July 2nd, 2026
Guide
Article
Area
*Published: June 2026 *
Key Takeaways
Setagaya is one of Tokyo's most sought-after residential wards: large, green, well-served by multiple train lines, and consistently popular with families, professionals, and internationally mobile residents who want calm without sacrificing city access. Within the Setagaya area, Kyodo is one of those stations that does not announce itself loudly but rewards people who take the time to look properly.
It is not as energetic as Shimokitazawa.
It is not as polished as Seijogakuen-mae.
It does not have the youthful intensity of Sangenjaya.
What Kyodo has is balance.
You get fast access to Shinjuku on the Odakyu Line, a proper commercial area around the station, a supermarket open until 23:00, restaurants, clinics, banks, and genuinely quiet residential streets the moment you step away from the concourse. For people making a real commitment to Tokyo, whether a year, two years, or longer, that everyday functionality is worth more than a famous address.
Kyodo Station sits on the Odakyu Odawara Line as station OH11, exactly 8.0 km from Shinjuku, between Gotokuji and Chitose-Funabashi. The station recorded an average daily passenger count of 79,305 in 2023, making it the 14th busiest of all 70 stations on the Odakyu Line. That is not a quiet local stop. That is a real residential hub.
This guide covers everything long-term residents need: verified commute times with specific train types, rent data sourced from live listings, schools, parks, safety, and honest comparisons to every competing neighbourhood in the area.
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Ward | Setagaya Ward (世田谷区) |
| District | Kyodo 1-5 chome, Miyasaka 1-3 chome, Sakuragaoka 1-5 chome |
| Station | Kyodo Station (経堂駅), OH11, Odakyu Odawara Line |
| Distance from Shinjuku | 8.0 km |
| Express commute to Shinjuku | Approximately 11 minutes (Semi-Express / Express) |
| Adjacent stations | Gotokuji (OH10), Chitose-Funabashi (OH12) |
| Best for | Singles, couples, young families, remote workers, Odakyu Line commuters |
| Commute strengths | Shinjuku, Yoyogi-Uehara, Shimokitazawa, Chiyoda Line via transfer |
| Shopping | Kyodo Corty, Odakyu OX (open until 23:00), seven local shopping streets |
| Student identity | Tokyo University of Agriculture (Nodai) Setagaya campus nearby |
| Nearby landmark | Gotokuji Temple (maneki-neko / lucky cat birthplace), one stop away |
| Average 1LDK rent | Approximately ¥175,000/month (E-Housing live data, June 2026) |
Kyodo is a residential neighbourhood in Setagaya Ward, conveniently located on the Odakyu Odawara Line, 8.0 km west of Shinjuku. Within Setagaya, one of Tokyo's largest and most livable wards, Kyodo occupies a practical middle ground: not the most famous station on the line, but one of the most complete for everyday residential life. It sits alongside Gotokuji, Chitose-Funabashi, Umegaoka, and Seijogakuen-mae in the Odakyu corridor.
Setagaya Ward runs in a wide arc west of Shibuya, spanning multiple train lines: the Odakyu Odawara Line, the Tokyu Den-en-toshi and Setagaya Lines, and the Keio Inokashira Line. Each line anchors a distinct residential sub-community. Kyodo belongs to the Odakyu corridor, and its character is shaped by that: practical, well-connected, and quietly popular with professionals and families who need Shinjuku access but prefer to live somewhere calm.
According to Setagaya City's official district information, the Kyodo area comprises Kyodo 1-5 chome, Miyasaka 1-3 chome, and Sakuragaoka 1-5 chome. The city describes the district as bounded by major transport routes: the Odakyu Line to the north, Setagaya-dori to the south, the Tokyu Setagaya Line area to the east, and Kannana-dori to the west, with seven shopping streets and a large commercial facility on the north side of the station.
