The Fort Worth Press - Tokyo’s Housing playbook

USD -
AED 3.672498
AFN 63.999978
ALL 83.571528
AMD 379.306739
ANG 1.790083
AOA 917.000543
ARS 1394.5488
AUD 1.42107
AWG 1.8
AZN 1.702826
BAM 1.70403
BBD 2.026631
BDT 123.441516
BGN 1.709309
BHD 0.377535
BIF 2983.464413
BMD 1
BND 1.284852
BOB 6.95265
BRL 5.249899
BSD 1.006257
BTN 93.307018
BWP 13.64595
BYN 3.067036
BYR 19600
BZD 2.023756
CAD 1.37275
CDF 2269.999671
CHF 0.792795
CLF 0.023189
CLP 915.63033
CNY 6.87305
CNH 6.902925
COP 3708.35
CRC 469.967975
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 96.081456
CZK 21.329798
DJF 179.186419
DKK 6.51722
DOP 60.835276
DZD 132.611748
EGP 52.238599
ERN 15
ETB 157.116838
EUR 0.87214
FJD 2.218798
FKP 0.749449
GBP 0.753801
GEL 2.71498
GGP 0.749449
GHS 10.968788
GIP 0.749449
GMD 73.99993
GNF 8818.979979
GTQ 7.707255
GYD 210.505219
HKD 7.83798
HNL 26.6321
HRK 6.568969
HTG 131.875123
HUF 343.11898
IDR 16996
ILS 3.114899
IMP 0.749449
INR 93.36525
IQD 1318.032101
IRR 1314999.999943
ISK 124.89907
JEP 0.749449
JMD 157.992201
JOD 0.709053
JPY 159.738969
KES 129.602799
KGS 87.449671
KHR 4029.54184
KMF 427.999977
KPW 899.9784
KRW 1500.204982
KWD 0.30682
KYD 0.838475
KZT 485.403559
LAK 21591.404221
LBP 90120.825254
LKR 313.313697
LRD 184.128893
LSL 16.795929
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 6.420803
MAD 9.415922
MDL 17.543921
MGA 4190.776631
MKD 53.767521
MMK 2100.10344
MNT 3571.101739
MOP 8.123072
MRU 40.161217
MUR 46.510185
MVR 15.460116
MWK 1744.806191
MXN 17.81945
MYR 3.937986
MZN 63.899385
NAD 16.795929
NGN 1363.679914
NIO 37.027516
NOK 9.593355
NPR 149.303937
NZD 1.71947
OMR 0.384501
PAB 1.006169
PEN 3.436114
PGK 4.341518
PHP 60.079501
PKR 281.091833
PLN 3.728215
PYG 6503.590351
QAR 3.658789
RON 4.4412
RSD 102.446978
RUB 83.875022
RWF 1468.813316
SAR 3.754759
SBD 8.04524
SCR 14.496822
SDG 601.000264
SEK 9.409825
SGD 1.283335
SHP 0.750259
SLE 24.650018
SLL 20969.510825
SOS 575.063724
SRD 37.374991
STD 20697.981008
STN 21.350297
SVC 8.803744
SYP 110.58576
SZL 16.800579
THB 32.782992
TJS 9.62383
TMT 3.5
TND 2.960823
TOP 2.40776
TRY 44.31915
TTD 6.820677
TWD 32.0139
TZS 2601.22963
UAH 44.250993
UGX 3785.225075
UYU 40.745194
UZS 12269.740855
VES 450.94284
VND 26315
VUV 119.592862
WST 2.733704
XAF 571.627633
XAG 0.013408
XAU 0.000207
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.813334
XDR 0.710924
XOF 571.630124
XPF 103.919416
YER 238.575013
ZAR 16.989715
ZMK 9001.167862
ZMW 19.677217
ZWL 321.999592
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2100

    16.6

    -1.27%

  • NGG

    -3.0200

    87.4

    -3.46%

  • AZN

    -2.8700

    188.42

    -1.52%

  • VOD

    -0.3800

    14.37

    -2.64%

  • CMSC

    -0.1200

    22.83

    -0.53%

  • BCE

    -0.2600

    25.75

    -1.01%

  • RELX

    -0.4300

    33.86

    -1.27%

  • GSK

    -1.3500

    52.06

    -2.59%

  • RIO

    -2.0800

    87.72

    -2.37%

  • BTI

    -2.4600

    58.09

    -4.23%

  • JRI

    -0.1370

    12.323

    -1.11%

  • BCC

    -1.0800

    71.84

    -1.5%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    22.89

    +0.04%

  • BP

    0.7600

    44.61

    +1.7%


Tokyo’s Housing playbook




Tokyo is the global outlier: a megacity that keeps housing comparatively affordable by continually adding homes where people want to live. While most world capitals saw rents and prices surge over the past decade, Tokyo’s core has absorbed population and job growth with steady construction, friction-light planning, and transport-led density. The result is a market that feels tight, but not prohibitive, especially measured against incomes and against other alpha cities.

