Meguro Parasitological Museum
Museum of zoology · Meguro ·

Meguro Parasitological Museum

Museum of zoology · Meguro ·

Free museum with fascinating, gross parasite specimens and specimens

small museum
tapeworm exhibit
parasite souvenirs
educational
free entry
disgusting
fascinating
donation requested
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null
Meguro Parasitological Museum by null

Information

4 Chome-1-1 Shimomeguro, Meguro City, Tokyo 153-0064, Japan Get directions

Restroom
Family friendly
Gender neutral restroom
Free Wi-Fi
Wheelchair accessible entrance

Information

Static Map

4 Chome-1-1 Shimomeguro, Meguro City, Tokyo 153-0064, Japan Get directions

+81 3 3716 1264
kiseichu.org

Features

•Restroom
•Family friendly
•Gender neutral restroom
•Free Wi-Fi
•Wheelchair accessible entrance
•Wheelchair accessible restroom

Last updated

Jan 14, 2026

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6 of Japan’s quirkiest, wackiest and most delightful museums - SilverKris

"A private, two-storey museum founded in 1953 that focuses exclusively on parasites, housing roughly 60,000 specimens with about 300 displayed for visitors; highlights include an educational (and unsettling) presentation of parasitology and one of the world’s longest tapeworms at 8.8 metres." - Rachel Eva Lim

https://silverkris.singaporeair.com/inspiration/arts-culture/galleries-museums/japan-quirkiest-museums/
Meguro Parasitological Museum

Sandra

Google
A v small museum by d roadside n v near to d bus stop. No wheelchair access as it's located on a small flight of stairs. Interesting concept - no-man museum. Some English translations. 2-floor. Equipped with locker 100¥ refundable. Museum runs on donations. Worth a visit. Not suitable for children as it's a quiet place shhh...

Mikael H.

Google
The Meguro Parasitological Museum is small, but it feels wrong in the way a quiet room can feel wrong, like something is listening from the walls. It doesn’t loom. It doesn’t threaten. It waits. Inside, the lights are low and the jars line up like confessions. Glass cylinders filled with clear fluid, each one holding something that once lived inside someone who thought they were alone in their own body. Worms long as nightmares. Things thin as threads and clever as burglars. Creatures that found a warm place and decided to stay. You look at them and feel an itch that isn’t there. Or maybe it is. This is not a place of jump scares. This is slower. The horror creeps in sideways. The labels are neat. Clinical. Dates, organs, Latin names. The calm tone makes it worse, because it tells you this is normal. This has happened before. It will happen again. The human body, it turns out, is just another old house with bad locks. Some exhibits are frankly disgusting. You lean back without meaning to. Your stomach tightens. You imagine these things moving, feeding, growing in the dark, unnoticed, until someone finally realizes that the pain has a shape. Lovecraft would have understood this place. Not the monsters from beyond the stars, but the truth that the real invasion doesn’t come from the outside. It comes from within. And yet, there’s a strange pull to it. You keep looking. You can’t help yourself. The collection is small, but dense, packed with quiet atrocities. It gets under your skin. Literally, if you let it. At the end, there is a museum shop. Bright. Cheerful. Almost obscene in its normality. It sells parasite-themed souvenirs—shirts, keychains, little jokes you can hold in your hand. They are lovely, in a sick way. You buy something if you’re brave, or foolish, or if you want to prove that you faced what was in the jars and didn’t run. When you step back outside, the street feels safer than it should. Your body feels like borrowed property. You walk away knowing one simple, unsettling fact: you were never really alone in there.

Chak O.

Google
It's a fascinating topic, and the museum pulls it off decently, with some amazing displays (the 8m tapeworm e.g.). Wish there was more english content, and a bit more to it. You can probably finish the whole museum in less than an hour. Lockers are free for a 100yen deposit.

Janet C

Google
A wonderful experience as it’s so educational. It’s incredible and I like how they provide QR codes for access to page to find out more about the parasite. Really enjoyable and should be a stop in your Tokyo trip!

Christopher S.

Google
Exactly what it says on the front door - no more, no less. It's equal parts gross and fascinating. But it's real. And it's a particular appreciation for science and the scientists who dedicate their lives to studying and discovering things like this. The museum itself does not cover a lot of physical ground - only two modest rooms on two floors, but a lot is packed into the space. Definitely worth your time.

Ys D.

Google
Amazing, and a bit creepy, all the weird critters that can affect you (and/or other animals) in some horrible ways. Well worth a visit if you're in the area. The museum is small but very interesting. It is free to enter but please help it stay open with a donation if you can.

Stash P.

Google
Free entry Museum, no tickets Required! And it is filled to the brim with creepy crawlies and little monsters known to cause extreme diseases and disorders. Parasitology so much fun!!

Paola C.

Google
As a scientist, I loved visiting the museum. The kids inside weren’t respectful about the “no-touching” rules at all, though.
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Olivia L.

Yelp
Of course my husband wanted to check this out before a sushi dinner haha. It's a small two story space with many parasites in bottles and graphic photos of animals and humans infected with certain diseases. It's a quick walk around. The tape worm display was fascinating yet gross lol. Unfortunately there are no English explanations. I read some of the newspaper articles near the souvenir shop and went to find the items mentioned, which helped. Overall worth stopping by if you're in the area to see parasites you'll never see anywhere else. Not sure if I would go out of the way though, unless parasites are your thing!
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Megan T.

Yelp
This is a really small museum that can get done in less than an hour. They only have some parts in English. But they have tons of different preserved parasites in jars that are cool to look at. The information they offer is extremely informative.
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Charles L.

Yelp
All credit to my daughter for discovering this off-the-beaten-path oddity. It is worth the 15 minute walk from the Meguro train station, and it will not take you much longer than that to see the entire museum. Upstairs you will be dazzled/disgusted by various parasites preserved in jars, but the pièce de résistance is the world's longest tapeworm (8.8 meters / 28.8 feet). A nearby rope allows you and a friend to better measure that frightening length. You might not be in the mood for soba / udon / ramen afterwards, but don't let that stop you from visiting! Also, pick up some cards and key rings before leaving, to share the parasitical goodness with your "friends".
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Bryan M.

Yelp
This is a humble and eager institution, and despite all the language and cultural barriers I can understand and respect their mission. Still, for a Western tourist there is not much to see, and it's a bit of a hike from the nearest train station. I'm usually swayed by the outlandish and bizarre, but not even that massive tapeworm made it worth the investment.
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Thomas V.

Yelp
It's a nice museum to stop by if you're in the area.lots of parasites to see.its free as well.only downside is there isn't much else in the immediate area.the museum itself is also Quite small.
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julie h.

Yelp
Very small museum but fascinating specimens. Friendly staff. Fun assortment of T-shirt souvenirs.