Overview
Use Narita Airport Terminal 2-3 Station if your flight, hotel shuttle, or airport transfer is connected to Terminals 2 or 3 rather than Terminal 1. It is one of Narita International Airport's main rail stations and the rail access point for the Terminal 2 side of the airport.
Lines and connections
The station is served by both Keisei and JR. Keisei services include the Skyliner, Access Express, and Keisei Main Line routes, while JR services include the Narita Express and other JR connections.
For central Tokyo, Keisei is convenient for Ueno, Nippori, Asakusa-side connections, and other eastern approaches. JR is a good choice for Tokyo Station, Shinagawa, Shibuya, Shinjuku, Yokohama, and Narita Station, depending on the train and timetable.
Airport access
The station is built into the airport access system. Narita Airport guidance describes Terminal 2 as about five minutes on foot from the station and Terminal 3 as about ten minutes on foot, so passengers using Terminal 3 should leave a little extra time for the walk within the airport.
Some nearby airport hotels still require a shuttle bus, even if they are associated with this side of the airport. Check which terminal or shuttle stop your hotel uses before treating the station name as a door-to-door route.
Station area
This is primarily an airport access station, not a neighborhood base. It links rail passengers with the Terminal 2 and Terminal 3 side of Narita Airport, along with airport bus stops and hotel shuttles that use the terminal bus areas.
Good to know
Narita Airport Station serves Terminal 1, while Narita Airport Terminal 2-3 Station serves Terminals 2 and 3. Match the station to your airline terminal before buying a ticket or planning a hotel transfer.