🌏 Destinations · All 🇯🇵 Japan · full guide Tokyo Kyoto Plan a Japan Trip (How Many Days) 🗓️ 5-Day Plan: Tokyo + Kyoto 🧭 Travel Prep Guide About Contact 🇹🇭 ไทย🇬🇧 English🇨🇳 中文🇪🇸 Español🇫🇷 Français
🗓️ 5-Day Plan · Your First Japan Trip

Japan in 5 Days — Tokyo + Kyoto, the First-Timer Plan

Two days to dig into Tokyo, the bullet train down to Kyoto on Day 3, another day for the old temples, then a Nara or Osaka day trip to finish — we lay it out day by day, with real travel times, train costs, and hotels that are easy to wheel your bags to, all on one page.

Start Here

Why a First 5-Day Trip Should BeTokyo + Kyoto

Ever stared at a map of Japan and felt defeated trying to work out how much you can fit into 5 days? Honestly, don't be greedy on a first trip — the magic of Japan is in walking slowly, not sprinting around collecting stamps city by city. The formula that works best for 5 days is to keep it to just two main cities — Tokyo, modern to the extreme, and Kyoto, the cultural heart of old Japan — linked by a single shinkansen leg. People who've just come back all say the same thing: you get both worlds in full, without burning out so badly the trip stops being fun.

This page lays it out day by day, like we're walking you through it — two days for Tokyo (Asakusa, Shibuya, Harajuku, Skytree), then on Day 3 you wheel your bags onto the shinkansen down to Kyoto, spend another full day on the golden temple and the bamboo grove, and on the last day choose between a Nara day trip to feed the deer or Osaka for street food before you fly home. Every leg comes with real travel times, train costs, and hotels that are easy to drag your luggage to.

🚄 Straight up, first thing: this plan does not force you to buy a JR Pass — for a 5-day Tokyo + Kyoto route with only one long shinkansen leg, buying tickets separately is usually far cheaper than a 7-day Pass. We explain why, and link a calculator, in the transport section below · train prices/times are 2026 figures, so check the latest again before you travel.
🗼
Days 1–2 · Tokyo
Asakusa, Shibuya, Harajuku, Skytree — the big-city highlights.
🚄
Day 3 · Move to Kyoto
Shinkansen ~2 hr 15 + Fushimi Inari + Gion at dusk.
⛩️
Day 4 · Kyoto
Golden Kinkaku-ji, the Arashiyama bamboo grove, Kiyomizu-dera.
🦌
Day 5 · Nara/Osaka
A day trip to feed the deer, or eat your way through Dotonbori, then fly home.
The Whole Trip at a Glance

Where You Areon Each of the 5 Days

Get the big picture before the details — the first two nights in Tokyo, then shift your base to Kyoto for two nights. There's only one real travel leg, the shinkansen on Day 3, so no fussing with hotel changes.

DayBaseHighlights of the daySleep in
Day 1Day 1TokyoArrive in Tokyo · Senso-ji temple, Asakusa · Shibuya Crossing · a view towerTokyo
Day 2Day 2TokyoMeiji Shrine + Harajuku · Akihabara/teamLab · Skytree + GinzaTokyo
Day 3Day 3→ KyotoShinkansen ~2 hr 15 · Fushimi Inari's thousands of torii · Gion at duskKyoto
Day 4Day 4KyotoGolden Kinkaku-ji · Arashiyama bamboo grove · Kiyomizu-deraKyoto
Day 5Day 5Day tripPick: Nara (deer + great Buddha at Todai-ji) or Osaka (Dotonbori + castle), then fly homeFly home
💡 A tip for planning your flights: if you arrive into a Tokyo airport (Narita/Haneda) and depart from Kansai (KIX) at Osaka, the whole trip flows best, because you never have to double back to Tokyo — you travel in a straight line, Tokyo → Kyoto → Osaka/airport. Most airlines let you book "into one city, out of another" (open-jaw) for a price close to a normal return ticket.
Day by Day

What You'll Actually DoAcross These 5 Days

Here's the detail, one day at a time — each card gives you the highlights, timing, how to get around, and a small tip that keeps the day flowing. Reorder things to taste, but this skeleton walks well without wearing you out.

Senso-ji temple in Asakusa, Tokyo, with visitors and an incense cauldron in the temple courtyard 🗼 Day 1 · Tokyo1
Arrive in Tokyo, start at Asakusa
Day 1 · Senso-ji · Asakusa

Land, drop your bags at the hotel, and ease into the trip at Asakusa — old-town Tokyo, home to Senso-ji, the city's oldest temple. Walk in under the giant red Kaminarimon lantern, browse souvenirs all the way down Nakamise Street, make a wish at the main hall, then stroll along the Sumida River with Skytree off in the distance. It's an opening day that doesn't push too hard after a tiring flight.

