The is a subway line owned and operated by Tokyo Metro in Tokyo, Japan. On average, the line carries 1,447,730 passengers daily (2017), the second highest of the Tokyo Metro network, behind the TÃ Âzai Line (1,642,378).
The line was named after the Chiyoda ward, under which it passes. On maps, diagrams and signboards, the line is shown using the color green, and its stations are given numbers using the letter "C".
The line serves the wards of Adachi, Arakawa, Bunkyà Â, Chiyoda, Minato and Shibuya, and a short stretch of tunnel in Taità  with no station. Its official name, rarely used, is . The Chiyoda Line was built as a bypass for the older Hibiya Line, with both lines following a similar route and having direct interchanges at three stations. Trains have through running onto other railway lines on both ends. More than half of these are trains to the northeast beyond Ayase onto the East Japan Railway Company (JR East) Joban Line to ( during the rush hour). The rest run to the southwest beyond Yoyogi-Uehara onto the Odakyu Odawara Line to .
Services on the Kita-Ayase branch consist of a combination of shuttle services to Ayase and through services to Yoyogi-Uehara.
The Chiyoda Line has direct interchanges with all other Tokyo Metro and Toei lines with the exception of the Toei Oedo Line. However, Yushima Station is located relatively close to Ueno-okachimachi Station on the Oedo Line without being marked as an official transfer between the lines.
According to the Tokyo Metropolitan Bureau of Transportation, as of June 2009 the Chiyoda Line was the second most crowded subway line in Tokyo, at its peak running at 181% capacity between and stations. In 2016 congestion was reported at 178%. In both fiscal years 2021 & 2022 the congestion rate had dropped to 139%, as a consequence of the COVID-19 pandemic.
The Chiyoda Line was originally proposed in 1962 as a route running from âÂÂKitami â Harajuku â Nagatachà  â Hibiya â Ikenohata â Nippori â Matsudoâ under Urban Transportation Council Report No. 6 (é½å¸Â交éÂÂ審è°ä¼ÂçÂÂç³第6å·); the initial name was Line 8.
In a revision issued in January 1964, it was indicated that the section from Nippori to Matsudo would connect to the Jà Âban Line via Nishi-Nippori, Machiya, and Kita-Senju, with the Jà Âban Line extended beyond Ayase. A further revision in March specified that the Odakyà « Odawara Line would be extended between Kitami and Yoyogi-Uehara to serve the section from Kitami to Harajuku.
The original proposal envisioned a separate subway line branching from the Odakyu Line at Kitami Station, running beneath Setagaya-dà Âri and passing through Wakabayashi and Komaba to Harajuku. However, due to issues such as operational conflicts with the Odakyu Line, the current plan was adopted, in which Odakyu services are extended from Kitami and diverge at Yoyogi-Uehara.
On December 16, 1964, Line 8 was formally designated as Line 9, officially named the Tokyo Metropolitan Rapid Transit Line No. 9, and the 32.5 km section between Kitami and Ayase was finalized. However, until April 1968, the line number differed by authority: it was referred to as Line 8 by the Urban Transportation Council under the Ministry of Construction, while the Tokyo Metropolitan Government designated it as Line 9.
Line 9 was designed to pass through built-up areas in Chiyoda, and also intended to relieve the busy Ginza Line and Hibiya Line, which follow a roughly similar route through central Tokyo.
On July 30, 1966, construction began with work on subsequent sections commencing sequentially thereafter.
The first stretch was opened on December 20, 1969 between and . The line was almost completed by October 10, 1972 when it reached , although the section to was not completed until March 31, 1978.
The branch line to was opened on December 20, 1979. This branch primarily serves as a connection to Ayase Depot, but also serves Kita-Ayase Station constructed in the area. A three-car shuttle service operated between Ayase and Kita-Ayase.
The Chiyoda Line was one of the lines targeted in the Aum sarin gas attack on March 20, 1995.
On May 15, 2006, women-only cars were introduced on early-morning trains from on the Joban Line to .
On March 18, 2008, the Chiyoda Line became the first subway line in Japan with operations by reserved-seating trains when Odakyu Romancecar limited express services began running between Kita-Senju and (on the Hakone Tozan Line) and (on the Odakyu Tama Line). Trains also run from/to using tracks connecting to the Yurakucho Line.
On March 16, 2019, 10-car trains commenced operation on the branch line to Kita-Ayase station after platforms were lengthened by 135m, allowing direct services from Kita-Ayase to Yoyogi-Uehara.
Metro Morning Way and Metro Homeway and are fully reserved seat commuter trains operating between Hon Atsugi on the Odakyu Odawara Line and Kita-Senju on the Chiyoda Line using 60000 series MSE Romancecar trains. These services require a seat reservation as well as payment of the Limited Express fee. Tickets can be purchased online or at ticket vending machines or ticket counters at Odakyu stations. Travel wholly within the Chiyoda Line is not permitted.
As of July 2024, on weekdays there are 2 Metro Morning Way services to Kita-Senju arriving 07:53 & 09:40, and there are 5 Metro Homeway services departing Otemachi hourly between 17:30 & 21:30 of which only the 18:30 departure commences from Kita-Senju at 18:14. On weekends and holidays there is one Metro Morning Way service to Kita-Senju arriving 09:46 and 2 Metro Homeway services departing Kita-Senju at 19:35 & 20:35.
Metro Hakone is a similar service operating in the counter-peak direction between Kita-Senju and Hakone-Yumoto on the Hakone Tozan Line to serve visitors to Hakone, with a travel time of approximately 2 hours. On weekdays there is 1 trip in each direction, departing Kita-Senju at 09:47 and arriving back at Kita-Senju at 16:46. On weekends and holidays there are 3 trips in each direction: departing Kita-Senju at 08:33, 10:37 & 15:22, arriving back at Kita-Senju at 12:47, 18:21 & 19:53.
, the following train types are used on the line, all running as ten-car formations unless otherwise indicated.
a. Crowding levels defined by the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism: