Six days built for the real otaku — walk Akihabara until your legs give out, hunt second-hand figures at Nakano Broadway, step inside the Ghibli Museum (advance booking only), trace the scenes from the anime you love, then finish at Den Den Town in Osaka. We map the route day by day, tell you exactly how to get around, and help you keep the budget in check.
Picture yourself standing in the middle of the Akihabara crossing — game billboards as tall as the buildings, anime opening themes blasting from every shopfront, and the figure you've been hunting for years sitting in a glass case right in front of you. This is a trip built for moments like that. We're not going to march you through temples and gardens until you're bored — we've planned six days around what otaku actually come to Japan for: the figure districts, the second-hand shops, the Ghibli Museum, anime scene pilgrimage, and Super Nintendo World.
The route runs Tokyo (Akihabara + Nakano + Ikebukuro) → Ghibli Museum Mitaka → a day of scene pilgrimage → Osaka's Den Den Town. We tell you how to get around at every leg, give the latest 2026 ticket prices we've checked, and flag exactly which things you have to book in advance (especially the Ghibli ticket, which you absolutely cannot buy at the door) so you don't arrive heartbroken.
Your main base is Tokyo for 4 nights, then you shift down to Osaka for 2 nights — lock in the Ghibli Museum day (Day 3) around the ticket slot you can actually get, then arrange the other days to fit around it.
| Day | Base | Highlight | Zone/Station | Book ahead? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Day 1Day 1 | Tokyo | Akihabara — figures, games, cards, maid cafés | Akihabara (JR/Hibiya) | No |
| Day 2Day 2 | Tokyo | Nakano Broadway + Ikebukuro Otome Road + Pokémon Center | Nakano · Ikebukuro | No |
| Day 3Day 3 | Tokyo | Ghibli Museum Mitaka + Inokashira Park | Mitaka (JR Chuo) | Ghibli ticket (key) |
| Day 4Day 4 | Day trip | Scene pilgrimage seichi junrei — Hakone / Chichibu / Washinomiya | Depends on series | Check train times |
| Day 5Day 5 | Osaka | Shinkansen down to Osaka + Den Den Town (Nipponbashi) | Nipponbashi (Sakaisuji) | Shinkansen ticket |
| Day 6Day 6 | Osaka | Super Nintendo World @ USJ (optional) + fly home | Universal City (JR) | USJ ticket + Timed Entry |
This is the heart of the page — six day-by-day blocks telling you which district to tackle when, how to get there, how long it takes, and which things to book ahead. Read it and copy it straight into your own plan.
🤖 Tokyo1
Start the trip in the capital of otaku culture — multi-floor figure buildings (Kotobukiya, AmiAmi, Animate), trading-card shops, GiGO/Taito arcades, and a maid café to try at least once. Work your way from the station side all the way down Chuo-dori (closed to traffic as a pedestrian street on Sunday afternoons) and you can easily fill the whole day.
Japan Anime Guide →A day for the serious collector — start the morning at Nakano Broadway, a single building packing in over 30 Mandarake branches, a goldmine of old figures, vintage goods and animation cels that hardcore collectors come to dig through. In the afternoon move to Ikebukuro: walk Otome Road (the shojo/doujin strip), drop into the big Animate branch, and the Pokémon Center Mega Tokyo at Sunshine City.
Japan Anime Guide →The day a lot of people look forward to most — a museum Hayao Miyazaki designed himself. No photos inside, so you can truly lose yourself in the Ghibli world; there's the robot from Laputa on the rooftop and a short film screened only here. Give it 2–3 hours, then stroll on through the adjacent Inokashira Park. It makes a relaxed day after two days of hard shopping.
Tokyo Attractions →
📍 Day trip4
"Seichi junrei" — visiting the real-world locations behind anime scenes — is what makes this trip special. Japan has over 5,000 pilgrimage spots; pick one series you love and turn it into a day trip. Hakone for Evangelion fans (Tokyo-3 is based on the town), Chichibu for Anohana, or Washinomiya Shrine, the spot that launched the pilgrimage trend from Lucky Star back in 2007.
Hakone Guide →
🍢 Osaka5
Take the morning shinkansen down to Osaka, drop your bags at the hotel, then spend the afternoon in Den Den Town — Osaka's electronics-and-anime district, the Kansai answer to Akihabara. Figures, trading cards, second-hand shops and cosplay; it's a touch less crowded than Akihabara and easier to walk. Finish with street food around Shinsekai/Dotonbori, both close by.
Osaka Guide →A last day for the Nintendo crowd — Super Nintendo World at Universal Studios Japan brings Mario's world to life for real. Ride Mario Kart, wear a Power-Up wristband, and collect coins across the zone. It has a single entrance and exit, so entry is capped — you'll need a Timed Entry. If Nintendo isn't your thing, use today for a final collectibles run in the city before you fly home and it's still worth it.
Osaka Attractions →This trip is mostly city walking plus one shinkansen leg down to Osaka. Get these three things straight and travel gets a lot easier (2026 times/prices may shift — check the latest before you go).
Akihabara–Nakano–Ikebukuro–Mitaka are all linked by JR + the subway; tap an IC card (Suica/PASMO) and you're on. Nakano is on the JR Chuo, ~5 min from Shinjuku · Mitaka is on the same line, ~20 min. Base yourself around Akihabara/Ikebukuro and getting around is easiest.
Tokyo→Shin-Osaka by Nozomi ~2 hr 30 min · if you use a JR Pass the Nozomi isn't covered, so take the Hikari (a little slower). From Shin-Osaka transfer to the subway for Nipponbashi/Den Den Town · work out whether a Pass is worth it before you buy one.
Booking order: Ghibli ticket (10th of the previous month, gone in minutes) → USJ ticket + Timed Entry for Super Nintendo World → shinkansen seats (easier to reserve in advance). Fix the Ghibli day first, then arrange everything else.
This trip splits into Tokyo for 4 nights + Osaka for 2 nights. Stay near a major train station first and getting between districts becomes far less tiring and saves you time.
See clearly where each district sits — Akihabara, Nakano and Mitaka are all in greater Tokyo, then the trip heads south to finish at Den Den Town in Osaka. Tap the pins to explore.
A deep dive into the otaku districts, figure shops, maid cafés, second-hand stores, and scene-pilgrimage spots across Japan.
Anime Guide →Super Nintendo World, USJ, Tokyo Disney, and how to book tickets / Express Pass to make the most of your time.
Theme Parks Guide →Akihabara, Nakano, Ikebukuro, and Tokyo's best districts, plus how to get around the city.
Tokyo Attractions →Den Den Town, USJ, Dotonbori, Osaka Castle — cover Kansai in just a few days.
Osaka Attractions →Want to add cities beyond the anime route? See the classic 7-day Tokyo–Kyoto–Osaka plan.
7-Day Plan →Visa · eSIM · IC card · JR Pass · yen · power plugs · etiquette — everything before you fly.
Travel Prep →Start by targeting the day you'll book the Ghibli Museum ticket (the 10th of the previous month), then build the other days around it. After that, find a stay near a station in Tokyo and Osaka early — and open the anime guide for more districts and standout shops.