Thinking about studying in Japan— but not sure where to start? Tokyo Metropolitan University (TMU) is a smart, budget‑friendly option for international students who want the best of both worlds: a green, spacious campus life in western Tokyo plus direct access to one of the world’s greatest cities. As the only university operated by the Tokyo Metropolitan Government, TMU blends rigorous academics with a mission to tackle real urban challenges—from climate resilience and mobility to health and digital infrastructure. This guide gives you an honest, data‑driven overview so you can decide whether TMU fits your goals.

Hikari no Tō (Tower of Light) at TMU Minami-Osawa Campus
Hikari no Tō (Tower of Light), a signature landmark rising over Minami-Osawa Campus, Tokyo Metropolitan University.
Source: Wikimedia Commons · Author: Mytho88 · License: CC BY-SA 2.5
Central plaza stone sculpture at Minami-Osawa
Central plaza at Minami-Osawa with a distinctive stone sculpture set amid green lawns and tree-lined walkways.
Source: Wikimedia Commons · Author: Mytho88 · License: CC BY-SA 2.5
Covered arcade walkway at Minami-Osawa Campus
Covered arcade walkway connecting classroom buildings at Minami-Osawa Campus, offering shade and a grand perspective.
Source: Wikimedia Commons · Author: Mytho88 · License: CC BY-SA 2.5
Wooded trail on Minami-Osawa Campus
A wooded trail on or near Minami-Osawa Campus, highlighting TMU’s abundant greenery and quiet study environment.
Source: Wikimedia Commons · Author: Hiroaki Ogawa · License: CC BY-SA 3.0
Bust of Masazumi Kawada at TMU
Bronze bust of Masazumi Kawada on campus, commemorating an important academic figure associated with the university.
Source: Wikimedia Commons · Author: J o · License: CC BY-SA 2.0
Arakawa Campus (Faculty of Health Sciences) main entrance area
Arakawa Campus (Faculty of Health Sciences): tree-lined approach to the main entrance area in Arakawa, Tokyo.
Source: Wikimedia Commons · Author: Hasec · License: CC0 (Public Domain)
Arakawa Campus gate nameplate
Arakawa Campus gate nameplate for Tokyo Metropolitan University’s Faculty of Health Sciences.
Source: Wikimedia Commons · Author: Hasec · License: CC0 (Public Domain)
Hino Campus building
Hino Campus: a modern academic building often associated with engineering and system design programs.
Source: Wikimedia Commons · Author: Ryo7890 · License: CC BY-SA 2.5
Harumi Campus (Law School) building in Chuo, Tokyo
Harumi Campus in Chuo, Tokyo — home to the Graduate School of Social Sciences (Law School), featuring a glass-façade corner block.
Source: Wikimedia Commons · Author: Mj-bird · License: CC BY-SA 3.0

Quick Facts (Tokyo Metropolitan University)

Use this snapshot to compare TMU with your other options. Sources are linked; figures reflect the latest available information (primarily 2024–2025).

Type (National/Public/Private) Public (operated by the Tokyo Metropolitan Government) — Official overview
Total Students Approx. 9,318 total (6,866 undergraduate + 2,236 graduate + 216 non‑degree) as of May 1, 2024 — Enrollment (official)
Campuses 3 — Minami‑Osawa (main), Hino, Arakawa — Campus addresses
Faculties/Schools
• Humanities & Social Sciences (Human & Social Sciences; Humanities)
• Law (Law; Political Science)
• Economics & Business Administration (Economics; Business Administration)
• Science (Mathematical Sciences; Physics; Chemistry; Biological Sciences)
Urban Environmental Sciences (Geography; Civil & Environmental Engineering; Architecture; Applied Chemistry for Environment; Tourism Science; Urban Science & Policy)
Systems Design (Computer Science; Electrical & Electronic Engineering; Mechanical Systems Engineering; Aeronautics & Astronautics; Industrial Art; Electrical Engineering & Computer Science)
• Health Sciences (Nursing Sciences; Physical Therapy; Occupational Therapy; Radiological Sciences)
Undergraduate programs (official)
学费 Admission fee: ¥282,000 (non‑Tokyo residents) / ¥141,000 (Tokyo residents). Annual tuition: ¥520,800 (standard public‑university rate). Details: Admission/tuition (official), Study at TMU (scholarships/reduction)
Gender Ratio ~39% women / ~61% men (degree programs combined; computed from 2024 data) — Enrollment (official)
Intl‑Student % ~6.3% (575 international students out of ~9,100 degree students, May 1, 2024) — International students (official PDF)
Students per Staff See latest ratio on TMU’s profile — Times Higher Education

