There is a Japanese saying that Tokyoites spend their money on clothes, Osakans on food. It is a caricature — but it contains a deep truth about two different ways of being in the world. Osaka is the city that invented the concept of kuidaore — "eat until you drop" — and elevated it to a philosophy of life. A merchant city since the 17th century, pragmatic, direct, irreverent, greedy and profoundly human. Where Tokyo keeps its distance with a cool elegance, Osaka moves in close with a laugh and a takoyaki held out at arm's length. This is not Japan's second city. It is the first Japanese city to have decided that pride can be expressed otherwise than by standing very straight.
Japan's merchant city
Osaka is a city of water. Built on the delta of the Yodo River flowing into Osaka Bay, it was threaded by hundreds of canals in the 17th century — which earned it the nickname "Venice of Japan." Most canals were filled in during the 20th century to make way for roads, but the Dōtonbori and Namba canals survive and today form the heart of the city's nightlife. Osaka was Japan's commercial centre during the Edo period (1603–1868) — the city where merchants (shōnin) ruled, where rice from across the archipelago was traded, and where Bunraku puppet theatre and Kabuki drew the crowds. This merchant culture left an indelible mark: Osakans are known throughout Japan for their pragmatism, their plain-speaking (the Kansai-ben dialect is perceived as more direct and less formal than standard Japanese), their sense of humour and their near-obsessive love of good food.
Osaka Castle — built in 1583 by Toyotomi Hideyoshi, one of Japan's three unifiers — is the city's architectural symbol and one of Japan's most-visited reconstructed landmarks (the current tower dates from 1931, rebuilt for the third time after destructions in 1615 and 1868). Surrounded by moats and gardens where cherry trees attract hundreds of thousands of visitors each spring, it presides over a 105-hectare park in the city centre — one of Osaka's great green lungs. The city's modernity makes itself felt on the other side: the Umeda Sky Building (1993, two towers joined by a floating "ring" at 173 metres), the Nakanoshima business district skyline along the canal, and the legacy structures of Expo 2025 on the artificial island of Yumeshima.
Day-to-day life in reality
Osaka is roughly 20% cheaper than Tokyo in rent — and this difference is real, not marginal. A 1K apartment in a central area like Umeda or Shinsaibashi costs ¥60,000–75,000/month (~$400–500), compared to ¥80,000–110,000 for an equivalent in Tokyo. A comfortable 1LDK in Namba or Tennoji: ¥80,000–100,000 (~$533–667). And outside the central zones, in neighbourhoods like Juso, Morinomiya or Taisho, 1K apartments can be found for ¥45,000–55,000 (~$300–367). Floor area is generally slightly larger than Tokyo for the same price — a 1K in Osaka often runs 22–28m² where Tokyo would offer 18–22m².
Osaka's gastronomy is, for long-term residents, the primary reason they never leave. The city's culinary identity rests on takoyaki — octopus dumplings in a crispy batter, cooked in a special mould, served with okonomiyaki sauce, mayo and dried bonito that undulates on the heat. Kushikatsu — skewers of everything that exists (meat, vegetables, seafood, cheese) breaded and deep-fried, with the absolute rule of never double-dipping into the communal sauce — is the other emblem. The Kansai-style okonomiyaki (thick savoury pancake with vegetables, meat and seafood) is distinct from the Hiroshima style. And Osaka's ramen — less famous than Fukuoka's or Tokyo's but with their own legendary establishments — is a discovery in itself. All of this in a city where one can eat extraordinarily well for ¥500–1,000 (~$3.33–6.67) in unpretentious places of formidable quality.
One of Osaka's great advantages is its position at the centre of the Kansai network. Kyoto is 15 minutes by Shinkansen or 30 minutes by JR. Nara is 40 minutes. Kobe is 20 minutes. Hiroshima is 45 minutes by Shinkansen. Living in Osaka means day-trip access to the densest concentration of Japanese cultural heritage (Kyoto, Nara, Himeji) from your apartment. This is a decisive argument for expats who want to explore Japan in depth without living in a museum city. The ICOCA IC card covers all regional networks.
Osaka teaches you that joy is not a performance. It is simply the natural way to be when you have eaten well and have people around you.
Working from Osaka
Osaka is Japan's second economy and the manufacturing, commercial and logistics hub of western Japan. The traditionally strong sectors are pharmaceuticals and medicine (Takeda, Shionogi, Otsuka all have roots in Osaka), chemicals, food processing and trading. The tech scene is less developed than Tokyo's but growing fast: the Japanese government chose Osaka as one of the pilot cities for startup visas and for the post-Expo 2025 innovation ecosystem. The Nakanoshima district and the future Yumeshima complex are attracting tech and biotech investment.
For digital nomads, Osaka presents a very attractive profile in 2026. Infrastructure identical to Tokyo (fibre 600–1,000 Mbps, universal WiFi, quality coworkings), cost of living 20% lower, an active expat community that is more human-scale than Tokyo's — which makes it easier to actually meet people. Recommended coworkings: Cocokaze (Umeda), Loco Partners (Shinsaibashi), e-square (Nakanoshima). And the city is simply more pleasant to explore day to day — less crowded, shorter distances, and Osakans noticeably more inclined to initiate conversation than their Tokyoite counterparts.
