Typhoon Warning Issued for Tokyo and Kanto Region
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Typhoon Warning Issued for Tokyo and Kanto Region

A typhoon reached Tokyo and Kanto on 30 June 2026, bringing heavy rain and high wave risks. Here is what visitors should do and check right now.

Declan BarryBy Declan Barry·4 min read·Published 30 June 2026·Last reviewed June 2026

Typhoon Warning Issued for Tokyo and Kanto Region

Published 30 June 2026

A typhoon moved towards the Kanto region on 30 June 2026, bringing forecasts of heavy rain and high waves that may affect travel in and around Tokyo. Visitors staying in or travelling through the area should treat the situation as ongoing and check conditions before heading out, particularly near coastal spots and riverside locations.

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What Has Been Forecast

The typhoon brought the risk of significant rainfall across greater Tokyo and the wider Kanto area. High waves were also forecast for coastal zones, which could affect access to seaside areas such as Kamakura, Enoshima, and the Tokyo Bay waterfront. Riverside paths and low-lying areas near rivers such as the Tama and Arakawa were flagged as potential flood risk zones.

JR East and private rail operators in the region have the authority to suspend or delay services at short notice when wind speeds or rainfall exceed safety thresholds. If you are relying on the Shonan-Shinjuku Line, the Keikyu Line to Yokohama, or any coastal route, build in extra time or hold off on non-essential journeys until conditions stabilise.

Practical Steps for Visitors Right Now

Download the Disaster Preparedness Tokyo App. This is the most direct way to receive official alerts in English, Chinese, or Korean. The app covers evacuation advisories, river levels, and transport disruption notices specific to Tokyo. Search "Disaster Preparedness Tokyo" in your app store.

Check the Tokyo Metro and JR East service status pages before boarding. Both publish real-time suspension notices in English. JR East's site is www.jreast.co.jp/e/ and Tokyo Metro's is www.tokyometro.jp/en/.

Avoid riverbanks and seafronts. Even if rain has temporarily eased in your immediate area, river levels can rise rapidly when heavy rainfall hits upstream. The lower reaches of the Tama River and areas along Tokyo Bay are the highest-risk zones for visitors.

Keep your accommodation informed. If you are travelling between hotels today or tomorrow, let both properties know. Some ryokan and smaller guesthouses in lower-lying areas of Tokyo (parts of Sumida, Koto, and Edogawa wards sit below sea level) may issue their own guidance to guests.

Carry your IC card rather than relying on timed tickets. If a train line is suspended, having a Suica or Pasmo card gives you more flexibility to reroute. Pre-booked limited express tickets on suspended lines are generally refunded without a cancellation fee during weather disruptions - keep your receipts and check at the station window.

Timing and Recovery

Typhoons moving through the Kanto region typically bring the worst conditions over a 12 to 24-hour window, with disruption often continuing for several hours after the storm passes as operators inspect tracks and coastal roads. Conditions should be clearer by 1 or 2 July, but verify this through official channels rather than assuming.

If your travel plans are flexible, indoor options in central Tokyo - the teamLab venues, museum complexes at Ueno, or covered shopping districts such as those around Shinjuku Station - are worth prioritising today instead of outdoor itineraries.

Source

Go Tokyo - Official Tokyo Travel Guide

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Declan Barry

Written by

Declan Barry

Founder, Your JP Adventure

Declan Barry is the founder of Your JP Adventure. He and his wife have planned their own Japan trips since 2022 — including a three-month stay — basing themselves in a handful of cities and day-tripping out, rather than chasing the standard highlight-reel itinerary. He built the planner to be the tool they wish they had had, and writes from first-hand experience on the ground.

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