Campus Maps

Minami-Osawa Campus (Main Campus, Hachioji)

Address: 1-1 Minami-Osawa, Hachioji, Tokyo 192-0397, Japan

Hino Campus (Hino City)

Address: 6-6 Asahigaoka, Hino, Tokyo 191-0065, Japan

Arakawa Campus (Arakawa City)

Address: 7-2-10 Higashi-Ogu, Arakawa, Tokyo 116-8551, Japan

Harumi Campus (Law School, Chuo City)

Address: 1-2-2 Harumi, Chuo, Tokyo 104-0053, Japan

Marunouchi Satellite Campus (Chiyoda City)

Address: 1-4-1 Marunouchi, Chiyoda, Tokyo 100-0005, Japan (Marunouchi Eiraku Building, 18F)

Iidabashi Campus (Chiyoda City)

Address: 3-5-1 Iidabashi, Chiyoda, Tokyo 102-0072, Japan (Tokyo Kusei Kaikan, 3F)

Mission, History & Founding Story

Public mission with a metropolitan focus. Tokyo Metropolitan University (TMU) is unique in Japan: it is the only university operated by the Tokyo Metropolitan Government. TMU’s mission emphasizes both basic/applied research and solutions for issues faced by major metropolitan areas—transport, environment, health, housing, and digital infrastructure. Students benefit from strong links with the Tokyo government and industry. Read more on TMU’s “About” pages: About TMU.

From post‑war roots to a comprehensive public university. TMU traces its roots to 1949. In 2005, Tokyo reorganized several metropolitan institutions into today’s comprehensive structure. In 2020, the university restored its Japanese name “東京都立大学 (Tokyo Metropolitan University)” while maintaining the English name “Tokyo Metropolitan University.” Official notice (EN): TMU’s Japanese name restored (2020). For a concise history and key facts, see: History | Key Facts.

Three campuses, one metropolitan ecosystem. The main Minami‑Osawa Campus sits in Hachioji—green, spacious, and one express‑train ride from central Tokyo. The Hino Campus hosts engineering/Systems Design; the Arakawa Campus hosts Health Sciences. See TMU’s official access page: Access & campus map.

Key Strengths & Unique Features

Human‑Centered Robotics & Intelligent Systems

TMU’s Graduate School of Systems Design is a hub for safe, human‑interactive robotics—assistive devices, service robots, and AI‑supported mobility. TMU showcases collaborative “partner” robots grounded in cognitive and brain science in its research case studies: Case study (Robotics). For a city perspective, see Tokyo’s feature on human‑friendly robots: Tokyo Updates article.

Urban Environmental Sciences: Tokyo as a Living Lab

Architecture / Civil & Environmental Engineering

From climate‑resilient infrastructure and water systems to urban design, TMU leverages Tokyo’s real‑world challenges in coursework and labs. Explore department offerings and pathways: Faculty list (official).

Tourism Science & Urban Policy

TMU’s Tourism Science emphasizes evidence‑based destination management and policy—timely for a megacity region. See the English pamphlet (PDF): Tourism Science Pamphlet (EN).

Space & Astrophysics with JAXA‑Linked Research

TMU’s Research Center for Space Science groups teams across physics and chemistry with connections to Japanese space‑science networks (including satellite themes aligned with JAXA initiatives). Overview (EN): Space Science Center. See broader research hubs: TMU Research Centers.

English‑Taught Degrees & Global Education Pathways

TMU offers several programs where coursework and evaluation are fully in English, plus structured minor courses (Data Science, Tourism Management, Human Health Sciences) that add interdisciplinary breadth. See: English‑taught degree programsMinor course.

Public‑University Value: Tuition Reductions & Scholarships

As a Tokyo public university, TMU keeps fees in line with Japan’s national standard (see “Quick Facts”). On top of that, TMU runs tuition reduction/exemption schemes and competitive awards. A notable example is the 东京全球合作伙伴奖学金 for high‑achieving graduate students: full tuition exemption for the standard degree length (2 years master’s / 3 years doctoral) plus a monthly stipend (terms apply). See: Tokyo Global Partner Scholarship (site) and official PDF details: Program guide (PDF). General fee‑reduction info: Study at TMU.

