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🌋 Kyushu Trip · Day-by-Day Plan

Kyushu 7-Day Itinerary — Fukuoka, Beppu, Kumamoto, Kagoshima Off the Beaten Path

Japan's southern island is the one most travellers skip — yet it's packed with onsen, volcanoes, and regional food. We've mapped a 7-day loop from Fukuoka down to Beppu–Yufuin, Kumamoto with Mt Aso, Sakurajima in Kagoshima, and a finish in Nagasaki — with the JR Kyushu Rail Pass and the Shinkansen route laid out so you can follow it step by step.

Start Here

Kyushu Is the Island Travellers Tend to Skip — and End Up Loving

Picture an island with more onsen than anywhere else in Japan, two volcanoes still smoking away, a striking black castle, and the port towns where foreign traders arrived before anyone else — all of that is Kyushu, Japan's southernmost main island. Most travellers fly to Tokyo and Osaka out of habit and skip right past it, but honestly, this is the island that people on their second or third trip tend to fall hardest for — fewer crowds, lower prices, and a side of Japan you can enjoy without elbowing through selfie sticks.

This page is a 7-day day-by-day loop around Kyushu — starting in Fukuoka, the island's capital, dropping down for the onsen of Beppu and Yufuin, stopping at Kumamoto Castle alongside the Mt Aso volcano, heading all the way south to Sakurajima in Kagoshima, then looping back to finish in the historic port of Nagasaki. We'll tell you what to do each day, which train line to take, how long it takes, and where to stay — all in one place.

🚄 First things first: this route runs on JR trains as its backbone — the Kyushu Shinkansen links Hakata–Kumamoto–Kagoshima very fast, while Beppu and Nagasaki are reached by the Sonic and Kamome limited expresses. We recommend the JR Kyushu Rail Pass, which is clearly better value than buying tickets one leg at a time. Train prices and schedules for 2026 may change, so always check the official JR Kyushu site before you travel.
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Onsen Capital
Beppu has the largest volume of hot-spring water in Japan, paired with laid-back Yufuin.
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Two Volcanoes
The Mt Aso crater near Kumamoto plus Sakurajima sitting in Kagoshima Bay.
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Regional Food Galore
Hakata tonkotsu ramen, street-side yatai, Nagasaki champon.
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Easy by Train
The Kyushu Shinkansen + JR Kyushu Rail Pass connect every main city.
The 7-Day Trip at a Glance

The Kyushu Route — Which City on Which Day

A loop south and back: Fukuoka → Beppu/Yufuin → Kumamoto + Aso → Kagoshima → Nagasaki, sleeping one night per city and moving on JR trains as your backbone. Stretch or shorten it to fit the number of days you have.

DayBase / CityMain highlightsTravelWhere to sleep
Day 1–2Days 1–2FukuokaNakasu yatai · Canal City · tonkotsu ramen · Kushida ShrineFly into FUKHakata/Tenjin
Day 3Day 3Beppu + YufuinJigoku hell tour · sand bath · Lake Kinrin in YufuinSonic ~2 hrsBeppu
Day 4Day 4Kumamoto + AsoKumamoto Castle · Mt Aso craterTrain/busKumamoto
Day 5Day 5KagoshimaSakurajima volcano (ferry) · Sengan-en Garden · Ibusuki sand bathShinkansen ~1 hrKagoshima
Day 6Day 6NagasakiPeace Park · Glover Garden · Chinatown · Mt Inasa night viewVia Hakata→KamomeNagasaki
Day 7Day 7Heading homePick up castella souvenirs · back to Hakata / fly homeKamome→FUK
🧭 How to read the table: this is a "loop south, then back" route that balances onsen, volcanoes, and port towns. With only 4–5 days, trim it to Fukuoka + Beppu/Yufuin + Kumamoto (northern Kyushu). With 9–10 days, add Takachiho, Ibusuki, or Yakushima island. Nagasaki sits on the opposite side from Kagoshima, so some people flip the order to visit Nagasaki first and then head south — whatever suits your return flight.
Day by Day

7 Days in Kyushu — What to Do

We walk the route stage by stage, from touchdown in Fukuoka to the loop back — each card tells you what to see that day, how to get there, how long it takes, and a tip from people who've made the trip.

Nakasu yatai food stalls — street-side ramen stands at night in Fukuoka 🍜 Fukuoka1–2
Fukuoka / Hakata
Day 1–2 · Fukuoka · Gateway to Kyushu

Kyushu's capital and where almost everyone flies in — slurp the original Hakata tonkotsu ramen, settle in at a yatai (street-side food cart) around Nakasu after dark, shop at Canal City, then drop by Kushida Shrine in the heart of town. The airport is just two subway stops from Hakata Station, so you can start sightseeing the moment you land.

