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Illustrated map of Japan marking top travel destinations including Tokyo, Kyoto, Osaka, Hiroshima, Nara, and Hakone with bullet train routes
Destination Guides

Best Places to Visit in Japan: A First-Timer’s Guide

By Emily Rodriguez
July 6, 2026 6 Min Read
0

The best places to visit in Japan for a first trip are Tokyo, Kyoto, and Osaka, often paired with a day trip to Nara or Hiroshima. Most itineraries mix a big city, a historic temple town, and at least one quieter stop, since Japan’s bullet trains make that combination easy to fit into a week or two.

Tokyo For Neon Streets And Old Temples

Tokyo is where most Japan trips start, and it holds enough variety to fill a week on its own. Shibuya and Shinjuku cover the neon, crowds, and nightlife side of the city, while Asakusa’s Senso-ji Temple and the nearby Nakamise shopping street show a much older Tokyo underneath the modern one.

The Meiji Shrine, tucked inside a forested park near Harajuku, is a quiet contrast to the surrounding fashion district. If sumo or kabuki theater is on your list, book those tickets one to two months ahead, since they sell out fast and don’t always show up on general ticketing sites.

Day Trips From Tokyo

Kamakura, about an hour south of Tokyo, was Japan’s political capital from 1185 to 1333 and still has the temples and a 14-meter Great Buddha statue to show for it. Nikko, roughly two hours north, is known for the elaborately carved Toshogu Shrine and forested mountain scenery that feels far removed from central Tokyo.

Illustrated collage of Japan's iconic sights, including Senso-ji Temple, Kinkaku-ji Golden Pavilion, the floating torii gate at Miyajima, and Mount Fuji


Kyoto For A Thousand Years Of Temples

H2: Kyoto For A Thousand Years Of Temples

Kyoto was Japan’s imperial capital for more than a thousand years, and because it was spared from WWII bombing, it kept a level of historic architecture that Tokyo and Osaka mostly lost. Kinkaku-ji, the Golden Pavilion, and the red gates of Fushimi Inari Shrine are the two sights that show up in nearly every Kyoto photo, and both deserve an early morning visit before tour groups arrive.

Beyond the postcard spots, the Arashiyama bamboo grove and the Higashiyama historic district are worth a slower half day each. Kyoto is also one of the best cities in Japan for kaiseki, a multi-course traditional meal, if you want one splurge dinner during the trip.

Osaka For Street Food And Nightlife

Osaka runs at a different speed than Kyoto. Dotonbori’s canal-side street food scene and Kuromon Market’s fresh seafood stalls make it one of the best cities in Japan to eat your way through, and the nightlife around Namba stays lively well past midnight.

Osaka also works as a base for day trips to Nara, Kobe, and Himeji, and it’s the closest major city to Universal Studios Japan if you’re traveling with kids. Two full days is a reasonable minimum, and three gives you more room to actually eat everything on the list.

Nara As A Half-Day Trip

H3: Nara As A Half-Day Trip

Nara sits under an hour from both Kyoto and Osaka by train, which makes it the easiest add-on day trip in the Kansai region. Todai-ji Temple houses a Great Buddha statue large enough to walk beneath, and Nara Park is home to hundreds of free-roaming, bowing deer that will nudge you for rice crackers.

Hiroshima For History And Miyajima Island

Hiroshima carries obvious historical weight as one of the two cities hit by an atomic bomb in WWII, and the Peace Memorial Park and Museum draw more than 1.7 million visitors a year. It’s a heavy visit, but the city itself has moved forward, with a modernized downtown and a local specialty, Hiroshima-style okonomiyaki, worth trying at Okonomi-mura.

Miyajima Island, a short ferry ride away, has the famous Itsukushima Shrine with its torii gate appearing to float at high tide. Combining Hiroshima and Miyajima into one day trip from Kyoto or Osaka via the Shinkansen is doable, though an overnight stay gives you a calmer, less crowded evening at the shrine.

