Things to do in Toda
Activities, attractions and tours





Things to do

Tokyo: teamLab Planets TOKYO Digital Art Museum Entry Ticket
RM101
per adult
88% of travellers recommend

Mount Fuji, Kamakura, Big Buddha, & Lake Ashi Day Trip
RM606
per adult
98% of travellers recommend

Asakusa Senso-ji Temple and Old Tokyo Walking Tour
RM122
per adult
98% of travellers recommend

Tokyo Chopstick Making Workshop with Artisan
RM18
per adult
100% of travellers recommend

Tokyo Evening Food Adventure: Hidden Eateries & Local Flavours
RM247
per adult
90% of travellers recommend

Tokyo: Mt. Fuji 5th St, Gotemba & Hakone by Luxury Bus
RM368
per adult
94% of travellers recommend

From Tokyo: Mt. Fuji & Hakone Tour w/ Return by Bullet Train
RM460
per adult
82% of travellers recommend

Tokyo: Mt Fuji & Arakurayama& Oshino Hakkai&Lake Kawaguchiko
RM194
per adult
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Top places to visit
1. Tokyo Disneyland®
At the captivating Tokyo Disneyland® theme resort, the movies of Walt Disney spring to life with a host of family-friendly attractions. Enjoy roller coasters and fairground rides, watch music and dance performances and meet world-famous Disney characters. You can even spend the night at a themed hotel. The resort opened in 1983 and was the first Disney Park outside of the U.S.
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2. Tokyo DisneySea®
Take the whole family to Tokyo DisneySea® for an experience like no other. This fantasy theme park is part of the Tokyo Disney Resort, but it is unlike any other Disney park in the world. Here, the myths and legends of the oceans come to life, with seven fantastical areas to explore. From Mediterranean Harbor, where you can float down Venice-style canals on gondolas, to the Arabian Coast and the magical world of Aladdin, there are memories to be made at every turn.
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3. Shibuya Crossing
Marvel at Shibuya Crossing’s flashing neon lights, gigantic video screens and up to 2,500 pedestrians surging into the street simultaneously. The experience is chaotic and compelling. This intersection encapsulates the city’s energy and is a popular setting for Tokyo street scenes in photos and motion pictures, including Sofia Coppola’s Lost in Translation.
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4. Tokyo Skytree
Built as a broadcast tower and opened to the public in 2012, Tokyo Skytree has quickly become a must-see attraction. The world's second-tallest structure behind the 828-metre Burj Khalifa in Dubai serves as a digital terrestrial broadcasting centre for Tokyo and the surrounding region. The public can ride up to the two observation decks and enjoy 360-degree views of Tokyo against the stunning back drop of Mount Fuji in the distance.
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5. Tokyo Tower
Back in 1958 Tokyo's brand-new TV networks needed a tall antenna array to transmit signals, and the city needed a national symbol as it struggled to emerge from the devastation of World War II. The result was the 333-metre high white and orange Tokyo Tower, a structure that bears more than a passing resemblance to France's Eiffel Tower and which has just celebrated its 55th anniversary. The two observatory points quickly became major tourist attractions and the tower now attracts around 2.4 million visitors a year. As well as the amazing views, there's a small art gallery, the Guinness Book of World Records Museum Tokyo, and a wax museum in a complex known as Foot Town, found at the base of the tower.
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6. Tokyo Imperial Palace
From the 1600s to 1867, shoguns ruling Edo, as Tokyo was then called, resided in Edo Castle on this site in central Tokyo. The castle was the largest in the world at that time. In 1868, when the shogunate was displaced, Japan moved its capital from Kyoto to Tokyo and occupied the Edo Castle site. After fire destroyed much of the complex, they built a new imperial palace in 1888, much of which remains today. The walls, towers and moat bridges are reminiscent of how the site was hundreds of years ago, when ramparts and moats played a critical role in protecting the complex.
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