If you thought London’s rush hour was bad, maybe avoid Tokyo’s

Published 3 hours ago
Source: metro.co.uk

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People were trapped in commuter hell on Tokyo’s railway lines, which ferry millions of passengers a day, after a power outage.

If London stations like Euston can feel busy at rush hour, it pales in comparison to the scenes in Tokyo on Friday morning.

Thousands of commuters were caught out after a power outage ground trains to a halt on the East Japan Railway’s Yamanote and Keihin-Tohoku lines.

Large crowds were packed at stations after trains were cancelled for hours while passengers were stranded on trains between stations.

Tokyo rail system after power outage
The scenes at Ueno station on Tokyo’s rail network were crowded, although seemingly calm (Picture: @taitanno/X)

One passenger said on social media that both lines are ‘f***ed’ after the power outage, making transferring to the Ueno line also ‘impossible.’

Station staff had to block access to some platforms, leading to huge bottlenecks at some of the city’s busiest stations.

Five people felt sick while waiting inside trains and were reportedly taken to hospital.

Taxi ranks were packed with anxious commuters trying to get to work, with some people opting to walk for an hour, Japan Times reports.

Footage shows firefighters and rail staff evacuating commuters after they were stranded between stations on the Keihin-Tohoku route.

Commuters crowd Shinbashi Station due to suspended operations on the JR Yamanote train line caused by a power outage in Tokyo on January 16, 2026.
Tokyo’s Shinhashi Station was affected by overcrowding on Friday morning after the major power outage (Picture: AFP/Getty Images)

The power outages were caused by two mysterious incidents, and authorities are investigating whether they are linked.

Railway staff first discovered the outage between Shimbashi and Shinagawa stations shortly before 4am local time, thought to be caused by issues with electrical equipment.

Then a fire was spotted near Tamachi Station at about 8am (11pm GMT on Thursday), with flames coming from a substation, according to the public broadcaster NHK.

A screengrab of a video showing thousands of people packed at a station on the Tokyo after power outage on the Keihin-Tohoku Line and the Yamanote rail lines
Inside the Ueno station this morning, where thousands queued (Picture: @taitanno/X)

Greater Tokyo’s rail network, which carries up to 40 million people a day, is known to be generally reliable.

On the UK railways, some of the worst days for disruption were in July last year, when rail infrastructure struggled with the heatwave.

On July 12 alone, over 6% of trains were cancelled, the rail watchdog, Office ofRail and Road, said.

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