A supply engine that rarely stalls
By-right building and flexible zoning. Tokyo’s national and metropolitan rules concentrate on managing externalities (sunlight, noise, fire safety) rather than prescribing narrow building forms. With broad residential/commercial categories and generous floor-area ratios on transit corridors, projects that meet code typically proceed without political hearings or discretionary up-zoning battles.

Short, predictable approvals. Standardized codes and professionalized review compress time-to-permit, lowering finance risk and encouraging small and mid-sized developers to build continuously rather than only in booms.

Rebuild culture. Earthquake codes, depreciation schedules and a consumer preference for new stock mean frequent teardown-and-rebuild cycles. Even on tiny lots, owners routinely add units or convert to small apartment buildings, incrementally densifying neighborhoods.

Transit makes density livable—and bankable
Private rail drives housing. Tokyo’s private railways integrate stations, shopping, offices and large volumes of mid-rise housing around their lines. Ticket revenue is only part of the business model; property income and development rights fund frequent service and station upgrades.

Unlimited “15-minute” catchments. Because most residents live near frequent rail, mid-rise density scales across dozens of hubs, not just the CBD. That spreads demand—and construction—over a vast footprint, preventing a handful of postcodes from overheating.

Institutions that add capacity
Public/semipublic landlords. Agencies such as the Urban Renaissance (UR) group, municipal corporations and housing cooperatives provide tens of thousands of no-frills, well-located rentals. These aren’t deep-subsidy projects; they are steady, middle-market supply that anchors rents.

Condominiums and rentals grow together. Developers deliver both for-sale condos and purpose-built rentals, so investors don’t have to outbid first-time buyers to add stock. A liquid mortgage market and still-low borrowing costs support new starts even when global rates rise.

Prices, rents and incomes: the relative picture
- Rents are high—but not New York/London high. Typical inner-ward one-bedroom rents remain far below peer megacities when converted at purchasing-power parity. Commuter-line hubs two or three stops from Shinjuku or Tokyo Station offer modern 1LDK units at prices that service workers can realistically afford—without hour-long car commutes.
- Incomes track shelter costs better than elsewhere. On standard measures (price-to-income, price-to-rent), Japan’s trend since the mid-2010s has been flatter than most OECD countries. Tokyo has seen pockets of luxury inflation, but the citywide rent and price indices have grown far more slowly than in North America or Western Europe.
- Volume matters. Even with nationwide housing starts easing in 2023–2024, Greater Tokyo continues to add substantial numbers of dwellings each year, especially along infill rail corridors and in redevelopment districts (Shibuya, Shinagawa, Toyosu, Kachidoki).

Why the system resists scarcity
- Politics aligns with building. Because zoning is permissive citywide, there’s less incentive for neighborhood vetoes or speculative land banking tied to hearings.
- Small lots, small builders. A fragmented development ecology turns thousands of micro-sites into duplexes and 3–10-unit walk-ups, the “missing middle” that many cities lack.
- Elastic density near jobs. Station-area rules allow extra floor area for mixed-use, family-sized units and open space, so growth concentrates where services exist.

What could change
- Aging construction workforce may raise costs and slow output unless training and immigration expand.
- Materials inflation and redevelopment of marquee sites can pull contractors toward luxury segments if not counterbalanced by steady mid-market programs.
- Demographic shifts—Tokyo’s net in-migration has already slowed—could rebalance demand across the metro, altering where affordability is best.

The takeaways for other megacities
- Make most housing legal by default; reserve politics for genuine impacts, not routine approvals.
- Let transit operators profit from development so they have reason to add service and stations.
- Cultivate small builders and small lots; mass only high-rises won’t close the gap.
- Keep a neutral, middle-market rental sector that adds units year-in, year-out.
- Measure success in permits and completions, not just plans.

Tokyo’s achievement isn’t magic. It is a long-running, systems-level commitment to abundant, transit-served housing—and a regulatory culture that treats new homes as a feature, not a problem.