One piece of local context that shapes Kyodo's identity: Tokyo University of Agriculture (東京農業大学, known locally as "Nōdai") has its Setagaya campus nearby. When Odakyu updated its station sub-name labels in 2021, Kyodo was officially titled "Tokyo University of Agriculture nearest station" (東京農業大学最寄駅). The student population feeds the shopping streets, keeps a range of affordable independent restaurants active, and gives the commercial corridor a slightly livelier texture than the surrounding residential streets alone would produce. The south-side shopping street, commonly called Nodai-dori (農大通り), is named directly after the university.
If you are evaluating Setagaya neighbourhoods more broadly, Kyodo represents the ward's practical, unpretentious core: everyday urban life without the premium price tag of trendier addresses. For a full view of the ward across all its train lines and sub-neighbourhoods, the E-Housing Setagaya area guide is a useful companion to this one.
Yes. The Kyodo area offers convenient access to Shinjuku, which is one of its clearest selling points. Semi-Express and Express trains on the Odakyu Line cover the 8.0 km route from Kyodo Station to Shinjuku in approximately 11 minutes. Local trains take 17-18 minutes. Note that Rapid Express services do not stop at Kyodo. Beyond Shinjuku, a transfer at Yoyogi-Uehara onto the Tokyo Metro Chiyoda Line opens access to Omotesando, Akasaka, Hibiya, and Otemachi. The main caveat is peak-hour crowding.
Kyodo Station (OH11) sits on the Odakyu Odawara Line and is served by Local, Commuter Semi-Express, Semi-Express, and Express services. The fastest practical option for most commuters is the Semi-Express or Express. Both stop at Kyodo and reach Shinjuku in around 11 minutes on schedule. The Rapid Express, which skips many intermediate stops, does not serve Kyodo.
Three commute patterns make up the majority of residents' daily journeys:
Toward Shinjuku. The most common direction, and the clearest reason to choose the Kyodo area. Eleven minutes on an Express is a strong result for a neighbourhood this calm.
Via Yoyogi-Uehara onto the Chiyoda Line. Transferring at Yoyogi-Uehara (OH05) connects to the Tokyo Metro Chiyoda Line, giving access to Omotesando, Akasaka, Hibiya, Kasumigaseki, and Otemachi. This extends reach across the east side of the city without requiring a Yamanote Line transfer.
Toward Shimokitazawa. Shimokitazawa (OH07) is a short ride away on the same line, giving quick access to the Keio Inokashira Line toward Shibuya and Kichijoji, and to Shimokitazawa's restaurants, live venues, and vintage shops.
The limitation is honest: the Odakyu Line is crowded. It is one of the more heavily used private railways in Tokyo, and the inbound morning run toward Shinjuku will be uncomfortable during peak hours. If your schedule is flexible, or you commute against the main flow, this matters less. If you need to be at a Shinjuku desk by 9am every day, build crowding into your assessment.
Daily life in the Kyodo area is practical and self-contained. The neighbourhood around Kyodo Station has everything most residents need: supermarkets, cafes, restaurants, clinics, banks, pharmacies, and a covered mall, without requiring a trip into Shinjuku or Shimokitazawa. The student population from the nearby Tokyo University of Agriculture (Nōdai) campus keeps the commercial streets active and affordable. Move away from the station and the streets quickly become quiet and residential.
Kyodo Corty is the most obvious commercial anchor. Its official site lists general shops from 10:00 to 21:00, fourth-floor restaurants from 11:00 to 22:00, and Odakyu OX supermarket from 10:00 to 23:00. A late-closing supermarket matters more than it sounds for people commuting back from central Tokyo at 9 or 10pm.
Setagaya City's official district page notes seven shopping streets around the station. Two main corridors shape the daily experience: Nodai-dori runs south toward the university and carries a good range of affordable independent eateries, izakaya, and cafes driven in part by student demand; a second commercial stretch runs north from the station exit. Together they give Kyodo an unusually complete set of daily amenities for a neighbourhood of its size.
Odakyu also lists the following at Kyodo Station: elevators, escalators, platform doors, toilets, waiting rooms, AED equipment, coin lockers, convenience stores, restaurants, ATMs, and barrier-free access throughout. The station infrastructure is practical and well-maintained, not underdeveloped.
Kyodo's rent sits in the practical middle of the Odakyu Line's Setagaya corridor, firmly above outer-Tokyo or suburban pricing because it is Setagaya with strong Shinjuku access, but meaningfully cheaper than Shimokitazawa and Sangenjaya. Based on E-Housing live listing data from June 2026, average advertised 1LDK rents in Kyodo run approximately ¥175,000 per month, compared with ¥200,000 in Shimokitazawa and ¥213,000 in Sangenjaya.
The table below uses averages from E-Housing live market data retrieved in June 2026. These figures reflect what was advertised at that time and will shift as inventory turns over, so use them as orientation, not as a quotation.
| Station | Line | Avg. 1K | Avg. 1LDK | Avg. 2LDK |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kyodo (OH11) | Odakyu | ¥90,000 | ¥175,000 | ¥239,000 |
| Gotokuji (OH10) | Odakyu | ¥97,000 | ¥185,000 | ¥246,000 |
| Chitose-Funabashi (OH12) | Odakyu | ¥89,000 | ¥179,000 | ¥239,000 |
| Umegaoka (OH09) | Odakyu | ¥97,000 | ¥183,000 | ¥265,000 |
| Shimokitazawa (OH07) | Odakyu | ¥109,000 | ¥200,000 | ¥277,000 |
| Sangenjaya (DT03) | Tokyu | ¥113,000 | ¥213,000 | ¥275,000 |
| Seijogakuen-mae (OH17) | Odakyu | ¥84,000 | ¥171,000 | ¥222,000 |
(Source: E-Housing live market data by station and floor plan, June 2026. Figures shift as listings turn over and should be reverified before any rental decision.)
A few things the table makes visible. Kyodo and Chitose-Funabashi are closely matched across all unit types, within ¥4,000 on 1LDK, which is consistent with their similar profiles as practical Odakyu residential stations. Shimokitazawa and Sangenjaya carry a significant premium of ¥25,000-¥40,000 per month on a 1LDK, which reflects their higher name recognition and livelier atmosphere. Seijogakuen-mae's currently listed averages run lower than Kyodo's despite its upscale reputation, most likely a snapshot of what happens to be available right now, rather than a statement about the area's underlying prestige.
Within the Kyodo area itself, walk time from the station is the biggest variable. A five-minute walk and a fifteen-minute walk can produce very different pricing for similar units.
These are the most common unit type near Kyodo, aimed at students, single professionals, and people who want efficient city access. Some older 1K buildings carry compact kitchens, unit baths, or aging interiors. Check the building year, sunlight, noise environment, washing machine access, and storage before committing. Nōdai's campus proximity creates consistent demand in this segment, which keeps supply active but also competitive.
This is where Kyodo's value proposition is strongest. A 1LDK here can serve a couple or a single remote worker well. Compared with Shimokitazawa or Sangenjaya at equivalent rent, you trade proximity to nightlife for a calmer home environment and a near-identical Shinjuku commute time. Newer 1LDK units close to the station attract both Japanese and international renters and move quickly when priced fairly.
Good 2LDK and 3LDK units in Kyodo turn over quickly and face consistent demand. Families should cast the search wider than just the Kyodo Station tag. Miyasaka, Sakuragaoka, Chitose-Funabashi, Umegaoka, and Gotokuji all have family-sized options that may offer better value or more convenient school-zone placement depending on the property.
Detached houses exist in the wider Kyodo and Setagaya area but are harder for foreign renters to secure. Screening tends to be more selective; owners may have specific requirements around noise, instruments, pets, or home office use. Prepare bilingual documentation in advance of applying.
