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Travel/Tokyo 23 Wards Daycare Guide: Where to Live, Where It's Hard
5 min read
April 9, 2026

Tokyo 23 Wards Daycare Guide: Where to Live, Where It's Hard

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Tokyo's 23 wards have the most competitive daycare market in Japan. From September 2025, Tokyo made first-child daycare fees free for ages 0–2 with no income limit. Ward-by-ward comparison, competitive vs easy areas, and strategy for foreign families choosing where to live.

Tokyo 23 Wards Daycare Guide: Where to Live, Where It's Hard
Back to Complete Guide:Japan Daycare for Foreign Parents (2026): The Untranslated System

Table of Contents

  1. 1The big change: 1st child daycare is now free in Tokyo
  2. 2The April 2025 Tokyo daycare landscape
  3. 3Each ward operates independently
  4. 4Ward-by-ward overview
  5. 5Strategic considerations for foreign families
  6. 6How Tokyo's system differs from the rest of Japan
  7. 7The application timeline (Tokyo wards, typical)
  8. 8Where to find your ward's specific information
  9. 9Multilingual support at Tokyo ward offices
  10. 10Related Articles
  11. 11Need More Help? Ask on LO-PAL

Headline: Tokyo's 23 wards have the most competitive daycare market in Japan. Even though Tokyo's waitlist hit a historic low in April 2025, several wards still have ratios over 1.5x for 1-year-old slots — and each ward operates its own independent system with its own forms, point tables, and rules.

Big news for foreign families: From September 2025, Tokyo Metropolitan Government made the first child's daycare fees (ages 0–2) completely free — no income limit. Combined with the existing free policy for 2nd children and up, daycare in Tokyo is now effectively free for 0–5 year olds at licensed facilities.

Information current as of April 2026 based on the Tokyo Bureau of Social Welfare, the Children and Families Agency April 2025 daycare statistics, and ward-level publications. Each ward has its own rules — always check the specific ward office for your situation.

Tokyo is the only place in Japan where the "daycare crisis" narrative is still partly accurate. National waitlists dropped from 26,081 in 2017 to 2,254 in April 2025, but Tokyo still represents a meaningful share of that remaining waitlist — and central wards remain competitive enough that point scores still matter. This guide compares the 23 wards so you can choose where to live and apply strategically.

The big change: 1st child daycare is now free in Tokyo

From September 1, 2025, Tokyo Metropolitan Government made daycare fees for the first child aged 0–2 free, with no income limit. This stacked on top of the existing 2nd-child-onward free policy from 2023.

The combined effect:

  • 0–2 year olds: All children in Tokyo licensed daycares are now free for tuition (you still pay meal fees, supplies, etc.)
  • 3–5 year olds: Already free under the national policy since October 2019

This makes Tokyo the most generous major city in Japan for daycare costs — eliminating the income-based fee structure that still applies in most other cities. Source: Tokyo Bureau of Social Welfare.

What "free" doesn't include

  • Meal fees (給食費) — typically ¥4,500–¥7,500/month
  • Extended-hours fees (延長保育料) — if you pick up after the standard time
  • Event fees (行事費) — once or twice a year
  • Diaper fees at some facilities
  • Supplies you bring from home (clothes, futon, etc.)

The April 2025 Tokyo daycare landscape

National data for April 2025:

  • National waitlist: 2,254 children (down 313 from 2024)
  • 83.3% of all waitlisted children nationwide are 1–2 year olds
  • 1,489 of 1,741 municipalities (85.5%) now report zero waitlist

For Tokyo specifically, recent annual reports show the wards with the most difficulty filling daycare slots are concentrated in eastern Tokyo (城東 area) and high-density central areas:

Difficulty rankWard (per recent surveys)Notes
Hardest江戸川区 (Edogawa)0-year-old slot ratio reportedly 7.66x. Largest gap between population and capacity.
2nd台東区 (Taito)Rising difficulty as residential population grows in central Tokyo
3rd大田区 (Ota)Mixed residential, large area, uneven daycare distribution
4th中央区 (Chuo)High-rise residential boom, capacity hasn't kept up
Also competitive港区 (Minato), 渋谷区 (Shibuya), 世田谷区 (Setagaya), 杉並区 (Suginami)Central wards with high foreign-resident populations and competitive 1-year cutoffs

Source: Style Act / Sumai Surfin "23-Ward Hardest Stations" annual report. Waitlist data from CFA April 2025 statistics.