Hakone And The Fuji Five Lakes For Mount Fuji Views

Hakone is the easiest way to see Mount Fuji without committing to a multi-day hiking trip. The Hakone Ropeway and a cruise across Lake Ashi both offer clear views of the mountain on a good day, and the region’s onsen, or hot spring baths, make it a natural place to slow down after a few days of city travel.

Mount Fuji itself is famously shy about showing its peak, since cloud cover hides it more often than not, so building in an extra day around Hakone or the Fuji Five Lakes improves your odds of an actual clear-sky view.

Takayama And The Japanese Alps For A Quieter Side Of Japan

Most first-time visitors never make it to Takayama, which is exactly why it’s worth considering on a second trip or a slightly longer first one. This small town in the Japanese Alps has an old town full of traditional wooden houses, a morning market for fresh local produce, and easy access to Shirakawa-go’s thatched-roof farmhouses nearby.

Two to three nights is enough to see Takayama itself, and it pairs naturally with hiking in Kamikochi or a stop in Kanazawa if you want to build a full Japanese Alps loop rather than sticking to the Tokyo-Kyoto-Osaka corridor.

When To Visit Japan

H2: When To Visit Japan

Spring, roughly late March through early April, brings cherry blossoms and the country’s biggest crowds and highest hotel prices at the same time. Autumn, especially November, brings equally striking foliage with somewhat lighter crowds, which makes it many repeat visitors’ favorite season.

Summer runs hot and humid across most of the country, with Tokyo and Kyoto both regularly climbing into the 90s Fahrenheit through July and August. Winter is quieter and colder, but it’s also ski season in Hokkaido and Niseko, and Kyoto’s temples look genuinely different dusted in snow.

Four-panel infographic showing Japan's spring cherry blossoms, summer heat, autumn foliage, and winter snow for trip planning

Getting Around Japan

The Shinkansen bullet train network connects Tokyo, Kyoto, Osaka, and Hiroshima efficiently, and a Japan Rail Pass can be worth the cost if you’re covering several of these cities in one trip, though it needs to be purchased before some route changes took effect, so check current pricing against your planned itinerary before assuming it’s the cheaper option.

Within cities, Tokyo and Osaka both run extensive subway systems, and an IC card like Suica or Pasmo works across trains, subways, and even convenience store purchases, which saves a lot of ticket-machine time.

Building Your Japan Itinerary

There’s no single right way to see Japan, but a first trip usually works best anchored around Tokyo and Kyoto, with Osaka and one day trip filled in around them. If you have more time, add a quieter stop like Hakone or Takayama rather than squeezing in a fourth big city, since Japan rewards slowing down as much as it rewards checking off famous sights.

FAQ’s Best Places To Visit In Japan

1. How many days do you need for a first trip to Japan?

Ten to fourteen days is enough to cover Tokyo, Kyoto, and Osaka comfortably, with a day trip or two worked in. A week is workable if you focus on just two cities, like Tokyo and Kyoto, without trying to add a third.

2. Is it better to visit Tokyo or Kyoto first?

Most itineraries start in Tokyo since international flights land there more often, then move to Kyoto by bullet train. There’s no real downside to reversing the order if your flights land in Osaka instead.

3. What is the best time of year to see cherry blossoms in Japan?

Late March through early April in most of the country, though the exact bloom dates shift year to year and vary by region, with Tokyo and Kyoto typically blooming before northern areas like Hokkaido.

4. Do you need the Japan Rail Pass?

It depends on your route. If you’re covering multiple distant cities like Tokyo, Kyoto, and Hiroshima in one trip, it often pays for itself, but if you’re staying within one region, a regional rail pass or individual tickets can work out cheaper.

5. Is Japan expensive to visit?

Japan can be as affordable or as expensive as you make it. Ramen and convenience store meals cost only a few dollars, while hotels in central Tokyo or a kaiseki dinner in Kyoto can push costs up quickly, so the range depends heavily on where you eat and stay.

Author

Emily Rodriguez

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