Turn your ideas into a real plan
The problem isn’t that you don’t have enough ideas. It’s that saved places are not an itinerary.
Tabimawari
Japan
Stop saving places.
Pins don’t show:
how long things really take
how tiring a day will be
how transport flows
what makes sense back-to-back
On a map, everything looks close.
In real life, Japan is about train lines, transfers, walking time, and energy levels.
That’s why people end up with days like:
5 neighborhoods in one day
places on opposite sides of the city
beautiful plans that collapse by 2pm
The issue isn’t your motivation.
It’s the lack of structure.
Step 1: Stop Thinking “Places”, Start Thinking “Areas”
The first shift to make is this:
You don’t plan Japan by listing places.
You plan Japan by grouping areas.
Instead of asking:
“What do I want to see today?”
Ask:
“Which area am I exploring today?”
In cities like Tokyo, Kyoto, or Osaka, neighborhoods matter more than distance in kilometers.
A good day usually means:
one main area
one nearby secondary area
Tird nearby area if you have time
no crossing the city multiple times
This alone already removes a lot of chaos.
That's also what you'll see with my itineraries. Each day is 2 or 3 areas, each area are within 15 to 30 min transportation or even by walking alone.
My itineraries are not here to be followed like this without any change. I mean yes, you can. But the best it's that it served you as a solid base to built your own trip. You can see whihc area goes well to which area, add and remove spots you want/ you don't want.
Step 2: Decide What Actually Fits in One Day
Just because something is “close” doesn’t mean it fits the same day.
Each activity has a hidden cost:
walking
waiting
eating
getting lost
stopping because something catches your eye
A realistic full day usually includes:
2 to 4 main spots
plus wandering, food, and breaks
If your day looks packed from 8am to 10pm with no margin, it’s not a plan.
It’s a wishlist.
Japan is intense.
Overplanning leads to frustration, not productivity.
I've packed my itineraries here for one reason : I know many will remove or add their own spots. It's not a whishlist or a spot list, it's direction so you can cuilt your trip.
Step 3: Do not chase popularity only
Another common mistake is planning days based on how famous places are.
For example:
a famous shrine
then a viral café
then a shopping street
then a viewpoint
If these places don’t align geographically or logically, the day will feel disjointed. That's also align with the previous steps : you need to plan by areas.
A good itinerary follows a natural flow:
same train line or intelligent, rapid connection
logical walking path
smooth transitions
The goal isn’t to see the most.
It’s to move less and experience more.
Step 4: Accept you can't see everything
This is the hardest part.
Japan creates strong FOMO. I do include myself.
There’s always one more place you could add. There's always this spots you'll see on social after your trip.
But the moment you accept that:
you don’t need to see everything
you just need to fully enjoy the spots you choose
Planning becomes much easier.
A calm, well-paced day with fewer spots will always feel better than a rushed checklist.
You trip is always meant to be enjoyable, understand the culture, meeting the people.
Step 5: Turn saved or pins into your real itinerary
This is where most people get stuck.
You need to transform:saved places into structured days with logic
That means:
grouping spots by area
choosing realistic combinations
deciding what to drop
leaving space for flexibility
When this step is done right:
days make sense
transport feels easy
the trip flows naturally
You stop constantly checking your phone and start actually enjoying where you are.
Use my 40 days Japan itinerary as your base, start by removing all cities and days you don't want, ajust it to the lenght of your trip. Then go into each days details, add and remove your own spots.
The Goal Isn’t a Perfect Plan. It’s a Usable One.
A good itinerary is not rigid.
It’s clear, balanced, and adaptable.
If your plan:
makes sense geographically
respects your energy
leaves room to breathe
Then it’s a good plan.
That’s exactly the difference between having “a lot of saved places”
and having a trip that actually works.
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