Akihabara Gachapon Kaikan
Capsule-toy landmark open since 2002 with around 500 gachapon machines, from anime figures to quirky 'grown-up' designs. Cash only.
A capsule-toy hall with roughly 500 machines and about 50 new titles each month. Cash only, with ¥1,000 bill changers inside.
- 촬영OK
오타쿠를 위한 안내
- 가는 법
- Suehirocho Station (Ginza Line) 2 min; JR Akihabara Station approx. 7 min Google 지도에서 열기 ↗
- 면세
- 불가
- 촬영
- 가능
- 결제
- cash
- 해외 배송
- 해외 배송 불가
영업시간
- Monday
- 11:00–20:00
- Tuesday
- 11:00–20:00
- Wednesday
- 11:00–20:00
- Thursday
- 11:00–20:00
- Friday
- 11:00–22:00
- Saturday
- 11:00–22:00
- Sunday
- 11:00–19:00
주력 장르
What it is
Akihabara Gachapon Kaikan has operated since 2002, making it a long-standing landmark for capsule-toy (gachapon) fans. It packs roughly 500 machines into a single floor, with around 50 new titles rotating in each month.
The lineup ranges from anime and character figures to the detailed, design-led "grown-up" capsule toys the shop is known for, plus animal and miniature series, with a collectible-figures corner at the back. It's an easy, fun way to sample Japan's gachapon culture — but note it is cash-only, so bring coins or ¥1,000 bills for the on-site changers.
근처·관련
One perfect day in Akihabara: a first-timer's otaku itinerary
A practical hour-by-hour route through Akihabara for your first visit — landmark shops, a maid café, gachapon, a card-shop peek and dinner — all within a 10-minute walk.
Tax-free shopping in Japan: how it works for otaku buys (passport, minimums, rules)
How foreign visitors save Japan's 10% consumption tax on figures, electronics and anime goods — who qualifies, the spend minimums, what the rules are, and the changes to watch.
How to see idols in Akihabara: AKB48 Theater, idol bars & live houses
Akihabara is the home of 'idols you can meet.' Here's how a foreign fan actually sees a show — AKB48 Theater's lottery tickets, idol bars like Dear Stage, and chika-idol live houses.
Where to play card games in Tokyo: Pokémon, Magic, Yu-Gi-Oh & One Piece TCG
How a foreign visitor finds and joins a TCG tournament in Tokyo this week — the best Akihabara shops, how shop events work, the OCG-vs-TCG card trap, and how to sign up despite the language barrier.