Wards with consistently more capacity (easier to get in)

  • 足立区 (Adachi) — Large area, lots of facilities, generally available spots
  • 葛飾区 (Katsushika) — Family-oriented residential area with capacity
  • 練馬区 (Nerima) — Most areas have available 1-year and 2-year spots
  • 北区 (Kita) — Generally good availability
  • 板橋区 (Itabashi) — Large area, mixed difficulty by neighborhood

Each ward operates independently

Unlike Osaka City (which has a centralized system), each Tokyo ward runs its own daycare application process. This means:

  • Each ward has its own application form (申込書) — they look similar but have small differences
  • Each ward has its own point table (利用調整基準表) — the specific scores for each adjustment vary
  • Each ward has its own deadlines (most are early-to-mid November, but check yours)
  • Each ward has its own list of daycares and capacity
  • If you move between wards, you must re-apply in your new ward (your previous application doesn't transfer)

Practical implication: You cannot rely on advice from a friend who lives in a different ward. You must read your specific ward's "保育のごあんない" (daycare information booklet).

Ward-by-ward overview

Here's a high-level comparison. Cutoff scores and exact ratios change every year — these are general indicators based on recent multi-year data. Always verify with the current year's data from the ward office.

Ward1-year competitiveness3-year competitivenessNotable feature
千代田区 (Chiyoda)ModerateEasySmallest population, generally manageable
中央区 (Chuo)HardModerateHigh-rise residential growth outpaces capacity
港区 (Minato)HardModerateHigh income, high competition. Some English-friendly facilities.
新宿区 (Shinjuku)ModerateEasyDiverse neighborhoods, varying competition
文京区 (Bunkyo)HardModerateEducation-focused families, high demand
台東区 (Taito)HardModerateRecent population growth
墨田区 (Sumida)ModerateEasyMixed
江東区 (Koto)Moderate-HardModerateToyosu/Ariake area especially competitive
品川区 (Shinagawa)ModerateEasyGenerally manageable
目黒区 (Meguro)Moderate-HardModerateHigh-income residential
大田区 (Ota)HardModerateLargest 23-ward area, uneven daycare distribution
世田谷区 (Setagaya)HardModerateLargest population in Tokyo. Central areas very competitive.
渋谷区 (Shibuya)HardModerateHigh income, high competition
中野区 (Nakano)ModerateEasyGenerally manageable
杉並区 (Suginami)HardModerateFamily-friendly area, competitive 1-year
豊島区 (Toshima)ModerateEasyMixed
北区 (Kita)Easy-ModerateEasyGenerally available
荒川区 (Arakawa)ModerateEasyMixed
板橋区 (Itabashi)Easy-ModerateEasyLarge area, varies by neighborhood
練馬区 (Nerima)Easy-ModerateEasyGenerally available
足立区 (Adachi)EasyEasyLots of facilities, generally available
葛飾区 (Katsushika)EasyEasyFamily-friendly with capacity
江戸川区 (Edogawa)Very HardHardHighest 0-year-old ratio reported (~7.66x). Capacity expansion lagging.

Strategic considerations for foreign families

If you're choosing where to live in Tokyo

If your job allows flexibility on where you live, consider these factors when picking a ward for daycare:

  1. Avoid Edogawa, Chuo, Minato, Setagaya central, and Suginami central if you have a 0–1 year old and need certainty. The ratios are still high.
  2. Consider Adachi, Katsushika, Nerima, Itabashi, Kita for easier daycare access. Lower rents too.
  3. Suburban Tokyo (outside the 23 wards) — Mitaka, Musashino, Tachikawa, Hachioji — generally has spots immediately available.
  4. The wards with multilingual support staff at city hall include Shinjuku, Minato, Shibuya, Setagaya, Toshima — even though some are competitive, they're more navigable in English.

