2008 • 14 July 2008: A ceremony was held at the site to mark the start of construction.
2009 • 6 April 2009: The
foundations for the three main legs were completed. • 7 August 2009: The tower reached a height of 100 m. • 16 October 2009: The projected height was increased from to make it the highest self-supporting steel tower. Also, 6-3-4 is
Mu-sa-shi in
Japanese wordplay goroawase. • 10 November 2009: The tower reached a height of 200 m.
2010 • 16 February 2010: The tower reached a height of . • 29 March 2010: The tower reached a height of , becoming the tallest structure in Japan. • 30 July 2010: The tower topped , reaching a height of . • 11 September 2010: The tower reached , becoming the tallest structure ever built in Japan, surpassing the dismantled
Tsushima Omega tower of . • 23 October 2010: The tower reached a height of , and assembly of the main tower section was completed. • 20 November 2010: Two
tuned mass dampers with a total weight of 100
tons were temporarily placed on the tower tip at . • 1 December 2010: The tower topped the mark and reached a height of , beating
Taipei 101 (). A lightning conductor and two tuned mass dampers were docked to the gain tower, which was gradually lifted within the central shaft. • 16 December 2010:
Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications approved
NHK and
five TV key stations in Tokyo's plans to install their broadcasting facilities on the tower. • 18 December 2010: The
transmitting antenna for digital terrestrial television began to be installed.
2011 • 1 March 2011: The tower topped the mark and reached a height of , surpassing
Canton Tower and becoming the world's
tallest tower. • 12 March 2011: The tower reached a height of . A full inspection was made, looking for possible damage by the
2011 Tōhoku earthquake and its
aftershocks. • 18 March 2011: The tower reached its final height of at 1:34 pm
JST. • 23 May 2011: Dismantling four
tower cranes continues until mid-July. • 7 June 2011: Announced
public opening date of Tokyo Skytree Town and entrance fee (Adults: 2,000 yen to level; extra 1,000 yen to level) to
observation floors. • 17 November 2011: Guinness World Records certified the Tokyo Skytree as the tallest free-standing tower.
2012 • 16 February 2012: The roofs of warehouses close to the tower were damaged by falling snow and ice from the tower. • 29 February 2012: Tower construction was finished. Completion was delayed two months from the original schedule because of a shortage of supplies due to the
effects of the 2011 Japanese earthquake and tsunami. • 2 March 2012: A ceremony was held to celebrate the completion with a
kannushi priest and 70 people from
Tobu Group, construction, broadcasting and other companies. • 6 March 2012: First Light-up during the Tokyo Hotaru Festival • 26 April 2012:
Emperor Akihito and
Empress Michiko of Japan inspected the Tokyo Skytree Tembo Galleria. • 22 May 2012: Public opening of Tokyo Skytree • 1 October 2012: Channel 9
Tokyo MX start transmission from Tokyo Skytree with continuing transmission from
Tokyo Tower in
simulcast manner.
2013 • 16 January 2013: Snow falling from the tower knocked a hole in the roof of a nearby house. No one was reported injured. • 13 May 2013:
Tokyo MX continued transmission from Tokyo Skytree and stopped transmission from Tokyo Tower with a gradual decrease in power since 12 November 2012. • 31 May 2013: On 9:00 a.m., formal transmission of broadcast in channel 1 to 8, except 3, start from Tokyo Skytree after number of test transmission with off for minutes to hours from
Tokyo Tower since 22 December 2012.
2022 • 22 May 2022: the 10th anniversary of the opening of Tokyo Skytree was celebrated with
Kabuki by
Ichikawa Ebizo XI who performed a signature technique called the "nirami" glare on a special stage atop of the tower. ==Opening==