📍Base: Hakata district (next to the station) or Tenjin (the shopping district)
🍜Highlights: Nakasu yatai · tonkotsu ramen · Canal City · Kushida Shrine
✈️Getting there: Fly into Fukuoka Airport (FUK), then the subway to Hakata in ~5 min
💡Tip: Yatai open in the evening and run late; popular stalls have long queues, so arriving before 7 pm gets you a seat more easily. Bring cash, as many don't take cards.
Fukuoka Guide →
Beppu jigoku 'hell' — a vivid cobalt-blue hot spring with steam rising ♨️ Beppu3
Beppu — the Steaming Onsen Town
Day 3 · Beppu Onsen

Beppu pushes up more hot-spring water than anywhere else in Japan, and as you walk the town you'll see steam rising from pipes everywhere. The headline is the "hell" (jigoku) tour — strangely coloured hot springs that are for looking, not bathing — from cobalt-blue ponds to blood-red ones. The other must-try is the sand bath, where you lie down and get buried in hot sand heated from underground.

📍Base: Beppu, Oita Prefecture · the Kannawa district is the hub of the hells
♨️Highlights: jigoku hell tour · sunamushi sand bath · an evening onsen soak
🚆Getting there: Sonic limited express from Hakata, ~2 hrs (reserved seat ~5,680 yen, check the latest)
💡Tip: The main hells have a combined pass for several ponds; some sit far apart and need a bus. Give it half a day, then save the other half for a real onsen soak.
Beppu Guide →
Yufuin's main street with the twin peaks of Mt Yufu rising behind 🎨 Yufuin3
Yufuin — the Laid-Back Onsen Town
Day 3 · Yufuin · Paired with Beppu

Just about an hour from Beppu but a different world — Yufuin is a small, arty town with a single street packed with cafes, galleries, and sweet shops. At the end of it lies Lake Kinrin, where mist drifts over the water in the early morning, with the twin peaks of Mt Yufu always in the backdrop. It suits couples or anyone who'd rather stroll than chase a packed tour.

📍Base: Yufuin, Oita Prefecture · easy to pair with Beppu in one day
🎨Highlights: Yunotsubo street · Lake Kinrin · cafes + galleries
🚆Getting there: Train/bus from Beppu ~1 hr, or the sightseeing Yufuin no Mori train from Hakata
💡Tip: The Yufuin no Mori train is gorgeous but books up fast, so reserve ahead. If you're staying in Beppu, visit Yufuin in the daytime and head back for an evening soak in Beppu.
Beppu Guide →
Kumamoto Castle — black-and-white keep on a tall stone base 🏯 Kumamoto4
Kumamoto + Mt Aso Volcano
Day 4 · Kumamoto Castle & Mt Aso

Kumamoto Castle is one of the most imposing in Japan — a black-and-white keep on steep, curving stone walls. It was badly damaged in the 2016 earthquake, then restored, and the main tower is open to climb again. If you want to push on, drive or take a bus up to the crater of Mt Aso, one of the largest volcanic calderas in the world, its vent still smoking with sulphurous gas.

📍Base: Kumamoto city · Aso is about 1.5 hrs to the east
🏯Highlights: Kumamoto Castle · Suizenji Garden · the Aso crater
🚆Getting there: Shinkansen Hakata→Kumamoto ~50 min · for Aso, transfer to the JR Hohi line or rent a car
💡Tip: The Aso crater opens and closes depending on gas levels and warnings — always check the crater status on the official Aso city website before going up.
Kumamoto Guide →
Seaside hot sand bath at Ibusuki, Kagoshima — people buried in black volcanic sand on the beach 🌋 Kagoshima5
Kagoshima + Sakurajima
Day 5 · Kagoshima · The southern end of the route

The southernmost city on the trip, with the Sakurajima volcano towering across the bay as a backdrop to the whole town. A ferry takes about 15 minutes across to explore the lower slopes (the summit is still active and off-limits). Stop by Sengan-en, the old Shimazu family villa, and if you have time, head further south to Ibusuki for a seaside hot sand bath — lying buried in warm sand heated from underground is an experience that's hard to find anywhere else.

