Flights booked, but no idea where to begin? This is your starting point — pick the right number of days, the best season, and the route that fits your style, then jump straight into the full day-by-day itineraries we've mapped out for 5 · 7 · 10 · 14 days, hour by hour.
Ever opened a map of Japan and felt your eyes glaze over, with no idea where to even begin? Tokyo, Kyoto, Osaka, Fuji, Hokkaido, Kyushu — everywhere looks worth going. Honestly, planning a Japan trip isn't as hard as it seems. You just need to answer 3 questions first: how many days you have, what month you're going, and which kind of route suits you. After that, everything else falls into place.
This page is the starting point for your planning — we'll help you pick the right number of days, show you what each trip length covers, choose a route by your interests (first-timer · onsen lover · foodie · family), then send you into the full day-by-day itineraries we've sequenced for you, from a quick 5-day trip all the way to a two-week deep dive.
A table to help you decide how long your trip should be — who each length suits and which cities it covers. Tap the link at the end of each row to open the full day-by-day itinerary for that option.
| Trip length | Level | Route + coverage | Best for | Day-by-day plan |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5 daysFirst trip, short & tight | Easy | Tokyo + Kyoto (+ a Nara/Osaka day trip) — two main cities, highlights without rushing | First-timers, short on time, a quick holiday | 5-day plan → |
| 7 daysMost popular | Just right | The full Golden Route: Tokyo–Hakone (onsen)–Kyoto–Osaka — cities, temples, and a ryokan night, all covered | A first trip that wants it all without cramming | 7-day plan → |
| 10 daysAdd Kansai + the west | Moderate | Golden Route + Hiroshima & Miyajima (the floating torii) — pushing further west | Those with a little more time who want Hiroshima | 10-day plan → |
| 14 daysDeep dive + countryside | Full | Tokyo–Fuji–Takayama–Shirakawa-go–Kanazawa–Kyoto–Osaka–Hiroshima, including the Japanese Alps | A long trip that wants both cities and countryside | 14-day plan → |
There's no single best route for everyone — only the one that's right for you. Pick the card that matches your style, then open the guide or plan we recommend for that kind of trip.
🔰 First-timer1
If this is your first trip to Japan, start with the Golden Route — Tokyo–Kyoto–Osaka. The trains connect easily, English signage is everywhere, and there's no shortage of food and sights, so you can tick off the highlights without any guesswork. Ideal for a 5–7 day trip.
See the 7-day Golden Route →
♨️ Onsen lover2
Want to soak in a hot spring, sleep in a ryokan, and eat kaiseki? This kind of trip should set aside 1–2 nights in an onsen town. Hakone is the closest to Tokyo, while Kyushu (Beppu, Kurokawa) and Tohoku (Ginzan) are the real deal for anyone who loves an open-air bath.
Choose an onsen town →
🍜 Foodie3
Japan is heaven for anyone who loves to eat. Osaka is nicknamed "Japan's kitchen" (takoyaki, okonomiyaki, kushikatsu), Kyoto shines for refined cuisine, and Tokyo has more Michelin restaurants than any city in the world. Build your trip to land in Osaka a little longer and you'll eat well.
Japanese Food Guide →
👨👩👧 Family4
Travelling Japan with kids is more fun than you'd expect. Nara lets the deer wander right up to you, Osaka has Universal Studios, and Tokyo has Disney. The key is to build in breathing room — don't pack several stops into one day. Choose a hotel near a station so it's easy to move around with a stroller.
See the 7-day plan →
⛩️ Culture5
If you're in love with temples, shrines, and old towns, Kyoto is the heart of it — Fushimi Inari's thousands of torii, the Golden Pavilion, the Arashiyama bamboo grove. Pair it with Nara and Kanazawa for the full picture. Give Kyoto plenty of time, since the temples are many and spread out.
Kyoto Attractions →
❄️ Winter6
Go in December–February and snow is all but guaranteed. The best-value winter trip is playing in the snow and then sinking into a warm onsen. Hokkaido and the Japanese Alps (Takayama, snow-capped thatched roofs at Shirakawa-go) are the dream backdrop. Pack a heavy coat and always check train schedules and road conditions.
See the 14-day plan →Follow these 5 steps in order and your planning never gets messy. Each step links to a guide that helps you make that particular decision.
Start by checking how many days you can take off, then compare with the table above. 5 days = Tokyo + Kyoto · 7 days = the full Golden Route (most popular) · 10–14 days = a deep dive out to Hiroshima and the countryside. Don't forget to knock off the first and last days for travel.
The month changes both the mood and the price. Cherry blossoms late Mar–Apr · autumn foliage Oct–Nov (easiest of all to travel) · snow Dec–Feb. Avoid Golden Week (late Apr–early May), when it's packed and pricey. Chasing the blossoms? See our cherry blossom guide.
Combine your days and your interests into a route. First-timers should take the Golden Route — Tokyo–Kyoto–Osaka — first; onsen lovers slot in Hakone; those with more time add Hiroshima or the Japanese Alps. Then open the day-by-day plan that fits you.
Book accommodation by the cities on your route (open the city guides — Tokyo · Kyoto · Osaka — for areas and hotels). If you're moving cities a lot, run the numbers on a JR Pass to see if it's worth it. In high season, book months ahead.
Tie up the loose ends before you go — an eSIM/pocket Wi-Fi for data · Japanese etiquette so you travel with ease · and travel prep info with visas, yen, power plugs, and IC cards all in one place.
Small things people wish they'd known the first time. Learn them up front and your planning comes together far more neatly.
See clearly where each city sits — the Golden Route (Tokyo–Kyoto–Osaka) runs as the central spine, Hiroshima is out west, and Kanazawa–Takayama sit in the middle of the island. Plan along this line and you'll cover several cities in one trip.
Pick a season first and everything else gets clearer — what to pack, what hotels cost, and the views you'll come home with.
Know how many days you're going? Open the day-by-day itinerary we've sequenced for you, complete with how to get around, where to stay each night, and the spots you can't miss.
A short, tight first trip — 2 days in Tokyo, move to Kyoto for 2, then a Nara/Osaka day trip before flying home.
See the 5-day plan →The full Golden Route — Tokyo–Hakone (onsen)–Kyoto–Osaka, all covered without cramming.
See the 7-day plan →Golden Route + Hiroshima & Miyajima — add the floating torii and the Peace Park out west.
See the 10-day plan →A deep dive into the countryside — including Fuji, Takayama, Shirakawa-go, Kanazawa, and the Japanese Alps.
See the 14-day plan →Enter your route and see at a glance whether the JR Pass beats separate tickets — based on real shinkansen fares.
Calculate the JR Pass →Every region and city, with links into city guides, hotels, and attractions across Japan.
Japan Guide →For a first trip, we'd start with the 7-day Golden Route plan — it covers Tokyo, Hakone, Kyoto, and Osaka without rushing. Or start hunting down well-located hotels in Tokyo early, before the rooms fill up.