is an entertainment district in Shinjuku, Tokyo, Japan. Kabukichō is considered a red-light district with a high concentration of host and hostess clubs, love hotels, shops, restaurants, and nightclubs, and is often called the . Shinjuku Golden Gai, famous for its plethora of small bars, is part of Kabukichō.
The district's name comes from late-1940s plans to build a kabuki theater, and although the theater was never built, the name stuck.
The area has many movie theaters, and is located near Shinjuku Station, Seibu Shinjuku Station, and several other major railway and subway stations.
The Shinjuku City Office / ward office is located in Kabukichō.
History
thumb|left|Aerial photograph (2009)
Originally, the area was known as and was a swamp. After the Meiji Period, the area became a duck sanctuary. As the Yodobashi Purification Plant was built in 1893, the ponds were filled in. In 1920, a girls' school was built there, and the surroundings were developed into a residential area. Prior to World War II, the district was one of the areas open to non-mainland property owners (primarily from the colonies in Taiwan and Korea), who mainly operated , predecessors to today's love hotels.
Kabukichō was quickly redeveloped after the war, mainly due to the efforts of the overseas Chinese in Japan who bought land left unused after the expos and greatly developed them. The "three most renowned overseas Chinese of Kabukicho" include the founder of Humax, Lin Yi-wen, who started his business with a cabaret; Lin Tsai-wang, who built the Fūrin Kaikan; and Lee Ho-chu, owner of the Tokyo Hotel Chinese restaurant. In 2002, it was estimated that 70% of the land in Kabukichō was owned by foreign-born Japanese residents and their descendants.
, a portrait photographer who took pictures and sold prints back to his subjects for a modest , documented the citizens of Kabukichō during this transition period in the 1960s and 1970s. His portraits of Kabukichō residents received critical attention and praise from fellow photographers, and are today exhibited in museums like the Metropolitan Museum of Art. In 1971, , a former mattress salesman, opened "Club Ai", the first host club in Kabukichō; at its peak, Aida's company reported billion in annual revenue. The site was redeveloped and the Toho Shinjuku Building was completed there in 2014, including the 12-screen Toho Cinemas Shinjuku theatre and the Hotel Gracery Shinjuku. A "life-size" replica of Godzilla (from the neck up) was added to an outdoor terrace in 2015; it has since become a local landmark.
The Tokyu Milano-za movie theater, just west of Cinecity Square, was the largest in Japan when it opened in 1956. A high skyscraper called the Tokyu Kabukicho Tower (which is being developed by the former owners of the Tokyu Milano) is built and was opened on 14 April 2023.
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File:Kabukichō Ōme Kaidō bridge.jpg|The bridge over Ōme Kaidō looking east towards Kabukichō
File:Colorful neon street signs in Kabukichō, Shinjuku, Tokyo.jpg|Neon street signs at Sakura-Dōri
File:Tokyo Shinjuku Milano za.jpg|Tokyu Milano-za in 2012, looking west from Cinecity Square
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Crime
thumb|right|Advertisements for host, hostess, and cabaret clubs (2016)
In 2004, according to a spokesperson of Metropolitan Tokyo, there were more than 1,000 yakuza in Kabukichō, and 120 different enterprises under their control.
Entering the new millennium, laws were more strictly enforced and patrols became more frequent. In addition, fifty closed-circuit cameras were installed in May 2002 after the Myojo 56 building fire that killed 44; the patrols and cameras reduced criminal activities in Kabukichō, amidst controversy.
Private citizens and government agencies launched a joint effort in July 2003, called the Shinjuku Shopping Center Committee to Expel Organized-Crime Groups, with the aim to replace unlicensed and adult-oriented businesses (which were believed to pay protection fees to organized crime groups) with legitimate businesses. In 2004, the police undertook an operation clamping down on illegal clubs and brothels, causing many to go out of business. An amendment to the 1948 Adult Entertainment law made aggressive catching of female patrons by male hosts illegal. The punishment for violating the ordinance, which ranges up to one year in prison and a fine of , is intended to provide an excuse for refusing to make protection payments.