When: afternoon–evening (the temple grounds are always open · the Nakamise shops close around 5–6 pm)
🚆Getting there: Asakusa Station (Ginza/Asakusa Line) lets you out right at the temple gate
💡Tip: Come in the evening — fewer people, the temple is lit up beautifully, and you can photograph Kaminarimon far more easily than by day.
Tokyo Attractions →
Shibuya Crossing in Tokyo at night with neon signs and crowds of people crossing the street 🚦 Day 1 · Tokyo1
Close the first day at Shibuya Crossing
Day 1 · Shibuya Crossing

Hop the train over to Shibuya after dark and watch the scramble — thousands of people crossing at once with every cycle of the lights, the image of Tokyo you have to see with your own eyes. Say hello to the Hachiko dog statue, then ride up to the Shibuya Sky deck atop Scramble Square to see the whole city lit up. On a clear night you'll pick out Tokyo Tower and the faint silhouette of Fuji — a satisfying way to finish day one.

When: evening · book a Shibuya Sky deck ticket ahead (around ¥2,500, check the latest)
🚆Getting there: Shibuya Station (JR Yamanote/Ginza Line), exit by the Hachiko statue
💡Tip: The best free angle on the crossing is from the 2nd-floor café across the street, or the station walkway — no ticket needed.
Tokyo City Guide →
Meiji Shrine in Tokyo, a traditional wedding procession passing through the forested grounds ⛩️ Day 2 · Tokyo2
Meiji + Harajuku + Akihabara
Day 2 · Meiji Shrine · Harajuku

Start the morning in a forest in the middle of the city at Meiji Shrine — so leafy you forget you're in Tokyo, and if you're lucky you'll catch a traditional wedding procession. Then walk out onto Takeshita Street in Harajuku, the home of teen fashion and offbeat snacks. In the afternoon, pick your lane — Akihabara for anime and electronics, or book ahead for the digital art museums of teamLab.

When: morning–afternoon (the shrine opens around sunrise · teamLab needs a timed online ticket)
🚆Getting there: Harajuku/Meiji-jingumae Station (JR Yamanote Line), walkable to both the shrine and Takeshita Street
💡Tip: teamLab (Planets or Borderless) tickets sell out fast — book several days ahead and dress simply, since some zones have you wading through water.
Tokyo Attractions →
Tokyo Skytree, a tall white tower rising above the Tokyo skyline 🌃 Day 2 · Tokyo2
Tonight: Skytree, or shopping in Ginza
Day 2 · Tokyo Skytree · Ginza

End day two on a high — Tokyo Skytree, at 634 metres the tallest tower in Japan, where the whole metropolis spreads out below you as a sea of light. The Solamachi mall at its base is good for eating and browsing. If you'd rather something more upscale, swing by Ginza, a top-tier shopping district that lights up beautifully at night and is packed with restaurants. Pick one or the other, depending on how much energy you have left.

When: evening–night (Skytree open until around 9–10 pm · deck tickets roughly ¥2,100–3,100, check the latest)
🚆Getting there: Tokyo Skytree Station (Tobu Line) or Oshiage · for Ginza, use Ginza Station on the Ginza/Marunouchi Line
💡Tip: Book Skytree online ahead for a discount and to skip the long queue. Go just before sunset to catch both the daytime view and the night lights.
Tokyo City Guide →
Fushimi Inari Shrine in Kyoto, a tunnel of vermilion torii gates lined up one after another 🚄 Day 3 · → Kyoto3
Bullet train to Kyoto + the thousand torii
Day 3 · Shinkansen · Fushimi Inari

Check out of your Tokyo hotel, wheel your bags onto the Tokaido Shinkansen, and roughly 2 hours 15 minutes later you're in Kyoto. Stash your luggage in a station locker or drop it at the hotel first, then head straight to Fushimi Inari Shrine to walk beneath thousands of vermilion torii gates climbing the mountainside — the iconic image of Kyoto. As evening falls, wander the old streets of Gion, where, if you're lucky, you might catch a maiko slipping past.