Student Life for Internationals

Clubs & Circles Welcoming Overseas Students

TMU’s International Center collaborates with student groups to create low‑barrier entry points for exchange—welcome events, cultural mixers, and peer support. A long‑running volunteer circle called HANDs connects local and international students year‑round: International Exchange Activities and the HANDs page (JP): HANDs.

Dedicated Support (Visa, Housing, Counseling)

The International Affairs Office assists with visa issues, certificate issuance, and housing (International Student Houses). It also coordinates “Student International Supporters” and “Resident Assistant” programs. Contact/info: International Affairs Office (contact). Short‑program visa information: Short‑program visas. Main portal: TMU International Center.

Language Exchange & Japanese Classes

TMU offers Japanese language classes from beginner (N5) through advanced (N1+) plus workshops delivered in English, Chinese, and Korean—useful for settling in academically and socially. See: Japanese language & cultural classes.

Partner Institutions & Exchange Options (Outbound Focus)

TMU maintains student‑exchange and research partnerships across Asia, Europe, North America, and Oceania. For outbound study, TMU publishes calls and guidelines that outline destinations and formats (semester exchange, short programs). See an example of official outbound guidelines (JP, PDF): Exchange Guidelines. For organizational structure and partner info, see: Organization (EN).

Local Climate & Lifestyle (Hachioji & Tokyo)

Weather Patterns (Last Few Years Reference)

Seasons you’ll feel: Early summer brings the rainy season (June–July); August is hot and humid; autumn is mild and dry; winters are cold but generally clear. Using the Japan Meteorological Agency’s monthly statistics for central Tokyo as a reference point, recent patterns show average daily highs peaking in the low 30s °C in August and average daily lows around 0–2 °C in January. See JMA’s monthly tables: JMA Monthly Climate (Tokyo). For an intuitive city‑level view of Hachiōji’s recent temperatures, see: WeatherSpark (Hachiōji).

Lifestyle, Safety & Cost of Living

Lifestyle: Minami‑Osawa is student‑friendly with parks and shopping; it’s one express line (Keio) to Shinjuku. Safety & preparedness: Tokyo provides multilingual disaster readiness resources. See the latest English handbook (2024): Disaster Readiness Guide (EN). Local info: Hachioji’s living guide (EN, 2024): Living Guide for International Residents. For indicative prices, check community‑sourced data for Hachioji: Numbeo (Hachioji) and a broad 2025 overview: Expatica: Cost of Living in Japan (2025).

International Student Statistics

As of May 1, 2024, TMU had 575 international students across all categories. By level: 62 undergraduate; 205 master’s; 203 doctoral; 1 professional; 104 others. See the official breakdown (EN/JP, PDF): International students (May 1, 2024). (A later snapshot—Oct 1, 2024—shows updated totals.)

Career & Graduate Prospects

Employment Outcomes & Graduate Study

TMU publishes outcomes annually. The English snapshot (“Post‑Graduation Path”) reports very high placement rates by division in the 2018 reference set (many divisions >95%). See official summary (EN): Post‑Graduation Path. For the newest faculty‑level PDFs and dashboards (JP): Career Center data.

Typical Employers & Sectors (Examples)

Placements reflect TMU’s strengths in policy, STEM, and design: engineering and construction majors, ICT, finance/consulting, and public sector roles (e.g., Tokyo Metropolitan Government). For individual departments, see example pages such as Civil & Environmental Engineering (EN): Civil Engineering (employment) and Applied Chemistry (EN): Applied Chemistry (prospects).

Career Support for International Students

TMU’s Career Center and the International Affairs Office coordinate English/Japanese guidance, business‑Japanese workshops, job fairs, and one‑on‑one advising. Start from the (JP) portal for schedules and reports: Career Support Office. For incoming international student support generally: Support overview.

How to Decide if TMU Is Right for You

Choose TMU if you want public‑university value with research strengths tuned to real urban issues; if you prefer a green, commuter‑friendly campus slightly outside the city core; and if you value hands‑on labs in robotics, urban systems, and space science alongside English‑taught options and strong student support. Next steps: explore the faculties that match your interests (Undergraduate programs) and admission/tuition details (Fees (official); Scholarships & reductions).

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