Honestly — Kyoto has a hinterland most travellers never venture into, from the matcha town of Uji and the deer of Nara to Arashiyama's bamboo grove, rural Ohara, and the floating-house village of Ine that you won't find on any tour.
Have you ever had matcha in Uji — the birthplace of Japanese matcha? Or taken a 45-minute train to see more than a thousand sacred deer in Nara? Kyoto is more than just Fushimi Inari and Kinkaku-ji — it's the best base in Japan for day trips, sitting right in the middle of the Kansai region with trains running in every direction. We've picked 10 trips that are genuinely worth it, complete with ticket info, travel times, and tips you won't find in any tour brochure.
Don't want to work out multiple train lines yourself? Klook has a full range of day-trip tours from Kyoto — sightseeing coach, a Thai-speaking guide on some tours, plus admission tickets included, roughly ¥4,000–12,000/person depending on the trip.
Ordered from the nearest and easiest to the farthest and most special. Each one comes with directions, costs, the best time to go, and the tips locals know.
Have you ever had matcha in Uji? This has been the source of Japan's high-quality matcha since the 13th century. Uji's main street is lined with old tea houses where you can taste tea, try matcha parfaits, and buy powdered tea to take home. Finish at Byodo-in, the Phoenix Hall featured on the ¥10 coin — a UNESCO World Heritage Site built in 1052.
Japan's largest freshwater lake is just 15 minutes from Kyoto by train, yet very few travellers go. Otsu, a small lakeside town, has the lovely Mii-dera Temple, Biwako Park, and wide-open views that feel completely different from Kyoto — perfect for a day when you want to escape the temple atmosphere and find a cool breeze by the water.
The must-do day trip for anyone visiting Kyoto for the first time. More than 1,200 Japanese deer roam freely through Nara Park, unafraid of people — buy a packet of deer crackers (shika senbei, ¥200) and be ready to be surrounded at once. Todai-ji is the largest wooden building in the world, housing a 15-metre bronze Buddha, and the Naramachi district is great for a stroll.
A district in western Kyoto that travellers set aside a separate day for, because there's more than enough to fill a full day. Walk the Bamboo Grove, where towering stalks rise on both sides of the path; Tenryu-ji, a UNESCO World Heritage Zen garden beside a pond; the Hozu River cruise through the valley; and the Togetsukyo Bridge, which is at its most beautiful in cherry blossom and autumn foliage season — the prettiest in Kyoto.
A 3.6 km sandbar covered with more than 8,000 pine trees, stretching across the mouth of Miyazu Bay to the far shore — one of the "Three Scenic Views of Japan" (Nihon Sankei) and a must-see from Kyoto. Take the cableway or walk up Kasamatsu hill, then bend over and look between your legs (matanozoki) to see the sandbar appear like a bridge floating in the sky.
A rural village in a valley north of Kyoto, just an hour away by bus but feeling like a slip back into old Japan. Sanzen-in Temple is surrounded by gardens of green moss and autumn foliage in the fall; Jakko-in Temple was the refuge of a noblewoman from an old tale; and grilled-vegetable stalls line both sides of the walking path.
A pair of valleys that Japanese travellers know well but few foreigners visit. Kibune is famous for Kawadoko — dining tables set up over a stream in summer, where you eat kaiseki cuisine beside the cool water. Cross the small mountain to Kurama, with its hot springs (onsen) and a tengu temple up the hill. The walk linking the two villages through lush green forest takes about 2 hours.
The oldest and most powerful Buddhist temple in Japanese history, founded in 788 atop the 848-metre Mt. Hiei. As the centre of the Tendai sect, it trained Japan's leading monks for a thousand years, including Honen, Shinran, Dogen, and Nichiren. Take the cableway up to see the Todo, Saito, and Yokawa precincts amid dense cedar forest — the view of Lake Biwa from the summit is gorgeous.
Osaka is just 15 minutes from Kyoto by Shinkansen, or 30 minutes by Kintetsu, but the mood is completely different — if Kyoto is temples and the tea ceremony, Osaka is Kuromon Market, takoyaki, Dotonbori, and Shinsekai serving kushikatsu, free-flowing into the night. Late at night the Namba district is still open when Kyoto has long gone to sleep.
A tiny fishing village where every house is built over the water — the ground floor is a boathouse opening to the sea, the upper floor is the living quarters — a style found only here in Japan. Take a small boat to see the village, sit at an izakaya eating fish fresh off the boats. It's on no package tour, not even in most guidebooks — but if you go, you'll remember it for the rest of your life.
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For days when you'd rather stay in the city — Fushimi Inari, Kinkaku-ji, Arashiyama, Gion, Kiyomizu-dera, and more.
See Kyoto Attractions →Affordable kaiseki, Nishiki Market, beef rice bowls, Pontocho after dark — everything you need to eat in Kyoto.
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