아다치구와 카츠시카구: 도쿄에서 가장 저렴한 지역 완벽 가이드
Why Adachi & Katsushika Are on Every Budget-Conscious Expat's Radar in 2026
If you're a Tokyo expat in Adachi ward or considering a move to Katsushika, you've already discovered one of the city's best-kept secrets. While most newcomers fixate on Shinjuku, Shibuya, or Minato, a growing wave of foreigners is heading northeast — and for very good reason.
Adachi and Katsushika wards sit in the far northeast corner of Tokyo, bordering Saitama and Chiba. They consistently rank as two of the cheapest wards in Tokyo for rent, yet they offer excellent train connections, genuine local character, and a quality of life that frankly embarrasses pricier central neighborhoods.
In 2026, as rents in Nakameguro and Ebisu push well past ¥150,000 for a small one-bedroom, more expats are doing the math and realizing you can live well in northeast Tokyo for half the price — without sacrificing a reasonable commute or everyday convenience.
Rent Reality Check: What ¥70,000–¥90,000/Month Gets You Here
Let's talk numbers, because this is where northeast Tokyo really shines. The cheapest ward Tokyo rent figures for Adachi and Katsushika are genuinely striking compared to central Tokyo.
Typical Rent Ranges (2026)
- 1K / Studio (20–25 m²): ¥55,000–¥70,000/month
- 1DK (30–35 m²): ¥70,000–¥85,000/month
- 1LDK (40–50 m²): ¥85,000–¥105,000/month
- 2LDK (55–65 m²): ¥100,000–¥130,000/month
That ¥70,000–¥90,000 budget — which barely gets you a cramped studio in Shimokitazawa — buys a genuinely spacious 1DK or even a 1LDK here. Many units include a full kitchen, separate living area, and real storage space.
Sharehouse rooms in Adachi and Katsushika are even more accessible, often starting around ¥45,000–¥55,000/month all-inclusive. For new arrivals who want to keep costs down while settling in, a furnished sharehouse in Kita-Senju or Ayase can be an incredibly smart starting point.
Beyond rent, daily costs are lower too. Local supermarkets like OK Store, Gyomu Super, and Life offer some of the best grocery prices in Tokyo. You'll find lunch sets at neighborhood teishoku restaurants for ¥700–¥900 — a rarity in central wards.
Commute Times & Train Lines: How Far Are You Really from Central Tokyo?
The honest answer? Much closer than most people assume. Northeast Tokyo's reputation as "remote" is largely a myth perpetuated by people who've never actually checked the train map.
Kita-Senju: The Northeast's Transport Powerhouse
Kita-Senju is Adachi ward's main hub and one of the most connected stations in all of Tokyo. Five separate lines converge here, giving residents extraordinary flexibility.
- Tokyo Metro Hibiya Line: Ginza in 20 min, Roppongi in 28 min
- Tokyo Metro Chiyoda Line: Otemachi in 18 min, Shinjuku (via Yoyogi-Uehara) in ~35 min
- Tobu Skytree Line: Asakusa in 10 min
- JR Joban Line: Ueno in 8 min, Tokyo Station in ~20 min
- Tsukuba Express: Akihabara in 10 min
Ueno in 8 minutes. Akihabara in 10. Ginza in 20. These are not long commutes by any global city standard — and Kita-Senju apartments for foreigners are increasingly popular precisely because of this connectivity.
Getting Around from Katsushika
Katsushika's key stations include Kanamachi, Shin-Koiwa, and Kameari. Shin-Koiwa on the JR Sobu Rapid Line gets you to Shinjuku in about 25 minutes and Tokyo Station in 18 minutes — perfectly workable for a daily commute.
Eight minutes to Ueno, ten minutes to Akihabara, twenty minutes to Ginza — and half the rent of central Tokyo. Northeast Tokyo's commute math simply works.
The key caveat: rush-hour trains on the Joban Line and Tobu lines can be crowded. If you're sensitive to packed commutes, aim for apartments within a 5-minute walk of a station so you can board early and secure a seat.
Neighborhood Vibe: Shitamachi Charm, Local Markets & Old Tokyo Atmosphere
If you've ever wanted to experience Tokyo the way it existed before the city became a global luxury destination, Adachi and Katsushika are your answer. These wards are pure shitamachi — the old working-class downtown culture of Tokyo.
What "Shitamachi" Actually Means for Daily Life
Shitamachi literally means "low city" — historically the districts where merchants, craftspeople, and everyday workers lived. The culture is warm, communal, and unpretentious. Neighbors actually talk to each other. Local shop owners remember your face.
