Tsubagi 2-chōme Lot 25-21

椿2丁目 地番 25-21

Adachi, Tokyo · 〒123-0871

The street address (住居表示) for this lot is 2-chōme-25-8 Tsubaki, Adachi City, Tokyo 123-0871, Japan.

地番 (Chiban)Tsubagi 2-chōme 25-21
Street Address2-chōme-25-8 Tsubaki, Adachi City, Tokyo 123-0871, Japan
住所〒123-0871 東京都足立区椿2丁目25−8
Postal Code123-0871
Municipality 足立区 (Adachi), Tokyo

About This Lot

Lot 25-21 is a registered land parcel (地番) in 椿2丁目, Adachi, Tokyo. The lot number is used in Japan's land registration system for legal documents, property ownership records, and cadastral maps. It corresponds to the street address 2-chōme-25-8 Tsubaki, Adachi City, Tokyo 123-0871, Japan (〒123-0871) in the Japanese address system.

The street address (住居表示) for lot 25-21 in 椿2丁目, Adachi is 〒123-0871 東京都足立区椿2丁目25−8, 〒123-0871.


Lot 25-21 in 椿2丁目, Adachi is in postal code 〒123-0871 (Tsubagi), Tokyo.


Search for your address using the search box above. Our system cross-references geocoded coordinates and address data from Japan's Geospatial Information Authority (国土地理院) to match street addresses with registered lot numbers. You can also browse by prefecture, city, and postal code.


Navigate to the lot page using the prefecture → city → postal code → lot number directory. Each lot page shows the corresponding street address (住居表示) where available, derived from Japan's official address geocoding data.


Japan uses two parallel address systems. The 住居表示 (jūkyo hyōji) is the postal/street address used for mail and everyday navigation. The 地番 (chiban) is the cadastral lot number tied to land registration and property deeds. They do not share a predictable structure — a conversion table or geocoding is required to translate between them.


Lot code data is sourced from the Ministry of Justice's 登記所備付地図データ (Legal Affairs Bureau cadastral map data), published as open data via the Japanese government's geospatial data portal. Coordinates are matched using the Geospatial Information Authority of Japan (GSI) address search API.


The database currently contains over 5,316,912 registered land parcels across Japan, sourced from the 2025 Ministry of Justice cadastral dataset. Coverage is being expanded across all 47 prefectures.


Yes. A chiban identifies a parcel of land, not a building. If a piece of land was subdivided over time, or if several structures were built on land that was never formally split into separate parcels, more than one building can sit on and share the same lot number. This is one of the reasons jūkyo hyōji was introduced: it assigns each building its own address regardless of how the underlying land is divided.


Use the chiban. Real estate registration documents, sale and purchase contracts, and title records (tōki jikō shōmeisho) all reference the land by its chiban, not its street address. If you only have the street address, you'll need to convert it to a chiban before filing or reviewing registry records — which is exactly what this tool is for.