Kyodo feels lived-in and local. The station precinct generates consistent daily foot traffic: commuters, students, parents, and shoppers, but never the concentrated night-time intensity of Shimokitazawa or Sangenjaya. Two or three blocks from the station exits, the streets are quiet, tree-lined, and residential. The combination of an active station and a calm neighbourhood is what makes the Kyodo area genuinely attractive for long-term living.
Setagaya City's own district description captures this well: around the station there are shopping streets and a large commercial centre; beyond them, the area transitions into quiet residential streets, greenery, and historical cultural assets.
For most people actually living in Tokyo for years, this combination, practical access paired with a calm home base, is worth more than a neighbourhood's reputation. A neighbourhood does not need to impress you on a first visit. It needs to support your life every day.
Kyodo has a stronger food scene than its low profile suggests. Two main shopping corridors run north and south of the station, with independent restaurants, cafes, izakaya, bakeries, and daily service shops throughout. The nearby Nōdai campus supports affordable independent dining along Nodai-dori. For larger nights out, Shimokitazawa is a short train ride away.
Kyodo Corty handles the convenience shopping anchor, with Odakyu OX open until 23:00. The surrounding streets carry a local character that feels inhabited rather than purely functional. Small ramen shops, coffee spots, standing izakaya, and the kind of neighbourhood restaurants that attract regulars from nearby stations make this an area worth exploring on a stroll.
The area also has a small-brewery culture and several well-regarded independent dining options known to Setagaya locals. This is a neighbourhood that rewards a walk around rather than arriving with a fixed list.
For bigger shopping or major dining variety, Shinjuku is 11 minutes by Express. Kyodo's local scene is strong for daily life; it is not competing to be a destination.
Yes, Kyodo is a solid family choice. It sits within Setagaya Ward's well-developed family infrastructure, gives access to Setagaya's public school network, and is within reasonable reach of several of Tokyo's established international schools. The residential streets are calmer than Shimokitazawa or Sangenjaya, small parks are within a short walk from most addresses, and the ward's multilingual family-support services are a practical bonus for internationally mobile households.
Public elementary and junior high schools in the Kyodo, Miyasaka, and Sakuragaoka areas serve the local school zones. Setagaya Ward is known across Tokyo for a strong public-school network. The specific school zone for any address is determined by the ward's official enrollment guidelines. Confirm this before committing to a rental property.
Setagaya Ward is home to several of Tokyo's most established international schools. This is one of the practical reasons internationally mobile families are drawn to the ward:
These schools operate independently of ward school zones and have their own admissions processes, waiting lists, and transport considerations. Verify current availability, fees, and access routes directly with each school before making housing decisions around them.
For families weighing school access as part of their search, the E-Housing guide to international schools in Tokyo covers curricula, catchment considerations, and fees across the city and can help narrow down which areas to prioritise.
Kyodo's green value is distributed rather than concentrated. Small parks are within a short stroll of most residential addresses. The Kyodo Children's Park (経堂児童遊園) and Yamashita Park serve local families for everyday outdoor time.
Hanegi Park is one stop away at Umegaoka and is a meaningful asset: a popular Setagaya green space known for its plum grove in late winter, well-sized for families and regular walks. Kinuta Park, one of Setagaya's larger open spaces, is reachable by bus and provides a more substantial outdoor option for weekends.
The wider Kyodo area also benefits from greenways tracing old waterway corridors, pedestrian paths that offer a quieter walking alternative to main roads.
Kyodo's park situation is broadly comparable to most of inner Setagaya: good for daily use, but not defined by one major signature park the way Umegaoka is anchored by Hanegi, or Shimokitazawa is adjacent to Inokashira.
Setagaya provides a more comprehensive family-support infrastructure than many Tokyo wards, including support services for new parents, multilingual information for foreign residents, ward-run childcare facilities, and resident consultation services in multiple languages. Nursery demand in Setagaya can be competitive. Check availability in the specific Kyodo and Miyasaka areas during your property search.
