AnimeJapan vs. Comiket: Complete Guide to Tokyo’s Biggest Anime Events 2026
I’ve attended both AnimeJapan and Comiket more times than I can count. The first time I showed up to Comiket unprepared—no cash, no strategy, wearing shoes meant for fashion instead of survival—I lasted four hours before my feet gave out. The second year, I did better. By year five, I had a system. This guide is what I wish someone had handed me on day one.
If you’re timing a trip around Japan’s biggest anime events, you need to know which one actually fits your interests, how to book tickets properly, and exactly what to pack. Both events happen at Tokyo Big Sight, but they’re wildly different experiences.
AnimeJapan: The Official Convention for Industry & Fans
When It Happens & How to Get Tickets
AnimeJapan 2026 runs March 28-31, but public attendance is only March 28-29. Industry and media get March 30-31. Unless you work in anime production or have media credentials, you’re attending the public days.
Ticket prices for public days:
| Ticket Type | Price (JPY) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 1-Day Pass (Advance) | ¥2,200 | Buy online before March 27 |
| 1-Day Pass (Day-of) | ¥2,700 | Lines start 7:00 AM |
| 2-Day Pass (Advance) | ¥3,800 | Better value if you have two days |
| Children (13-18) | ¥1,100 | ID required |
Buy advance tickets through the official AnimeJapan website (animejapan.jp) or Lawson ticket machines. Go into any Lawson, use the ticket terminal near the entrance, select AnimeJapan, and pay. Your tickets print immediately.
Day-of tickets mean arriving before 7:00 AM and waiting. On Saturday (busiest day), lines exceed 2,000 people by 8:00 AM. Advance tickets cost only ¥500 more and guarantee entry.
The Actual Experience: What You’ll See
AnimeJapan is massive. 250+ companies exhibiting, 400+ booths, stages running constantly. Major studios (Bones, Madhouse, Ufotable, Toei Animation) rent enormous pavilions. They unveil new projects, sell exclusive merchandise, and host voice actor panels.
Live stages happen all day—voice actor interviews, upcoming anime premieres, music performances. If you care about a specific panel, arrive early. Popular panels pack rooms with 500+ people.
Cosplay is heavy on Saturday, lighter on Sunday. Photography is allowed in designated areas. The experience takes 4-6 hours minimum.
Survival Tips for AnimeJapan
Arrive by 8:30 AM if you care about specific merch. Popular booths run out of exclusive items by mid-afternoon.
Bring a backpack, not a shoulder bag. A 20-liter pack is ideal.
Eat before you arrive or bring snacks. Convention center food has a 40-minute line by 11:00 AM.
Use the Rinkai Line (Yurikamome). Tokyo Big Sight sits on Odaiba. Take the Yurikamome from Shimbashi Station (20 minutes).
Comiket: 500,000 People Buying Doujinshi & Fanworks
What Is Comiket, Exactly?
Comiket (Comic Market) is a doujinshi market—a massive gathering where independent creators sell self-published manga, art books, music, and merchandise. It happens twice yearly: Summer Comiket (August) and Winter Comiket (December). Both at Tokyo Big Sight, 10:00 AM to 4:00 PM.
The scale is absurd. 15,000+ circles (independent vendors), entire sections devoted to single franchises. You’ll find original manga, fan-made merchandise, original art, music albums.
How Comiket Works for Foreigners
Do I need Japanese to buy stuff? Absolutely not. Cash payment, no conversation necessary. Point, hand over money, get item.
| Comiket Logistics | Details |
|---|---|
| Entry Fee | ¥1,000 (gets you a program) |
| Hours | 10:00 AM–4:00 PM both days |
| Payment | Cash only (some circles take PayPay) |
| Crowds Peak | 11:00 AM–1:00 PM |
| Parking | Nonexistent (use Yurikamome or Rinkai Line) |
Download the official Comiket catalog PDF (comiket.co.jp, 2 weeks before event). Identify 15-20 circles you want to visit and map a route.
Summer vs. Winter Comiket
Winter Comiket (December): Weather is tolerable (10-15°C), lines start forming around 6:00 AM. Entry lines can last 2+ hours.
Summer Comiket (August): Temperatures inside hit 28-30°C from body heat. Outdoor queues start 7:00 AM in direct sun. Bring water and a towel. People get dehydrated regularly.
Comiket Survival
Bring ¥30,000-50,000 minimum if you plan to buy things. Doujinshi ¥300–2,000 each; merch ¥1,000–5,000.
Comfortable shoes are non-negotiable. You’ll walk 3+ hours minimum in dense crowds.
Comparing Both Events
| Factor | AnimeJapan | Comiket |
|---|---|---|
| Best for | Official announcements, voice actor panels, casual fans | Rare fanworks, serious collectors |
| Attendance | 100K–150K across two days | 250K+ per day |
| Entry Fee | ¥2,200–2,700/day | ¥1,000 |
| Merch | Official, limited runs | Unique, one-of-a-kind |
| Stamina | Moderate | High |
Budget Breakdown
AnimeJapan (one day): ¥7,500–20,000+ depending on shopping.
Comiket (one day): ¥7,800–35,000+ depending on shopping.
Hotels & Timing
Stay in Shinjuku, Shibuya, or Shimbashi for best access (20-35 minutes to Big Sight). Budget hotels ¥4,000–8,000/night. Book early for Comiket weekends.
For anime-themed stays, some capsule hotels in Akihabara have character themes.
Related Activities
Akihabara complete guide | Collab cafe guide | Anime merch shopping guide
Related Guides
Follow @japan_pop_now for event updates and insider tips.



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