WHAT ORDER TO VISIT JAPAN CITIES IN?

If you don’t want to spend half your trip on trains, this matters a lot.

Tabimawari

Tabimawari

Japan

Moving back and forth between cities is one of the biggest time wasters. The rule is simple:

Always move in one direction.
Avoid zigzags. Below are the structures that actually work.


ROUND TRIP ITINERARY

Example: Tokyo → Tokyo

This is the easiest and most flexible option.

How it works:

  • Start in Tokyo

  • Travel west (Mount Fuji area, Kyoto, Osaka, Hiroshima…)

  • You can also travel to Japanese alps (Nagano, Kanazawa, Takayama) Then Kyoto, Osaka, Hiroshima & back to Tokyo.

  • Come back to Tokyo at the end

Example route:
Tokyo → Hakone → Kyoto → Nara → Osaka → back to Tokyo

Tokyo → Fujikawaguchiko → Tokyo→ Kyoto → Nara → Osaka → back to Tokyo

Tokyo → Nagano → Kanazawa → Takayama → Kyoto → Nara → Osaka → back to Tokyo

Why this works:

  • Logical loop

  • No unnecessary backtracking

  • Easy to adjust days or add stops

  • Good if your flight is round-trip Tokyo

The key rule: Don’t jump randomly between cities.

Avoid things like:
Tokyo → Osaka → Nagoya → back to Kyoto→ Tokyo

Instead, keep it clean:
Tokyo → Nagoya → Kyoto → Osaka →Tokyo

or Tokyo →→ Kyoto → Osaka → Nagoya →Tokyo

Less train time, more actual travel experience.


ONE-WAY ITINERARY

Tokyo → Osaka (classic)

Perfect if you land in Tokyo and leave from Kansai Airport.

Tokyo → Fukuoka

Osaka → Fukuoka

Fukuoka → Osaka or Tokyo

Example structure:

  • Tokyo (4–5 days)

  • