
Tokyo Karaoke
Tokyo Karaoke is a compact karaoke box on Rua da Gloria, Liberdade's karaoke corridor. The venue has 8 private rooms ranging from small (2-4 people) to medium (8-12 people), each equipped with a touchscreen song selection system, microphones, and a screen. The song catalog is extensive, covering Japanese (enka, J-pop, anime themes), Portuguese (MPB, samba, sertanejo, pagode), English (pop, rock, country), and Korean (K-pop). Rooms are rented by the hour, with the first hour including a round of drinks. The sound quality in the rooms varies; the larger rooms have better speaker systems, while the smallest rooms can distort at high volume. A small bar in the lobby serves beer, sake, and soft drinks, with a limited food menu of sushi rolls and edamame. The staff is bilingual in Portuguese and Japanese, with enough English to handle basic requests. The crowd on weekday evenings is predominantly Japanese-Brazilian, while weekends bring a more diverse mix including university students, groups of friends, and tourists. The venue opens in the late afternoon and runs until 2 AM on weekends.
Where to stay near Tokyo Karaoke
Hotels and rentals within walking distance.
What to Expect
Private karaoke rooms with a multilingual song catalog. The experience is closer to a Tokyo karaoke box than a Western karaoke bar. Expect soundproofed rooms, touchscreen song selection, and a drink-focused service model.
Private and fun. Each room is its own world.
Whatever you choose to sing: J-pop, MPB, K-pop, English pop, enka, samba, and more
Casual. No one sees you except the people in your room.
Groups of friends looking for a private singing session, karaoke enthusiasts, couples who want a fun evening without the club scene
Cash and cards accepted. Room fee paid at checkout.
Price Range
Room rental 50-90 BRL/hour (includes first round of drinks), beer 15 BRL, sake flask 35 BRL, sushi plate 25 BRL
Room ~$10-18/~9-16 EUR per hour, beer ~$3/~2.70 EUR
Hours
16:00-00:00 Mon-Thu, 16:00-02:00 Fri-Sat, 14:00-22:00 Sun
Insider Tip
Book a room in advance on Friday or Saturday, as they fill by 8 PM. The medium rooms have the best sound quality. Request the updated song catalog at the front desk, as the touchscreen system sometimes does not reflect the newest additions.
Full Review
Tokyo Karaoke sits on Rua da Gloria between the larger Samurai Karaoke and the older Chopperia Liberdade, competing for the same karaoke crowd in a concentrated strip. Its advantage is the private room model, which provides a more intimate experience than the open-stage format at some neighboring venues.
The rooms are functional rather than luxurious. Basic furnishings, a TV screen, microphones, and a touchscreen tablet for song selection. The soundproofing varies; the interior rooms are better insulated than the ones along the corridor, where you can hear muffled singing from adjacent rooms. The medium-sized rooms (for 6-8 people) offer the best balance of space and sound quality.
The song catalog is the venue's real asset. The Japanese selection is deep, covering everything from classic enka ballads to current J-pop hits and anime theme songs. The Portuguese selection is equally strong, with MPB standards, samba classics, and the full spectrum of sertanejo. English and Korean options are solid but not as deep. The touchscreen interface works smoothly, and search by title, artist, or language is intuitive.
The per-hour pricing model (R$50-90 depending on room size and time slot) includes a first round of drinks delivered to the room. Subsequent drinks are ordered through an intercom or by flagging the staff in the corridor. Beer, sake, and soft drinks are available. The sushi menu is basic but acceptable for between-song snacking.
Weekday evenings are the best time for a relaxed session. The rooms are available without reservation, and the atmosphere is calm. Weekend evenings are busier and louder, with groups of friends celebrating birthdays and end-of-week gatherings. Reservations are recommended for Friday and Saturday after 7 PM.
The experience is closer to a Japanese karaoke box than a Western sing-along bar. The private room format, the touchscreen system, and the emphasis on Japanese songs all reflect Liberdade's cultural roots. For visitors who have experienced karaoke in Tokyo, this will feel familiar. For those who have not, it is an excellent introduction.
The Neighborhood
Located on Rua da Gloria, Liberdade's karaoke strip. Samurai Karaoke and Chopperia Liberdade are neighbors. The Liberdade metro station is a 5-minute walk north.
Getting There
Metro to Liberdade station (Line 1), then a 5-minute walk south along Rua da Gloria.
Address
Rua da Glória, 543
Other Venues in Liberdade

Lions Nightclub
Large multi-floor electronic music club with a rooftop area and 3D-effect dance floor. Regular lineups feature local and international DJs spinning house, techno, and Brazilian bass.

Bar Kintaro
Izakaya-style Japanese bar operating since 1993, modeled after Tokyo's drinking alleys. Serves sake, Japanese beer, and classic izakaya snacks in a no-frills setting.

Samurai Karaokê
São Paulo's most famous karaoke box, open since 1969 across three floors with dozens of private rooms. The kitchen serves sushi, ramen, and gyoza between songs.

Chopperia Liberdade
Late-night bar combining karaoke, pool tables, and draft beer in a movie-set-style room with red walls and oriental lanterns. Open until 5 AM on weekends.

Izakaya Karaoke e Dancing
Old-school Japanese dance hall and karaoke venue popular with the local Nikkei community. Early arrivals pay a flat fee covering dinner and unlimited singing.

Aska Lamen
Late-night ramen shop and bar on Rua Galvao Bueno that doubles as a drinking spot after 10 PM. The counter seating fills with locals slurping tonkotsu ramen between rounds of sake.