Chuo-ku

Chuo-ku

Check central work access and waterfront options together.

Ginza, Nihonbashi, Tsukiji, Kachidoki, and Harumi cover work and daily life in different ways.

Start broad

Chuo-ku

Keep choices open

Inside the ward

3

Compare neighborhoods

If unsure

Look nearby

Look nearby

Next action

Rentals

Open current rooms

I

Choose where to start

1Start the search

Check central work access and waterfront options together.

Ginza, Nihonbashi, Tsukiji, Kachidoki, and Harumi cover work and daily life in different ways.

(1)

Why it can be a starting point

Ginza, Nihonbashi, Tsukiji, Kachidoki, and Harumi cover work and daily life in different ways.

(2)

Do not narrow too early

Ginza-side and Kachidoki-side life are not the same.

(3)

Where to widen next

Compare Koto, Chiyoda, and Minato-side choices.

II

Compare daily-life areas

3Commute and routes

Commute and movement

Judge the ward by where you actually go, not only by the address name.

Search from your destination

Where should you keep open?

Pick a real destination, then compare the route and the places worth keeping before you narrow the rental search.

Times are daytime references for choosing where to start. Current rooms are checked in Rent.

Central office default

Tokyo / Otemachi

about 5 min

Direct

Route

1

G Tokyo Metro Ginza Line

Nihonbashi and Ginza stay close

Lines and places to compare

(1)

Ginza / Nihonbashi side

Best when central office access and commercial convenience are the first reason.

(2)

Tsukiji / Tsukishima side

A better daily-life bridge between central access, food, and waterfront streets.

(3)

Kachidoki / Harumi side

Use it when space, newer towers, and bay-side routines matter more.

4Daily-life areas

Compare daily-life areas

The same ward can feel very different by station. Use the photos to choose what to check next.

6Daily-life check

Daily life changes inside the ward

Ginza, Nihonbashi, Tsukiji, Kachidoki, and Harumi cover work and daily life in different ways.

(1)

Ginza and Nihonbashi are convenient, but daily grocery routes and room size decide whether it works.

(2)

Tsukiji and Tsukishima make central Tokyo feel more lived-in, with food and water nearby.

(3)

Kachidoki and Harumi are not the same as Ginza-side Chuo: judge them by towers, bridges, and commute.

(4)

If central rent feels tight, compare Toyosu, Monzen-nakacho, Minato, and Chiyoda-side options.

III

Return to rentals and decide

5Search range

choose the search range in Chuo-ku

Compare Koto, Chiyoda, and Minato-side choices.

Search rentals

What to keep before opening rentals

Choose what matters first so you do not remove good rooms too early.

(1)

Start from Ginza / Nihonbashi

Ginza, Nihonbashi, Tsukiji, Kachidoki, and Harumi cover work and daily life in different ways.

(2)

Check before narrowing

Ginza-side and Kachidoki-side life are not the same.

(3)

Compare nearby choices

Compare Koto, Chiyoda, and Minato-side choices.

7Final judgment

Quick judgment

(1)

Should I search only Chuo-ku?

Compare Koto, Chiyoda, and Minato-side choices.

(2)

Which area should I compare first?

Ginza, Nihonbashi, Tsukiji, Kachidoki, and Harumi cover work and daily life in different ways.

(3)

What should I check before deciding?

Ginza-side and Kachidoki-side life are not the same.

If it feels right, check current rooms

Open rentals with the ward kept broad. Narrow by station only after you see how many choices remain.