Welcome to Tokyo, where selling your kidney is not enough to live a comfortable life (sarcasm)

Housing in Tokyo has insanely skyrocketed in the past three years. It’s always been overpriced since a long time ago, but the absurdity of it has reached a whole new level. A newly built 25 square meter apartment in Tokyo costs around 140,000 yen a month (around $930? Why do Japanese Yen suck so bad). A fresh-graduate’s salary is only around 200,000 yen after taxes. Opting for an older unit could be cheaper, but it won’t show much of a difference unless it’s like a 20-40 year old building with bad insulation and old interior (and a chance of having unwanted little critters lurking somewhere in the cracks of the building walls). So, cheap rent with unwanted bonuses, or a decent unit but have you’ll only be able to afford cup noodles for your meals. Pick your poison.

(Oh, the rent obviously does not include water, gas, and electricity bills, which would probably cost you around another 10,000 yen.)

This was the reality that hit me like a truck while I was apartment hunting a couple of weeks back. I had to search for a new place to move into because they want me to live closer to the HQ office. I never expected to see monthly rent of 100,000 yen and above to be normal these days, though. (My previous apartment was around 80,000 yen.) Also, these are the rent of apartments that are located 30 minutes away from Tokyo station by train. I’m guessing the the ones near Tokyo station must have a lot of zeros.

After spending around two weeks stressing out about rent, I decided that there’s nothing I could do about it. Searching for a new place that meets my current standards is going to be impossible because I have no money for it. So this time, I’m going to sacrifice space in return for access. My new apartment is going to be significantly smaller (the kitchen being the worst victim), but I’ll have a better access to the station for commute. The kitchen is so small that it’s almost unusable, so I’ll have to think of some tricks to make it work. Perhaps I’ll update on that in another post.

For now I’ll have to declutter a lot of stuff to make it fit into my new space.

Comments

3 responses to “Welcome to Tokyo, where selling your kidney is not enough to live a comfortable life (sarcasm)”

  1. Hanako Avatar

    I know how you feel about apartment living. I live outside of a city that’s becoming a huge destination and living area, and the rent is still pretty high. I pay $2,000ish (295,000ish yen) USD, but I live in a 2 bedroom, 2 full bath apartment (764 sq ft–70ish sq meters). I originally paid $764 (113,200 yen) when I moved in 12 years ago.

    Rent in the city is $3000+ (444,000+ yen) for a 1211 sq ft (112 sq meters). And we have incredibly high inflation. A dozen of eggs cost $6 (890ish yen) which use to cost only $2 six months ago. But that’s because of the bird flu, so bad example. But everything has gone up in price, and it’s hard for us to budget wisely. End up overspending because it’s getting ridiculous.

    1. Rin Avatar
      Rin

      Inflation is really scary. We used to have this one-coin-vending machine where everything can be bought with a 100 yen coin. But that doesn’t exist anymore. The cheapest drink you can buy from the vending machine now is 130 yen. And I guess that’s just going to get worse from now on.

      1. Hanako Avatar

        Pretty much. It sucks, and makes it hard on the working people. I don’t think we have had anything like that for a long time (one coin vending machines). I think the cheapest drink from a vending machine these days is $1.75 (261 yen) Hopefully the economy gets better and prices goes down. Unfortunately, for the US, I highly doubt it. “King” Trump wants to keep the poor… poor. That includes the middle class.

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