Salaries in Osaka run about 10–15% below Tokyo in equivalent roles — the average annual salary is ~¥4,000,000/year (~¥333,000/month gross → net ~¥250,000 → ~$1,667). But the cost-of-living gap (housing and food especially) is wider than the salary gap, meaning an Osaka worker often lives as well as — or better than — a Tokyo counterpart at the same financial comfort level. For a nomad with foreign-currency income, Osaka delivers even stronger purchasing power than Tokyo.
Culture & nightlife
Osaka is the world capital of Manzai — the two-person comedy style seen in every Japanese television programme, featuring a boke (the fool) and a tsukkomi (the straight man who corrects). The Osakan is born with humour integrated as a basic social skill — the inability to be funny is considered a personality deficit. The major comedy talent agencies (Yoshimoto Kogyo, founded in 1912 in Osaka and still the largest in Japan) structure an entertainment industry with no equivalent elsewhere in the country. Namba Grand Kagetsu is the legendary theatre where the best Manzai troupes perform every evening — incomprehensible without Japanese but fascinating to watch even wordlessly, so physical and immediate is the energy.
Bunraku theatre — two-thirds life-size puppets operated by three black-clad operators, voice provided by a narrator on stage accompanied by a shamisen — is listed as UNESCO Intangible Heritage and has its roots in Osaka. The National Bunraku Theatre performs several times a year with English subtitles. It is one of the strangest and most gripping artistic experiences Japan has to offer — nothing prepares you for the beauty of a puppet weeping under the manipulation of three human beings dressed in black.
Anecdotes & History
Nintendo was founded in Osaka in 1889 — but not to make video games. Fusajiro Yamauchi founded the company to produce hanafuda, traditional Japanese playing cards made of heavy paper. For 80 years, Nintendo made card games, then toys, then tried without great success several sideline businesses (hotels, taxis) before pivoting to electronic games in the 1970s. Game & Watch in 1980, Donkey Kong in 1981, the Famicom in 1983 — the transformation of Nintendo into one of the world's most recognised cultural brands was executed from its Kyoto headquarters (relocated there in 1933), but the company was born in the commercial alleyways of Osaka. This capacity to pivot radically while remaining fundamentally "an entertainment company" is a very Osaka quality.
Matsushita Kōnosuke — founder of Panasonic (then Matsushita Electric, 1918) — was born in 1894 in a village in Wakayama Prefecture and grew up in an Osaka of industrial poverty. An apprentice at a bicycle shop at age 9, he founded his company at 23 in an Osaka apartment with ¥100 in capital. His management philosophy — profit-sharing with employees, the idea that a company has social responsibility — influenced the Japanese industrial model of the 20th century more deeply than any other entrepreneur of his era. His Peace Memorial Museum in Osaka is the best introduction to Japanese corporate culture from the inside.
Who is Osaka for?
Osaka may be Japan's best city for this profile. Infrastructure identical to Tokyo, 20% lower costs, more relaxed atmosphere, welcoming expat community, extraordinary food.
Excellent option. Safety identical to Tokyo, international schools (Osaka International School, Marist Brothers), Kansai access from Kyoto. Total cost more affordable than Tokyo.
Osaka is ideal for an active, curious retiree. Extraordinary food, absolute safety, Kansai within train distance, reasonable cost of living. More relaxed pace than Tokyo.
Viable in industry, pharma, commerce. International market thinner than Tokyo for tech and finance. A specific opportunity justifies Osaka — without one, Tokyo remains more strategically sound.
Osaka: Tokyo with a soul — and 20% cheaper
Osaka delivers everything that makes Japan remarkable — safety, infrastructure, gastronomy, culture — in a version that is more human, more direct, funnier and more accessible. For a nomad, a retiree or a family, it is often the best Japanese choice: nothing is sacrificed on quality of life, but you save on housing, food and general stress.
What you need to know: the language barrier is as real as in Tokyo (Kansai-ben is additionally different from standard Japanese, which can catch even intermediate learners off guard), the international professional market is more limited, and Osaka works less in English than Tokyo even in expat zones. But for those who want to live in Japan rather than simply work there, Osaka is hard to beat.
✓ Strengths
- 20% cheaper than Tokyo — rent, food, going out
- Incomparable street food gastronomy — kuidaore
- Kansai access: Kyoto 15 min, Nara 40 min, Kobe 20 min
- Safety identical to Tokyo — global top tier
- More relaxed atmosphere, Osakans warmer and funnier
- Manzai comedy culture, Bunraku, rich subcultures
- Perfect infrastructure — metro, fibre, konbini
- Growing expat community — less saturated than Tokyo
✗ Limitations
- Thinner international professional market than Tokyo
- Kansai-ben dialect — distinct, surprising even for Japanese speakers
- Fewer multinationals and tech companies
- Extreme heat and humidity in July–August
- Language barrier identical to Tokyo
- Long-stay visa: same challenges as everywhere in Japan
Frequently asked questions
Osaka or Tokyo for a digital nomad?
Where to eat in Osaka — the essential experiences?
How do you get around Osaka?
Expo 2025 in Osaka — what legacy for residents?
What is a realistic monthly budget for a comfortable life in Osaka?
WiggMap — Indicative data: SUUMO 2025, e-housing.jp 2025, Statistics Bureau Japan 2024. Exchange rate JPY/USD ~¥150/$ (March 2026). This content is informational and does not constitute financial or real estate advice.