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🇯🇵 Japan · Planning Tool

Is the JR Pass Worth It?
Tap the routes you'll ride, get your answer in 10 seconds

The number-one question for anyone planning a trip to Japan — this calculator adds up your separate Shinkansen fares, compares them with the 2026 JR Pass price, and tells you straight whether it is worth it or paying separately is cheaper.

Start Here

Stop guessing whether the JR Pass is worth it — let the numbers answer

Let's be honest, this is the question people planning a Japan trip ask the most — "should I buy a JR Pass, will it be worth it?" The real answer depends on where you're actually going to ride the train, not a single answer that works for everyone. Someone who lands in Tokyo and runs Hiroshima–Kyoto–Osaka all in one week usually comes out way ahead, but someone who bases themselves in Tokyo the whole time and pops over to Kyoto just once is far better off paying for tickets separately.

So the calculator below is built to be as simple as possible: tap the routes you actually plan to ride, choose whether it's one-way or round trip, and it adds up all the separate fares and compares them with the JR Pass price instantly, telling you how many yen you'd save. Every fare is a real 2026 price, and it's the Hikari/Sakura fare that the JR Pass already covers. Go ahead and tap away.

Calculator

Tap in your routes

Pick the pass length, then scroll down and tap the routes you'll ride — the result updates instantly on the right (below it on mobile).

① Choose your JR Pass length

Ordinary (standard class) 2026 prices — the Green car costs more; this calculator uses the Ordinary price.

② Choose the routes you'll ride

Tap + to add a trip, flip the "Round trip" switch to count it ×2 — fares are real 2026 prices, ordinary class, reserved seat (Hikari/Sakura covered by the pass).

You can pick several routes
Separate fares totalNo routes selected yet
¥0
JR Pass 7 daysOrdinary · 2026 price
¥50,000
Select routes to see the result
Add the routes you plan to ride and we'll tell you whether the JR Pass is worth it.
≈ rough USD comparison at ¥1 ≈ $0.0067
🎫 See / buy the JR Pass on Klook →
Wherebest is a Klook affiliate partner — we may earn a commission when you book through the link, at no extra cost to you.

Fare note: the figures are one-way tickets, ordinary class, reserved seat, on Hikari/Sakura/Hayabusa(Yamabiko)/Kodama trains covered by the JR Pass (not the faster Nozomi/Mizuho). Actual prices may shift ±400–800 yen depending on peak/off-peak periods, and there may be additional city-train connections. This calculator only counts the main route fares to give you a clear comparison — check the price on your travel dates again before buying.

How to Use

How to read the result

3 easy steps

1) Choose the pass length — most travellers going for 7–10 days use the 7-day pass; if you're travelling longer and crossing several regions, bump it up to 14 or 21 days. The price figure updates with your choice.

2) Tap the routes you'll actually ride — picture your own itinerary, e.g. land in Tokyo, go to Kyoto, on to Hiroshima, then loop back, and add each leg one at a time. Flip the "Round trip" switch if you'll ride the same route back (it doubles it for you).

3) Read the summary box — if it shows ✅ Worth it, the separate fares cost more than the pass, so buying the pass is cheaper. If it shows ❌ Not worth it, paying for tickets separately is cheaper and you don't need the pass.

Know This Before You Decide

The Nozomi thing you need to know before buying

There's an important point a lot of people miss — the JR Pass does not cover the Nozomi and Mizuho trains, the fastest Shinkansen on the Tokaido/Sanyo/Kyushu lines. If you hold a pass and accidentally board a Nozomi without paying extra, you'll be charged the full fare for the whole trip.

⚠️ JR Pass holders must ride Hikari, Sakura or Kodama — these are a touch slower than the Nozomi (e.g. Tokyo–Kyoto on the Hikari ~2 hr 45 min vs the Nozomi ~2 hr 15 min) but free with the pass. If you genuinely need speed, you can pay the full Nozomi fare yourself. Every fare in this calculator is figured as the Hikari/Sakura fare the pass already covers.

The good news is that the JR Pass covers a lot: JR trains nationwide, including the Shinkansen (except Nozomi/Mizuho), JR city lines like the Yamanote in Tokyo, the Narita Express into the city from Narita Airport, and the JR ferry to Miyajima Island. What it doesn't cover is each city's subway, private railways (such as the Tobu line to Nikko), and most buses — those you pay for separately.