Kyodo is generally considered safe. The neighbourhood sits on Setagaya's Musashino Plateau, elevated roughly 30-45 metres above sea level, which places it well above Tokyo's low-lying flood-risk zones. Setagaya City classifies the plateau as having low flood and liquefaction risk. As with any Tokyo address, earthquake preparedness is the primary ongoing consideration; building age and construction standard matter far more than neighbourhood reputation.
For specific flood risk, Setagaya City provides official hazard maps covering Tama River flooding, inland flooding, smaller river flooding, and landslide risk. These are the right resources for any individual address. Broad neighbourhood reputation is not a substitute. Kyodo's elevation reduces general flood exposure compared with bay-area or low-lying eastern Tokyo neighbourhoods, but address-level verification always applies.
For earthquake risk, the variables that matter most are building-specific: construction year relative to Japan's 1981 and 2000 seismic code updates, structure type (reinforced concrete, steel, wooden), and overall maintenance condition. Buildings constructed or substantially retrofitted after 2000 to the current seismic standard are the most reliable option. This applies everywhere in Tokyo.
For foreign residents navigating safety resources in a second language, Setagaya City provides a foreign-resident information page with multilingual life resources, Japanese language classes, disaster-preparedness links, and resident consultation services. Ward-level support like this is a practical advantage for long-term international residents.
The Kyodo area is best suited to residents who want Setagaya's residential quality and Odakyu Line connectivity without paying the premium of Shimokitazawa or Sangenjaya, or committing to the more remote western reaches of the line. It rewards residents who value a calm, functional home base over a lively neighbourhood identity.
| Resident type | Why Kyodo works |
|---|---|
| Single professionals | Express to Shinjuku in 11 minutes, practical station, good 1K/1LDK market |
| Couples | Space, calm, and convenience at better value than trendier Setagaya stations |
| Young families | Residential streets, ward family support, schools, parks, Setagaya infrastructure |
| Remote workers | Quiet home base with station-area cafes and services within walking distance |
| Odakyu Line commuters | Efficient access to Shinjuku, Yoyogi-Uehara, Shimokitazawa, Chiyoda Line |
| Expats wanting local life | Non-touristy atmosphere, multilingual ward support, Tokyo University community |
| Need | Better area |
|---|---|
| Nightlife close to home | Shimokitazawa, Sangenjaya, Shibuya, Nakameguro |
| Luxury or prestige residential image | Seijogakuen-mae, Jiyugaoka, Daikanyama |
| Lowest possible rent in Tokyo | Further west on Odakyu Line, Chuo Line suburbs, Saitama, Chiba |
| Brand-new high-rise towers | Musashi-Kosugi, Toyosu, central Tokyo redevelopment zones |
| Direct Shibuya commute without transfer | Sangenjaya, Ikejiri-Ohashi, Tokyu Den-en-toshi Line stations |
| A large park immediately adjacent | Umegaoka (Hanegi Park), Seijogakuen-mae (Komazawa proximity) |
Gotokuji is quieter and smaller. Its station-side commercial area is more modest than Kyodo's, but it has a stronger local identity anchored by Gotokuji Temple, widely cited as the birthplace of the maneki-neko (beckoning cat), an iconic Japanese cultural landmark and nearby attraction that draws visitors from across Tokyo. The temple is approximately a 15-minute walk from Gotokuji Station. Since Gotokuji is one stop from Kyodo on the Odakyu Line, it is also accessible to Kyodo residents on foot or by a single-stop ride.
On rent, current E-Housing listing data shows Gotokuji averaging slightly higher than Kyodo across all unit types, around ¥10,000 more per month on a 1LDK, despite being a quieter, smaller station.
Choose Gotokuji for calm streets and a strong local cultural identity.
Choose Kyodo for a more complete everyday commercial setup.
Chitose-Funabashi is a practical stop on the Odakyu Line one station east of Kyodo, with a closely matched rent profile. E-Housing data from June 2026 shows 1LDK averages within ¥4,000 of each other. The difference in character is modest: Chitose-Funabashi can feel slightly more spread out and suburban; Kyodo's station-side commercial area is more developed.
Choose Chitose-Funabashi if a specific property there is the right fit.
Choose Kyodo if the richer station-side amenities matter to your daily routine.
Umegaoka is calmer and notably greener. Hanegi Park, a major local asset especially for families, is one of its defining features. The station commercial area is smaller than Kyodo's.
Choose Umegaoka for park access and a quieter pace.
Choose Kyodo for stronger shopping, food, and everyday services.
Shimokitazawa is younger, more creative, and considerably more energetic. It is a serious independent music, food, and vintage-clothing hub that draws people from across Tokyo. It carries a meaningful rent premium of around ¥25,000 more per month on a comparable 1LDK. It is also busier and louder, especially on weekends.
Choose Shimokitazawa for cultural energy and lifestyle.
Choose Kyodo for a calmer residential base with a near-identical Shinjuku commute time.
If you are still deciding between the two, the E-Housing guide to living in Shimokitazawa covers the neighbourhood in the same depth as this guide, including rent data, commute times, and a full breakdown of what daily life there actually looks like.
Sangenjaya is denser, closer to Shibuya, stronger for nightlife and restaurants, and sits on the Tokyu Den-en-toshi Line rather than Odakyu, offering a different commute network entirely. It commands a clear rent premium over Kyodo.
Choose Sangenjaya for Shibuya access and a more urban nightlife atmosphere.
Choose Kyodo for calmer Setagaya living at lower cost.
Seijogakuen-mae has a more polished, upscale residential image: quieter streets, more established greenery, and an association with private schools and affluent family life. Despite that reputation, current E-Housing listing data shows it running slightly below Kyodo on average rents, most likely a snapshot of what happens to be on the market rather than a reordering of their actual prestige.
Choose Seijogakuen-mae for a quieter, more formal residential atmosphere.
Choose Kyodo for stronger everyday station convenience.
| ✅ Pros | ❌ Cons |
|---|---|
| Express/Semi-Express to Shinjuku in approximately 11 minutes | Odakyu Line is crowded during peak morning hours |
| Odakyu OX supermarket open until 23:00 | Very limited nightlife within the neighbourhood |
| Calmer residential streets than Shimokitazawa or Sangenjaya | Mixed housing stock; many older buildings |
| Approximately ¥25,000-¥38,000/month less than comparable Setagaya stations | Best-located units face consistent demand |
| Nōdai campus supports affordable independent dining | Walk time to station varies widely between listings |
| Multilingual ward support services for international residents | Setagaya-level pricing: not cheap by outer-Tokyo standards |
Yes. The Kyodo area is worth serious consideration if you want a practical Setagaya base with strong Odakyu Line access and a genuinely calm residential home environment.
E-Housing would not position Kyodo as the most exciting neighbourhood on the west side of Tokyo. That is not what it is. What it is is a neighbourhood that works: consistently, day to day, for the kind of resident who needs their home to support a real life rather than perform for a weekend.
A neighbourhood does not need to impress you on a first visit. It needs to be liveable at 7am and 10pm on a Tuesday in February. Kyodo meets that standard well.
The practical advice holds across every client we work with: do not judge Kyodo by the station name alone. Judge the specific property, its walk time, building age and seismic standard, sunlight, street noise, and your actual commute pattern. A well-chosen apartment in Kyodo can be a very comfortable, high-functioning Tokyo home. A poorly chosen one can feel overpriced simply because Setagaya is in the address.
This guide was written and is maintained by the E-Housing advisory team. E-Housing is a Tokyo-based real estate agency specialising in residential rentals and purchases for international residents and long-term expats. Our advisors work directly with properties across the Odakyu, Tokyu, Keio, and Chuo Line corridors and have placed clients in Kyodo and the wider Setagaya area over many years.
Data in this guide is sourced from Odakyu's official station information, Setagaya City's official district pages, and E-Housing live listing averages (June 2026). Rent figures reflect averages across advertised listings at that date and shift as inventory turns over. Always verify current figures before making a decision. Commute times are based on Odakyu's published timetable for Semi-Express and Express services and will vary by train type and time of day.