🚄Travel: Tokyo → Kyoto on the Nozomi shinkansen ~2 hr 15 · ticket around ¥14,170 (2026, check the latest)
When: Fushimi Inari is open 24 hours with no entry fee · Gion is at its most atmospheric at dusk
💡Tip: A JR Pass can't be used on Nozomi — you'd switch to Hikari (about 20 min slower) · come to Fushimi Inari early or late to beat the midday crowds.
Kyoto City Guide →
Arashiyama Bamboo Grove in Kyoto, a path running through tall green bamboo stalks ⛩️ Day 4 · Kyoto4
Golden temple, bamboo grove and Kiyomizu
Day 4 · Kinkaku-ji · Arashiyama · Kiyomizu-dera

A full day in Kyoto. Start early at Kinkaku-ji, where the golden pavilion mirrored in its pond is so lovely you'll have to stop and stare. Move on to Arashiyama to walk through the towering green bamboo grove and over the Togetsukyo Bridge. Finish the afternoon at Kiyomizu-dera, the wooden temple on the hillside whose veranda juts out over the whole city, then wander down the old wooden lanes of Sannenzaka to shop for souvenirs.

When: full day · Kinkaku-ji/Kiyomizu-dera entry is around ¥400–500 each (check the latest)
🚆Getting there: Kyoto's city buses link the temples · for Arashiyama, the JR Sagano line or the Randen tram are easiest
💡Tip: The famous temples get very crowded by mid-morning — hit Kinkaku-ji or the bamboo grove before 9 am for clear photos and cool, calm air.
Kyoto Attractions →
Day 5 · Choose Your Path

The Last Day —Nara or Osaka

Both are easy round trips from Kyoto in a single day. Choose based on whether you want a "calm old town + deer" or a "buzzing city + great food," then plan your departing flight to match.

OPTION A
🦌 Nara — old town + deer

About 45 minutes from Kyoto (JR or Kintetsu). Walk into Nara Park to feed the tame deer roaming free, and bow to the giant Daibutsu Buddha in Todai-ji, a colossal wooden hall. Ideal if you want to end the trip quietly and slowly, soaking up Japan's first permanent capital.

OPTION B
🍜 Osaka — eat + shop

About 15 minutes from Kyoto by shinkansen, or 25–30 by rapid train. Graze on street food at Dotonbori (takoyaki, okonomiyaki), photograph the Glico sign, see Osaka Castle and shop the Shinsaibashi district. Ideal if you want a lively, full-on finish.

How to Decide
⚖️ Look at Your Departure Airport

If you fly home from Kansai (KIX), choose Osaka — it sits right on the way to the airport, no backtracking · If you fly out of Tokyo, both work fine, but allow for the ~2 hr 15 shinkansen ride back up to Tokyo before the airport.

Transport + Train Tickets

What to Know About TrainsBefore Your First Trip

Japan's rail system looks daunting at first, but a handful of basics has you covered — especially the IC card, and the perennial question of whether to buy a JR Pass.

💳
Get an IC Card First
Suica (Tokyo) or ICOCA (Kansai) lets you tap onto any city train or bus. Top it up at a machine instead of buying single tickets — you can even add one to your phone.
🧮
A 5-Day JR Pass Rarely Pays Off
With only one long shinkansen leg (Tokyo→Kyoto), a separate ticket at around ¥14,000 is far cheaper than a 7-day Pass at around ¥50,000. Do the maths first.
🚄
Reserve Your Shinkansen Seat Ahead
Buy a reserved seat online or at the station. High season fills up fast — pick the right-hand side (seats E/D) heading down to Kyoto for a chance to spot Fuji.
🧳
Big Bags Need the End-of-Car Space
On the Tokaido Shinkansen, the back-row seats have a space for oversized luggage — reserve it with your ticket, or you'll be holding the bag on your lap.
🗺️
Load Google Maps for Navigation
In Japan it's remarkably accurate for platforms, departure times and fares. Turn on an eSIM for data all trip and getting around is far easier.
🚏
Kyoto Runs on Buses
Many Kyoto temples are easier to reach by city bus than by train — tap your ICOCA to board. Allow extra time, as traffic backs up in the evening.
Route Map

The 5-Day Routeon a Single Map

See at a glance why this route flows — Tokyo sits to the east, Kyoto/Nara/Osaka to the west, joined by a single shinkansen line. You travel in a straight line without doubling back.

Where to Stay

Pick First-Trip HotelsThat Are Easy to Reach with Luggage

The heart of this plan is sleeping in just two bases — two nights in Tokyo, two in Kyoto. Choose spots with easy train connections and the whole trip gets much smoother.

