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Climbing Japan
JETSET climbing gym indoor bouldering and climbing gym in Tachikawa, Japan - modern climbing walls, training facilities, and climbing community

JETSET Climbing Gym

Bouldering Gym in Tachikawa, Tokyo

🧗 Bouldering
💰 ¥2,530 day pass

About JETSET Climbing Gym

JETSET climbing gym delivers focused bouldering 2 minutes from Tamagawa-Josui Station. Two floors span beginner slabs to a savage 160-degree roof for advanced climbers.

Hours & Pricing

⏰ Operating Hours
Monday10:00 - 00:00
Tuesday00:00 - 10:00
Wednesday14:00 - 22:00
Thursday14:00 - 22:00
Friday14:00 - 22:00
Saturday10:00 - 20:00
Sunday10:00 - 19:00
💳 Pricing
Day Pass¥2,530
Registration Fee (first-time)¥1,100

Climbing Facilities & Amenities

Parking
Gear Shop
Kids Area
Training Area

Bouldering Wall

JETSET spreads bouldering across two distinct floors. The first floor features vertical, slab, and moderate overhang walls—some with three-stage changing angles that let you dial in specific techniques. Upstairs is where things get serious: a nearly horizontal 160-degree roof wall designed for advanced climbers hunting power endurance and lock-off strength. Routes rotate regularly with international setters keeping the challenges fresh.

Training Area

A dedicated training zone sits center-floor with training holds for campus boarding and finger strength work. It's a solid setup for structured sessions—hangboards, strength training, and drill work without interrupting the flow on the climbing walls. Good for intermediate climbers looking to level up specific weaknesses.

How & When To Visit

📍 Directions

Nearest Station

Tamagawa-Josui Station

Walking time: 2 minutes

Address

4 Chome-60-17 Kashiwacho, Tachikawa, Tokyo 190-0004, Japan

📍 Google Maps
📅 Best Times to Visit

🟢 Quiet Times

Weekday mornings/afternoons

🔵 Social Times

Evenings & weekends

Frequently Asked Questions

It's legit steep—160 degrees puts you nearly horizontal. Located on the second floor, it's built specifically for advanced climbers working on power, body tension, and endurance. If you're comfortable on vertical and moderately overhanging terrain, the roof will push your limits hard. First-floor walls ease you in with slabs and changing-angle sections before you tackle the beast upstairs.
Day passes run ¥2,530, which is pretty standard for Tokyo-area bouldering gyms. First-timers pay a ¥1,100 registration fee on top of that. Shoes and chalk are typically available for rent if you don't have your own gear yet.
JETSET has parking for 3 cars at ¥300, but spots fill up fast. Honestly, the train's easier—Tamagawa-Josui Station is only a 2-minute walk away. Unless you're hauling kids or tons of gear, public transit is the smoother option.
English support is limited, so brush up on basic climbing terms in Japanese or bring a translation app. Staff are friendly and will work with you, but don't expect full bilingual assistance. The climbing itself is universal, though—beta transcends language barriers.
Elementary school kids are welcome as long as they're supervised by a guardian. There's a dedicated kids area, so younger climbers have space to learn without getting in the way of adults projecting on the steep stuff. It's a family-friendly setup if you're introducing the next generation to climbing.
There's a gear shop right in the gym, so you can grab essentials like chalk, tape, or brushes without making a separate trip. Selection isn't massive, but it covers what you'd need for a typical session or if you forget something at home.
Weekday mornings and early afternoons are usually quieter—most people hit the gym after work. Weekends and evenings pack out, especially on the first floor's beginner-friendly walls. If you're chasing projects on that 160-degree roof, off-peak hours give you uninterrupted sends.
JETSET brings in international route setters regularly to keep things fresh. Exact reset schedules vary, but you'll see new problems rotating through often enough that it doesn't go stale. Good variety across grades means there's always something new to work on, whether you're warming up or pushing your limit.

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