Yes. Kyodo is a well-rounded residential neighbourhood in Setagaya Ward with fast Odakyu Line access to Shinjuku, a self-contained commercial area around the station, and a calmer atmosphere than nearby Shimokitazawa or Sangenjaya. It is particularly well-suited to people who want functional everyday convenience without living in the city centre.
Kyodo Station (OH11) is 8.0 km from Shinjuku by rail. Semi-Express and Express trains cover the route in approximately 11 minutes. Local trains take 17-18 minutes. Note that Rapid Express services do not stop at Kyodo. All times are based on Odakyu's published timetable and vary by service pattern and time of day.
Among Tokyo residents, Kyodo is known as a quietly practical Setagaya neighbourhood with solid Shinjuku access, a lively shopping street area shaped in part by the nearby Tokyo University of Agriculture (Nōdai) campus, and a residential atmosphere considerably calmer than more prominent Setagaya addresses. Its reputation is built on consistent liveability rather than any single landmark.
Kyodo is generally considered safe. The neighbourhood sits on Setagaya's Musashino Plateau at around 30-45 metres elevation, giving it low flood and liquefaction risk. For earthquake preparedness, building construction year and seismic standard matter more than neighbourhood-level reputation. Check Setagaya City's official hazard maps for any specific address.
For everyday options, the station-side shopping streets and Kyodo Corty mall provide cafes, restaurants, izakaya, bakeries, and daily services. One stop away on the Odakyu Line is Gotokuji Temple, widely regarded as the birthplace of the maneki-neko (lucky cat) and one of the most notable attractions in the western Setagaya area. Shimokitazawa, with live music venues, vintage shops, and independent restaurants, is a short ride away for evening outings.
Kyodo works well for foreign residents who want an authentically local Tokyo experience rather than an expat-concentrated area. Setagaya Ward also provides a foreign-resident information page with multilingual resources, Japanese language support, disaster preparedness information, and consultation services, practical infrastructure that makes long-term international life in the ward significantly more navigable.
Yes. Kyodo has residential streets, access to Setagaya's public-school network, ward family-support services, walkable parks including the Kyodo Children's Park and Yamashita Park, and reasonable proximity to established international schools including the British School in Tokyo Showa Campus, St. Mary's International School, and Seisen International School. Families should verify specific school zones, nursery availability, and international school admissions directly before committing to a property.
Based on E-Housing live market data from June 2026, average advertised rents in the Kyodo area run approximately ¥90,000 for a 1K, ¥175,000 for a 1LDK, and ¥239,000 for a 2LDK. These are current listing averages and shift over time. For context, a comparable 1LDK in Shimokitazawa averages ¥200,000 and in Sangenjaya ¥213,000.
Kyodo Station (OH11) is on the Odakyu Odawara Line, between Gotokuji (OH10) and Chitose-Funabashi (OH12). It is served by Local, Commuter Semi-Express, Semi-Express, and Express services. Rapid Express trains do not stop at Kyodo.
The main drawbacks are: peak-hour crowding on the Odakyu Line inbound to Shinjuku; limited nightlife within the neighbourhood itself; a mixed housing stock with many older buildings; competitive demand for the best units close to the station; significant variation in walk time between listings; and pricing that still reflects Setagaya's desirability rather than outer-Tokyo rates.
It depends on what you want from a neighbourhood. Kyodo is better if you want a quieter residential base, a similar Shinjuku commute, and lower rent. Shimokitazawa is better if you want cultural energy, nightlife, live music, independent cafes and vintage shops, and a more vibrant daily atmosphere. The two neighbourhoods serve genuinely different lifestyles.
Last updated: June 2026. All rent figures are based on E-Housing live market data at time of publication. Commute times are based on Odakyu's published timetable for Semi-Express and Express services. All data should be re-verified before any rental or purchase decision.
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