The Quick Verdict

When the JR Pass is worth it / isn't

✅ Worth it when…

• You're riding the Shinkansen between far-apart cities on several trips during the pass period, e.g. Tokyo ⇄ Hiroshima or Tokyo ⇄ Fukuoka (Hakata) — even one round trip on a single long route nearly pays for it.

• Your plan is the always-on-the-move kind — land in Tokyo, run Kyoto–Osaka–Hiroshima, then loop back all within one week.

• You use JR city trains + the Narita Express often, which racks up fares faster than you'd think.

❌ Not worth it when…

• You're mostly based in one city, e.g. staying in Tokyo the whole trip and popping over to Kyoto or Osaka just once — paying for that one Shinkansen trip separately is cheaper.

• Your trip leans on city subways, which the pass doesn't cover anyway.

• It's a very short trip of 3–4 days and you don't leave the main city zone — the calculator will show you a clear ❌.

Tip: if the result comes out borderline, consider the JR Tokyo Wide Pass or the JR Kansai Pass, which are region-specific passes — cheaper and better value if you're travelling within one zone.
Frequently Asked

FAQ · the JR Pass before you buy

Is the JR Pass worth it, and how many trips do you need to break even?
The simple rule is that the 7-day JR Pass (¥50,000) starts to pay off once you ride the Shinkansen between far-apart cities on at least one round trip plus a shorter trip or two. A clear example: Tokyo–Hiroshima round trip (¥19,000 ×2 = ¥38,000) plus Tokyo–Kyoto round trip (¥13,850 ×2 = ¥27,700) comes to ¥65,700, which exceeds the pass price, so it's worth it. But if you only travel Tokyo–Kyoto–Osaka and stay a long time in each city, paying separately is usually cheaper. Tap in your real itinerary in the calculator above and see for yourself.
Can you ride the Nozomi train with a JR Pass?
Not for free. The Ordinary and Green JR Pass do not cover the Nozomi (Tokaido/Sanyo line) or Mizuho (Kyushu line) trains, which are the fastest services. Pass holders ride Hikari, Sakura or Kodama instead (slightly slower, but free). If you really need to ride a Nozomi/Mizuho, you must pay the full fare yourself or buy a supplement ticket. Every fare in this calculator is the Hikari/Sakura fare the pass already covers.
What does the JR Pass cover — does it include city trains?
The nationwide JR Pass covers JR trains all over Japan, including the Shinkansen (except Nozomi/Mizuho), JR city lines such as the Yamanote Line in Tokyo and the JR lines in Osaka, the Narita Express from Narita Airport into the city, and the JR ferry to Miyajima Island. It does not cover each city's subway/metro, private railways such as the Tobu line to Nikko, or most buses — those you pay for separately.
How much is the JR Pass in 2026, and will the price rise?
The Ordinary JR Pass price in 2026 is 7 days ¥50,000 · 14 days ¥80,000 · 21 days ¥100,000 (the Green car is higher: ¥70,000 / ¥110,000 / ¥140,000). Children aged 6–11 pay half price. There's been an announcement that from 1 October 2026 the prices sold through overseas channels will rise (7 days to ¥53,000), but the official JR website is keeping the old price for a while. We recommend checking the latest price before every purchase.
Where do you buy the JR Pass — do you have to buy it before you fly?
These days you can buy the JR Pass both online in advance and in Japan, but buying ahead through an agent like Klook is more convenient because you lock in a fixed price, get an Exchange Order or e-ticket first, and then swap it for the actual pass at a JR counter in the airport or a major station once you arrive in Japan. It helps you skip the queue and lock in the price before any increase.
Klook · Japan Rail Pass

Ready to buy? Book your JR Pass ahead on Klook — lock the price, skip the queue

Buy the Ordinary/Green JR Pass in advance, get an e-ticket or Exchange Order, then swap it at a JR counter once you reach Japan — more convenient than queuing to buy on the spot, and you can book regional passes like the Tokyo Wide / Kansai in the same place.

See the JR Pass on Klook →
Wherebest is a Klook affiliate partner — we may earn a commission when you book through the link, at no extra cost to you.
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