In practical terms, this translates to:
- Long covered shotengai (shopping streets) with independent butchers, fishmongers, and bakeries
- Traditional festivals (matsuri) that are genuinely community events, not tourist spectacles
- Cheap, excellent ramen, yakitori, and izakaya spots that have been run by the same family for decades
- Senju fish market area in Adachi, one of Tokyo's oldest market districts
- Kameari in Katsushika, famous as the setting for the beloved manga "Kochikame" — still celebrated with bronze statues throughout the neighborhood
The Arakawa River cycling path connects Adachi and Katsushika along a scenic green corridor — popular with joggers, cyclists, and families on weekends. It's a genuinely lovely slice of Tokyo life that you simply don't get in the dense urban core.
Pro Tip: Visit Kitajuku covered market in Adachi on a Sunday morning for some of the freshest and cheapest produce in Tokyo. Arrive before 10am for the best selection. Bring cash — most vendors don't take cards.
Foreigner-Friendliness: English Services, International Communities & Ward Office Support
This is the section where these wards genuinely surprise people. Neither Adachi nor Katsushika is a traditional "expat hub" — you won't find the dense international community of Minato or the backpacker scene of Taito. But foreigner-friendliness has improved significantly.
Adachi Ward Office Services
Adachi Ward has invested meaningfully in multilingual support. The ward office at Adachi-ku-yakusho (near Nishi-Arai station) offers:
- Translated resident registration forms in English, Chinese, Korean, and several Southeast Asian languages
- A dedicated Multilingual Consultation Corner (外国人相談窓口) with interpreter services
- Free Japanese language classes organized through the ward's international exchange programs
Katsushika Ward Office Services
Katsushika similarly provides English-language assistance at its ward office near Kameari station. The ward publishes a foreign resident guide in multiple languages and runs a support hotline for residents navigating Japanese bureaucracy.
International Community & Daily English Use
Kita-Senju has become a surprisingly cosmopolitan hub. The presence of Tokyo University of the Arts (Geidai) — which relocated its music faculty campus there — brings an international student population. You'll find English-speaking staff at major supermarkets and pharmacies near the station.
The Vietnamese, Chinese, and Filipino communities are particularly well-established in Adachi ward, giving the neighborhood genuine international texture without the tourist overlay you get in places like Asakusa.
Good to Know: As a foreigner moving to either ward, you'll need to register at the ward office within 14 days of moving in. Bring your passport, residence card, and your rental contract. The process takes about 30–45 minutes and staff can assist in English if you request it in advance.
Who Should Live in Adachi & Katsushika? Best Fits (And Who Should Look Elsewhere)
Northeast Tokyo isn't for everyone — and that honesty is actually useful. Here's a frank breakdown of who thrives here and who might struggle.
You'll Love It If You Are...
- Budget-conscious and value space over prestige: The rent-to-space ratio is simply unbeatable in Tokyo.
- Working in Ueno, Akihabara, Marunouchi, or the Yamanote east corridor: Your commute will be genuinely easy.
- Interested in authentic Japanese culture: Shitamachi life offers a richness that sanitized tourist districts can't match.
- A student or young professional on a tight budget: This is where your money goes furthest in Tokyo.
- Someone who enjoys cycling and outdoor space: The Arakawa and Edo River corridors are excellent.
- A family: Both wards have good schools, parks, and community infrastructure — and space for kids to actually breathe.
You Might Prefer Elsewhere If You Are...
- Working in Shibuya, Shinjuku, or west Tokyo: Commutes cross the entire city and run 45–60+ minutes in rush hour.
- Craving a trendy café-and-boutique lifestyle: You'll need to travel for that — it's not the local scene here.
- Completely new to Japan and anxious about minimal English signage outside main stations: The adjustment curve is steeper here than in central expat-heavy areas.
- Hoping to live in a building with many international neighbors: Sharehouses in this area tend to have a higher Japanese resident ratio.
Making the Move: Your Northeast Tokyo Starting Point
The northeast Tokyo expat neighborhood landscape has changed meaningfully in recent years. What was once dismissed as "too far from the action" is now recognized as one of the smartest choices a budget-aware expat can make — without sacrificing connectivity or quality of life.
Adachi and Katsushika reward the curious, the practical, and the culturally adventurous. The rents are real, the commutes are manageable, and the shitamachi atmosphere is something you genuinely can't manufacture in a newly developed neighborhood.
If you're considering a move to northeast Tokyo and want to test the area before committing to a long-term lease, Modern Living Tokyo's furnished apartments and sharehouses offer a flexible, low-barrier way to get started. Move in with your suitcase, get your bearings, explore Kita-Senju on foot, and see if northeast Tokyo clicks for you — many residents find it clicks immediately and never want to leave.
Ready to explore what affordable, well-connected Tokyo living actually looks like? Browse our available rooms and apartments and find your northeast Tokyo home base.



