehouses converted to shops and restaurants, and the Cup Noodles Museum.
The Cup Noodles Museum deserves the detour. Momofuku Ando invented instant ramen in 1958 in a backyard shed, and the museum tells that story with genuine charm. The highlight: design your own Cup Noodles from a menu of soup bases and toppings. It takes 15 minutes and costs 500 yen. You leave with a custom-labeled cup of noodles.
The Cosmo Clock 21, the massive Ferris wheel on the waterfront, is most striking after dark when its LED display cycles through patterns. A full rotation takes 15 minutes.

Cup Noodles Museum Yokohama
Yokohama · Kanto
Interactive museum where you can create your own custom Cup Noodle package and flavor.
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Evening: Noge
The Noge district, south of Sakuragicho Station, is Yokohama's oldest entertainment quarter. Narrow streets packed with standing bars, yakitori counters, and jazz clubs. Yokohama has a deep jazz tradition dating to the postwar American military presence, and Noge keeps it alive in basement bars where the sets start at 20:00.
The standing bars (tachinomiya) serve drinks from 300 yen and close when the last customer leaves.
Getting There
Yokohama Station is 25 minutes from Shibuya on the Tokyu Toyoko Line (direct, no transfer). Minato Mirai Line continues to Chinatown and the waterfront. A day pass for the Minato Mirai Line covers all the key stops.
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