🗼
Tokyo: Near a Yamanote Station
Shinjuku, Tokyo Station or Ueno connect easily everywhere. Ueno is handy because it's close to both Asakusa and the airport trains.
⛩️
Kyoto: Near the Station or Downtown
Around Kyoto Station makes wheeling bags onto the shinkansen easy, while the Karasuma/Shijo area is central and well placed for buses to the temples.
📅
Book 2–3 Months Ahead
Good locations in Tokyo and Kyoto sell out fast, especially in autumn-leaf and blossom seasons. Booking early gets you both the room and a better price.
🛏️
Two Bases Is Enough — No Constant Moving
Two nights in Tokyo, two in Kyoto. You pack up only once, on the day you change cities, and the last-day trip is an easy round trip from Kyoto.
📶
Turn On an eSIM Before You Fly
Having data the moment you land helps with Google Maps navigation, booking tickets and finding restaurants — no hunting for WiFi.
💴
Budget a Buffer + Some Cash
Small shops, temples and some machines still take cash only, so carry some yen. Train tickets and larger stores take cards/IC.
Related Guides

Keep Planning Your Japan Trip — Cities, Train Tickets, and Other Itineraries

🗼

Tokyo City Guide

Where to stay, what to see and where to eat in Tokyo — pick your neighbourhood and map out the first two days smoothly.

Tokyo Guide →
⛩️

Kyoto City Guide

Old temples, the bamboo grove and Gion, plus central hotels that put the temple buses within easy reach.

Kyoto Guide →
🧮

JR Pass Calculator

Plug in your real route and see whether a JR Pass pays off or separate tickets are cheaper, before you spend a yen.

Calculate JR Pass →
🗺️

Plan a Japan Trip (How Many Days)

The itinerary hub — compare 5/7/10/14-day routes and pick the trip and season that fit you.

Start Planning →
📆

7-Day Golden Route

More than 5 days? Add Hakone's onsen and a full day in Osaka to the classic route.

See the 7-Day Plan →
ℹ️

Japan Travel Prep

Visa · eSIM · IC card · JR Pass · yen · power plugs · Japanese etiquette — everything before you fly.

Travel Prep →
Frequently Asked Questions

Questions About a5-Day Japan Trip

How many cities can you see in Japan in 5 days?
Five days and four nights is a good fit for two main cities — Tokyo and Kyoto — plus one short day trip. The most sensible plan for a first trip is two full days in Tokyo, a bullet train down to Kyoto on Day 3, another full day in Kyoto, and a Nara or Osaka day trip on the last day before you fly home. Don't try to squeeze in more, because most of your time would go on moving between cities rather than actually exploring.
Is a JR Pass worth it for a 5-day first trip?
For a 5-day Tokyo + Kyoto plan with only one long shinkansen leg (Tokyo→Kyoto), a 7-day JR Pass at around ¥50,000 usually isn't worth it, because a one-way shinkansen ticket at around ¥14,000 is far cheaper. The better move is to buy the shinkansen ticket separately and tap an IC card (Suica/ICOCA) for trains around the city. Run your real route through the JR Pass calculator before you decide.
What's the fastest way from Tokyo to Kyoto, and how long does it take?
The fastest option is the Tokaido Shinkansen Nozomi service, which takes around 2 hours 15 minutes from Tokyo Station to Kyoto. A reserved seat costs around ¥14,170 (2026 price — check the latest). If you hold a JR Pass you can't use Nozomi and have to take the Hikari instead, which is about 20–25 minutes slower.
Should I do Nara or Osaka on the last day?
Pick whichever suits you. Choose Nara (about 45 minutes from Kyoto) if you want a relaxed day feeding the deer, seeing the great Buddha at Todai-ji and soaking up a calm old town. Choose Osaka (about 15 minutes by shinkansen, or 25–30 by rapid train) if you'd rather eat street food at Dotonbori, see Osaka Castle and shop hard. Both are easy round trips from Kyoto in a day. If you fly home from Kansai (KIX), Osaka is more convenient because it's on the way.
Where should a first-timer stay in Tokyo and Kyoto?
In Tokyo, stay near a major, well-connected station such as Shinjuku, Tokyo Station, or Ueno (handy for both Asakusa and the airport trains). In Kyoto, stay near Kyoto Station or in the city centre (Karasuma/Shijo), so buses and trains to the temples are easy and you can wheel your luggage onto the shinkansen on travel day. See real accommodation options in our Tokyo and Kyoto city guides.
Is 5 days enough for a first trip to Japan?
It's enough for a condensed Golden Route — you'll catch the highlights of Tokyo and Kyoto and experience both the ultra-modern big city and the old temple town. It's a great fit for a first trip when you don't want to travel far with lots of transfers. If you have more time, step up to 7 days to add Hakone and a full day in Osaka, or 10 days to reach as far as Hiroshima and Miyajima.
Ready for Your First Trip?

Your 5 Days Are Planned
All That's Left Is the Hotels

Open the Tokyo and Kyoto city guides to choose neighbourhoods that are easy to wheel your bags to, find more places to see and eat, or start hunting for well-located hotels early — before the rooms fill up and prices climb.

🔴 Search Tokyo Hotels Kyoto Guide