If you're already in a competitive ward

  1. Maximize your point score — see point system guide
  2. List 8–10 daycares instead of 5 — central wards expect long lists
  3. Tour daycares early — September and early October before the deadline
  4. Apply for the second round (二次選考) in February if you don't get in first time
  5. Consider unlicensed daycare with Tokyo subsidy — Tokyo's 認可外保育施設等利用支援事業 makes some unlicensed options effectively free

How Tokyo's system differs from the rest of Japan

FeatureTokyo 23 WardsMost other cities
0–2 fee structure1st child free (no income limit) from Sept 2025Income-based
System organizationEach ward operates independentlyUsually city-wide centralized
Application competitionStill meaningful in central wardsMostly resolved (zero or near-zero waitlist)
Point systemEach ward has its own tableEach city has its own table
Foreign-language supportVariable, some wards have multilingual staffVariable, large cities have some support
Unlicensed daycare subsidiesStrong (each ward has its own program)Limited or none

The application timeline (Tokyo wards, typical)

WhenWhat happens
August (year before)"保育のごあんない" published by each ward
SeptemberTour daycares (book in advance)
Early OctoberApplication window opens
Mid-NovemberApplication deadline (varies by ward — some Nov 10, some Nov 20, some Nov 25)
JanuarySelection processing
Late January – early FebruaryFirst-round results mailed
FebruarySecond-round application for unfilled spots
MarchOrientation at assigned daycare
April 1Daycare starts

Critical deadline differences: Most wards close applications between November 10 and November 25. Some wards (Setagaya, Suginami) have earlier deadlines — verify your specific ward.

Where to find your ward's specific information

Search for your ward + daycare info:

  • Search: [ward name in Japanese] 保育のごあんない 令和X年
  • Or: [ward name] 保育園 申込
  • Each ward office has a 保育課 (daycare division) or 子育て支援課 (childcare support division) where you can pick up paper materials

Examples:

  • Minato: 港区 子ども家庭支援部 子ども政策課
  • Shinjuku: 新宿区 子ども家庭部 保育課
  • Setagaya: 世田谷区 保育部 保育課
  • Shibuya: 渋谷区 子ども家庭部 保育課

Multilingual support at Tokyo ward offices

Several Tokyo wards offer multilingual support for foreign families during the daycare application process:

  • Shinjuku Multilingual Counter — At Shinjuku Ward Office, English/Chinese/Korean support
  • Minato International Center — Provides interpretation services for ward-related procedures
  • Setagaya International Information Corner — Translation of documents and accompaniment to ward office
  • Toshima Multicultural Centre — Multilingual support for residents

Smaller wards may not offer dedicated multilingual support, in which case you'll need to bring your own interpreter or book a LO-PAL helper.

Related Articles

  • Japan Daycare Guide: Pillar Overview
  • Hoikuen Application Step-by-Step
  • Point System Decoded
  • 5 Daycare Types Compared
  • Osaka City Daycare 2026

Need More Help? Ask on LO-PAL

Need someone to come to your specific Tokyo ward office with you? Translate the ward's daycare information booklet? Or compare wards before you decide where to live? LO-PAL matches you with a Tokyo-based local helper who knows your ward's system. Post your request and get matched.

Written by

Taku Kanaya
Taku Kanaya

Founder, LO-PAL

Former Medical Coordinator for Foreign Patients (Ministry of Health programme) and legal affairs professional. Built LO-PAL from firsthand experience navigating life abroad.

Written with partial AI assistance

Read full bio →

Table of Contents

  1. The big change: 1st child daycare is now free in Tokyo
  2. The April 2025 Tokyo daycare landscape
  3. Each ward operates independently
  4. Ward-by-ward overview
  5. Strategic considerations for foreign families
  6. How Tokyo's system differs from the rest of Japan
  7. The application timeline (Tokyo wards, typical)
  8. Where to find your ward's specific information
  9. Multilingual support at Tokyo ward offices
  10. Related Articles
  11. Need More Help? Ask on LO-PAL

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