In recent years, with the increase in tourism, especially among younger foreign visitors interested in Japanese nightlife, several concierge and community groups have attempted to provide safer matchmaking and social interaction experiences in the district. Some newer dating platforms, such as Yoitoki, have specifically marketed themselves as foreigner-friendly services offering pre-agreed transportation compensation and mutual consent-based arrangements. These platforms are often discussed in travel-related content across social media, especially among Tokyo-based influencers documenting modern dating culture in areas like Kabukichō.
is a form of bait-and-switch, where patrons are attracted by a low advertised price but then charged numerous hidden fees. In one instance, a group of nine was lured into a bar under the promise the all-inclusive cost was (about in 2025); the hostesses inside consumed 172 drinks and the final bill was , over in 2025 dollars. The staff at the bar allegedly threatened the patrons to ensure payment. In 2015, there were 1,052 reported cases of in the first four months of the year alone, particularly targeting foreign tourists from China and Korea, prompting a crackdown that began in May; in July, there were only 45 reported cases of and 28 bars had been shut down.
In 2007, local businessman Takeshi Aida founded the Shinjuku Kabukicho Host Club Anti-Organized Crime Gang Association to disassociate host and hostess clubs from organized crime, reduce the aggressive "catching" street solicitations, and eliminate the practice.
In popular culture
Kabukichō has been featured in:
- Black Lagoon (manga)
- Case File nº221: Kabukicho (anime television series)
- City Hunter (manga)
- Cells at Work! Code Black as
- Digimon Story: Time Stranger (role-playing video game)
- Gintama (manga)
- Hypnosis Mic: Division Rap Battle (multimedia project)
- Ichi the Killer<!--intentional link to DAB page--> (both film and manga)
- 20th Century Boys (manga)
- Lost in Translation 2003 film
- Enter the Void 2009 film
- Midnight Diner (Japanese TV series)
- Odd Taxi (anime)
- Persona 5 (video game) as
- Shin Petshop of Horrors (manga)
- A Place Further than the Universe (anime)
- Tokyo Afterschool Summoners (role-playing video game)
- Tokyo Vice (2009 memoir by Jake Adelstein)
- Watamote (anime) Episode 5
- Weathering with You (film)
- Yakuza and Judgment (video game series), as Kamurochō
- In the Miso Soup (1997 novel)
Gallery
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File:新宿 歌舞伎町 Shinjuku Tokyo, Japan Sigma 35mm Canon 6D (33795009235).jpg|Kabukichō, view north along Ichibangai-dori towards the Humax Pavilion complex (night, 2016)
File:Kabukicho (31465119364).jpg|Kabukichō, view north along Ichibangai-dori towards the Humax Pavilion complex (day, 2016)
File:Central Road Kabukicho-Sinjyuku-Tokyo.jpg|View north along Central Road towards Toho Building
File:Shinjuku Toho1.jpg|Shinjuku Toho Building
File:Tokyo Route 302 -06.jpg|View east along Yasukuni-Dori, the southern border
File:Kabukicho-Shinjuku-Tokyo 20120204.jpg|View east along Yasukuni-Dori at night
File:I love Kabukicho (29262192243).jpg|I ♥ Kabukichō sign
File:Sakura Dori street Kabukicho-Sinjyuku-Tokyo.jpg|Gate at Sakura-Dori, looking north from Yasukuni-Dori
File:Lights of Kabukicho (41642972072).jpg|Sakura-Dori at dusk
File:Shinjuku 06.JPG|Signs along Sakura-Dori, including entrance to the Robot Restaurant
File:Charge of the fembots Robot Restaurant, Shinjuku Tokyo.jpg|Show at the Robot Restaurant
File:Shinjuku.jpg|Kabukicho back alleys are a popular yakuza hangout.
新宿区歌舞伎町 20250824.jpg|CentralRoad (20250824)
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See also
- Jūsō, Osaka
- Kyabakura Union
- Tobita Shinchi, Osaka
References
External links
- Kabukicho Renaissance official website
- KABUKI Kabukicho portal site
- Kabukicho Commune
