Best-of list · Live Music

The 9 Best Live Music Bars in Tokyo 2026

The 10 best live music bars in Tokyo for 2026 — picked by our editors. Hand-picked by our city editors. Locations, hours, neighbourhoods and price.

The short answer

Our editors' №1 is The Bellwood.

9 ranked rooms follow. How we picked is at the end of this guide.

Best overallThe Bellwood
Third pickBlue Note Tokyo

Tokyo's live music scene runs from intimate jazz counters to listening bars. The bars below show why Japan's capital is one of Asia's deepest live music cities.

The 10 best live music bars in Tokyo

Editor's №1

The Bellwood

Atsushi Suzuki built The Bellwood in Shibuya after six years behind bars in Shanghai and New York, and it landed at number 48 on the World's 50 Best Bars 2025. The room runs a Taisho-era kissa theme with live jazz most nights, and the drinks track a kaiseki-style flow. Open 6 PM to 2 AM daily. Come on a weeknight before 9 to keep the counter and the band in earshot.

Full listing & hours →

Jazz Spot Intro

Intro is a basement two minutes from Takadanobaba station, running jam sessions since 1988. Bar manager Inoue-san plays alto sax, then ducks behind the bar to pour. Sessions hit Monday and Thursday from 5 PM and Saturday until 5 AM. Entry runs about 1,000 yen with a drink. Go late, sit close, and let the regulars trade choruses while he refills your glass.

Blue Note Tokyo

Blue Note Tokyo is the Aoyama room where touring American names play to a seated supper crowd. It is polished, pricey, and books two sets a night, so even the back table sees the stage. Reserve ahead and expect a cover plus a minimum spend. Come for a headliner you already love, not a cheap night out. The early set runs quieter than the second.

Full listing & hours →

Cotton Club

Cotton Club sits in Marunouchi, a sibling to Blue Note that leans jazz, soul, and vocal acts across two nightly sets. The tables are tight and the sound stays clean from the back wall. Dinner service runs alongside the music, so book a table if you want to eat. Prices match the room. Go for a name on the calendar and dress like you mean it.

Full listing & hours →

Shinjuku Pit Inn

Pit Inn has run jazz in Shinjuku since 1965, which makes it the oldest serious room on this list. It books a matinee and an evening set most days, with afternoon shows cheaper and student-friendly. The crowd comes to listen, not talk. No frills, no view, just the music. Check the schedule, pick a night with a player you want, and get there early for a forward seat.

Full listing & hours →

Jirokichi

Jirokichi has held down a Koenji basement since 1975 and hit its 50th year in 2025. It runs live music every night across blues, rock, and roots, with a small stage and a crowd packed close. Cover charges sit modest by Tokyo standards. The room rewards a band you have never heard of. Show up, pay the door, and let Koenji's oldest live house pick the act.

Liquidroom

Liquidroom is the Ebisu standing-room hall that books indie, electronic, and rock acts loud enough to feel in your chest. Capacity runs near 900, so this is a gig night, not a quiet drink. The bar pours fast between sets. Check the calendar, buy the ticket ahead, and wear shoes you can stand in for three hours. The floor near the rail is the spot.

Club Quattro

Shibuya's Club Quattro stacks a live house inside a department-store building and books touring rock and pop most nights. It is standing-room, capacity around 700, with a balcony for people who want a wall to lean on. Buy ahead, since good bills sell out. The bar is for between-set refills, not lingering. Come for a band on the rise and get on the floor early.

What The Dickens

What the Dickens is an Ebisu British pub open since 1995, with live music most nights and a kitchen of pub classics. The wooden room fills with locals and expats. Best for draught pints and a band.

Full listing & hours →

Weekly picks

The bars worth going to, weekly.