📍Base: Kagoshima city · Ibusuki is about 1 hr to the south
🌋Highlights: Sakurajima ferry · Sengan-en Garden · Ibusuki sand bath
🚄Getting there: Kyushu Shinkansen Kumamoto→Kagoshima-Chuo ~50–60 min (Hakata→Kagoshima on the Mizuho ~1 hr 15 min)
💡Tip: Sakurajima drops volcanic ash often, so carry an umbrella/eye protection and check the wind direction that day. The ferry runs all day, no need to book ahead.
Kyushu Region Guide →
Nagasaki Peace Park — the blue Peace Statue ⚓ Nagasaki6
Nagasaki — the Historic Port
Day 6 · Nagasaki

Nagasaki was the port where Chinese, Portuguese, and Dutch traders did business back when the rest of Japan was closed off, leaving it with a multicultural blend no other city quite matches. Start at the Peace Park commemorating the events of 1945, climb Glover Garden (the Meiji-era homes of foreign merchants), wander one of Japan's oldest Chinatowns, then finish with the night view from Mt Inasa, ranked among the most beautiful in the country.

📍Base: central Nagasaki · easy to get around by the city tram
Highlights: Peace Park · Glover Garden · Chinatown · Mt Inasa night view
🚄Getting there: from Kagoshima you loop back via Hakata, then take the Relay Kamome→Takeo-Onsen→Kamome Shinkansen (Hakata–Nagasaki ~90 min)
💡Tip: Mt Inasa is reached by ropeway — go around sunset and wait for the city lights to come on for the best of it. Buy a day tram pass if you'll hit several spots.
Nagasaki Guide →
Getting Around + Seasons

How to Do Kyushu by Train and Make It Pay

This route runs on JR trains as its backbone. Get these three things straight before you set off and the planning gets a lot smoother — 2026 prices and timetables may change, so always check the official JR Kyushu site first.

POINT 1
Get a JR Kyushu Rail Pass

The All Kyushu Area pass gives you unlimited JR trains across Kyushu — about 22,000 yen for 3 days · 24,000 yen for 5 days · 26,000 yen for 7 days (check the latest). For a trip running Hakata–Kumamoto–Kagoshima–Nagasaki like this, the 5- or 7-day pass is usually clearly cheaper than buying tickets one leg at a time.

POINT 2
Know the Main Trains

The backbone is the Kyushu Shinkansen (Hakata–Kumamoto–Kagoshima · the Mizuho is fastest, ~1 hr 15 min to Kagoshima) · the Sonic limited express runs to Beppu in ~2 hrs · for the Nagasaki side you take the Relay Kamome then the Nishi-Kyushu Shinkansen Kamome · the scenic Yufuin no Mori train is lovely but needs a reservation.

POINT 3
Which Season to Go

Kyushu is good year-round and milder than the north — spring (Mar–May) and autumn (Oct–Nov) have the best weather · summer is rainy and humid · winter sees little snow but onsen soaks are at their best. Avoid Golden Week (late Apr–early May), when it's crowded and accommodation is pricey.

Where to Stay

Which City to Sleep InEach Night of the Trip

This trip moves cities often, so picking accommodation near the train station every time is the easiest call — tap into a city guide for real hotel options, or start your room search on Agoda.

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Fukuoka — the Hakata District
Sleep near Hakata Station for easy onward travel in every direction · Fukuoka Guide · Find a stay →
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Beppu — an Onsen Ryokan
Pick a place with its own onsen for one night — well worth it in a hot-spring town · Beppu Guide · Find a stay →
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Kumamoto — the City Centre
Stay near the station or the castle district so you can wander out in the evening · Kumamoto Guide · Find a stay →
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Kagoshima — Near Chuo Station
A room with a Sakurajima view is a bonus, and it's close to the ferry pier · Kyushu Guide · Find a stay →
Nagasaki — Along the Tram Lines
Staying near a tram line lets you reach sights all across the city · Nagasaki Guide · Find a stay →
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Money-Saving Trick
Kyushu accommodation is noticeably cheaper than Tokyo or Osaka · booking next to the station cuts down on dragging your luggage · set aside one night for an onsen ryokan as the highlight of the trip.
Map

The Kyushu Routeon One Map

See exactly how the loop works — Fukuoka sits up north, then down to Beppu on the east side, Kumamoto in the centre of the island, Kagoshima at the southern tip, then back over to Nagasaki on the west.

Kyushu Travel Tips

6 Things to KnowBefore You Hit the Southern Island

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Hunt Down the Regional Food
Kyushu is the birthplace of tonkotsu ramen · Hakata has yatai · Nagasaki has champon and sara udon · Kagoshima has kurobuta pork. Eat your way through and never repeat a dish.
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Check the Volcano Status
Both Aso and Sakurajima are still active. The Aso crater opens and closes with gas levels — always check the official site before going up, and remember you can't climb the summit of Sakurajima.
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Set Aside an Onsen Ryokan Night
If you've come all the way to Kyushu, spend one night at a ryokan with an onsen — Beppu, Yufuin, or Kurokawa. Many travellers call it the best value of the whole trip.
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Reserve the Sightseeing Trains Ahead
Beautiful trains like the Yufuin no Mori, and JR Kyushu's specially designed services, sell out fast — book early.
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Get an eSIM Before You Fly
Handy for Google Maps to find stations, checking live train times, and looking up yatai or cafes along the way — much easier than hunting for WiFi.
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Pack Light to Stay Nimble
This trip changes cities often, and a single easy-to-roll bag helps a lot · if you've got a lot, use luggage forwarding (takkyubin) to send it ahead to your next hotel.
Related Guides

