In the five-line subway plan designated by
Ministry of Home Affairs Notification No. 56 of 1925 (大正14年内務省告示第56号) after the
Great Kanto earthquake of 1923, the Marunouchi Line was outlined as a 20 km (12 mi) underground route connecting “
Shinjuku –
Yotsuya-mitsuke –
Hibiya –
Tsukiji –
Kakigaracho –
Okachimachi –
Hongo-sanchome – Takehayacho –
Otsuka”. Tokyo City obtained a route license for Line 4 between
Shinjuku and
Otsuka on May 16 of the same year planned to begin construction on Line 3 between
Shibuya and
Sugamo and on Line 5 between Ikebukuro and Susaki. However, due to the city’s substantial public debt, the
Ministry of Home Affairs and the
Ministry of Finance opposed the project, and construction approval was not granted. In October 1932, Tokyo City transferred the route licenses for Line 3, running between Shibuya and Sakurada-Hongo (near present-day
Nishi-Shimbashi), and for Line 4, connecting Shinjuku and
Tsukiji, to Tokyo Rapid Railway. In February 1937, Tokyo Rapid Railway planned a connecting section between Lines 3 and 4 and obtained a route license for the
Yotsuya-Mitsuke –
Akasaka-Mitsuke segment. On June 5, 1942, a groundbreaking ceremony for the Yotsuya-Mitsuke–Akasaka-Mitsuke section was held and construction began near the Benkei Moat (弁慶濠). Construction was suspended in June 1944 as a result of worsening wartime conditions, including shortages of funds, materials, and labor. The subsequent progress of the line was as follows: • Ochanomizu to Awajichō: March 1956 • Awajichō to Tokyo: July 1956 • Tokyo to Nishi-Ginza (now Ginza): December 1957 • Nishi-Ginza to Kasumigaseki: October 1958 • Kasumigaseki to Shinjuku: March 1959 • Shinjuku to Shin-Nakano/Nakano-Fujimichō (not Nishi-Shinjuku): February 1961 • Shin-Nakano to Minami-Asagaya (not Higashi-Kōenji): November 1961 • Minami-Asagaya to Ogikubo: January 23, 1962 • Nakano-Fujimichō to Hōnanchō: March 23, 1962 • Nishi-Ginza becomes part of Ginza when Hibiya Line reaches there: August 1964 • Higashi-Kōenji opens (between Shin-Nakano and Shin-Kōenji): September 1964 • Nishi-Shinjuku opens (between Shinjuku and Nakano-Sakaue) May 1996. The Marunouchi Line was one of the lines targeted in the
Aum sarin gas attack on March 20, 1995. A plan to extend the Marunouchi Line from Ogikubo to
Asaka City in
Saitama Prefecture was rejected in the late 1990s. The line, stations, rolling stock, and related facilities were inherited by
Tokyo Metro after the privatization of the Teito Rapid Transit Authority (TRTA) in 2004.
Automatic train control (ATC) was activated on the Marunouchi Line on February 27, 1998, which allowed for an increase in the maximum operating speed limit from to . This was followed by
train automatic stopping controller (TASC) which was introduced in November 2002, along with
automatic train operation (ATO) which was introduced on the main segment of the Marunouchi Line on December 27, 2008. The platform-edge doors at
Hōnanchō Station, the terminus of the Hōnanchō Branch, were lengthened to allow six-car trains to use the station, with work starting in 2013, which enabled through trains to and from Ikebukuro to start operating all the way to Hōnanchō from fiscal 2017. With the start of the revised timetable on December 7, 2024, the Marunouchi Line became the first subway line in Japan to adopt
communications-based train control (CBTC) signalling. The new system allows for shorter intervals between trains and improved delay recovery. == Station list ==