Both are visa-free for Thai passport holders. Both have incredible food and reliable public transport. So why do most Thai first-timers get more from Taiwan? We compare 8 dimensions honestly.
Before picking a side, it helps to know where Taiwan and Japan are essentially tied — so your decision comes down to the real differences.
Neither destination is objectively better. But they are not equal for every travel style or budget.
| Dimension | Taiwan | Japan | Edge |
|---|---|---|---|
| Visa (Thai passport) | Visa-free 90 days | Visa-free 30 days | Taiwan |
| Flight from BKK | ~3.5 hr direct | ~6–7 hr direct | Taiwan |
| Daily budget (mid-range) | THB 2,500–3,500 | THB 3,500–5,500+ | Taiwan |
| Accommodation cost | Good 3-star ~THB 1,200–1,800 | Good 3-star ~THB 2,000–3,500 | Taiwan |
| Street food / dining | Night markets, always open, from THB 40 | Ramen + izakaya, pricier, earlier closing | Taiwan |
| Public transport ease | Taipei MRT — very easy | Tokyo Metro — complex but manageable | Tied |
| Experience diversity | Gorge + coast + hot spring + city | Snow + city + shrine + countryside | Tied |
| Premium food / fine dining | Good but limited top tier | World-class depth (Michelin, ramen, kaiseki) | Japan |
The right answer depends on your priorities, not on which country is objectively "better."
Go to Taiwan first. You get a 5–7 day trip in Taiwan for roughly the same cost as 4 days in Japan. Night market dinners, affordable hotels, and cheap train passes stretch your money further without compromising quality.
Taiwan is the stronger choice. The 3.5-hour flight means you arrive without significant jet lag and can start exploring immediately. A 4-day Japan trip feels rushed because of the longer travel time — you lose a day each way to fatigue.
Taiwan edges ahead. Taipei's MRT is stroller-friendly and the pace is relaxed. Night markets let kids graze freely. Japan is also excellent for families but the distances between cities and the volume of walking in places like Kyoto can be more demanding.
Japan wins at depth. Kyoto alone has thousands of temples and shrines, geisha districts, and traditional craft culture built over 1,000 years. Taiwan's historical sites are interesting but fewer in scale. For serious cultural immersion, Japan is the richer destination.
Japan is the destination. If your trip is built around a specific Michelin-starred restaurant, an authentic ramen deep-dive, or high-end sushi at Tsukiji, Japan has no rival. Taiwan's food is outstanding but accessible street food is its strength, not fine dining.
Japan wins outright. Taiwan has warm coastal zones and hot springs for winter, but no ski resorts. Hokkaido powder, Nagano slopes, and Hakuba village are experiences Taiwan simply cannot offer. If winter sports are on the bucket list, Japan is non-negotiable.
Many experienced Thai travellers use Taiwan as the "warm-up" trip and Japan as the "level-up" trip. Here is how to sequence them well.
Regardless of which destination you choose to visit first, here are three Taiwan hotels that cover different trip styles — from urban Taipei to a lakeside resort to the east coast.
Visa, eSIM, currency, transport passes and everything practical before you land in Taipei.
Read the guide →North loop, south loop, or east coast? Which Taiwan route suits your time and travel style?
Compare routes →Everything from the airport to the best night markets, day trips and where to stay in Taipei.
Explore Taipei →Realistic daily costs broken down by travel style — backpacker, mid-range and luxury.
See the numbers →25 dishes every visitor to Taipei must try — from beef noodle soup to bubble tea origins.
Start eating →Hualien, Taroko Gorge and Yilan — comparing 3 ways to experience Taiwan's dramatic east coast.
Plan the route →