Keep Planning Your Kyushu Trip — Cities, Onsen, and Rail Passes

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Kyushu Region Guide

The whole-island overview — main cities, seasons, getting around, and the highlights of every Kyushu prefecture.

Kyushu Guide →
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Japan 7-Day Itinerary

The Golden Route in 7 days — Tokyo–Kyoto–Osaka — compared with this off-the-beaten-path Kyushu trip.

7-Day Plan →
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Fukuoka Guide

The gateway to Kyushu — Nakasu yatai, tonkotsu ramen, Canal City, hotels, and how to travel onward.

Fukuoka Guide →
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Kumamoto Guide

Kumamoto Castle, the Mt Aso volcano, hotels, and how to reach the crater safely.

Kumamoto Guide →
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Onsen Towns Across Japan

Pick the onsen town that's right for you — Beppu, Yufuin, Kurokawa, and 12 more famous towns nationwide.

Onsen Towns →
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Is the JR Pass Worth It?

Enter your route and check whether you should buy a JR Pass or single tickets before you decide to pay.

JR Pass Calculator →
Frequently Asked Questions

Questions Aboutthe Kyushu Trip

Is 7 days enough for Kyushu?
Seven days is just right for the main loop — Fukuoka–Beppu/Yufuin–Kumamoto–Kagoshima–Nagasaki — at a relaxed pace, sleeping one night per city and using JR trains as your backbone. If you only have 4–5 days, trim it to Fukuoka + Beppu/Yufuin + Kumamoto, or focus on northern Kyushu. With 9–10 days you can add Takachiho, Ibusuki, or Yakushima island.
Is it better to take the train or rent a car in Kyushu?
For this big-city route the train is more convenient, because the Kyushu Shinkansen links Hakata–Kumamoto–Kagoshima quickly and the Sonic and Kamome limited expresses connect Beppu and Nagasaki. A JR Kyushu Rail Pass is great value if you visit several cities. Renting a car only makes sense for Mt Aso, Kurokawa, or rural spots the train doesn't reach.
How much is the JR Kyushu Rail Pass, and is it worth it?
The All Kyushu Area pass is around 22,000 yen for 3 days, 24,000 yen for 5 days, and 26,000 yen for 7 days (2026 prices may change — check the official JR Kyushu site first). Just a round trip from Hakata to Kagoshima by Shinkansen almost pays for the pass on its own, so for a 7-day trip running across several cities the 5-day or 7-day pass is usually clearly cheaper than buying tickets one leg at a time.
What's the difference between Beppu and Yufuin, and which should I visit?
Beppu is the onsen town with the largest volume of hot-spring water in Japan, known for its 'hell' (jigoku) tours, steam drifting across the whole town, and sand baths. Yufuin is a small, arty town with a street of cafes and galleries plus Lake Kinrin, set against the twin peaks of Mt Yufu. The two are only about an hour apart, so you can easily pair them in a day, or stay in Beppu and pop over to Yufuin in the daytime.
Can you go up Sakurajima and Mt Aso, and are they safe?
Sakurajima is a ~15-minute ferry from central Kagoshima, and you can explore around the lower slopes and viewpoints normally, but the summit is still active so climbing it is forbidden. The crater of Mt Aso near Kumamoto opens to visitors in phases depending on the gas level and the day's warnings, so always check the crater status on the official Aso city website before you go.
How do you get from Kagoshima to Nagasaki?
There is no direct train between Kagoshima and Nagasaki yet. You take the Kyushu Shinkansen back up from Kagoshima to Hakata first (about 1 hour 45 minutes), then transfer to the Relay Kamome limited express to Takeo-Onsen Station and switch to the Nishi-Kyushu Shinkansen (Kamome) into Nagasaki — Hakata to Nagasaki is about 90 minutes in total. That's why Nagasaki is usually placed near the end before flying home, or you can reverse the order to head south first and loop back north.
Ready to Take On Kyushu

Map Out Your Kyushu Route
and Book a Room for Every Night

Open the Kyushu region guide to dig into each city, its onsen, and how to get around — or start by lining up your first night in Fukuoka, then book the other cities along the route.

🔴 Book Kyushu Hotels Kyushu Guide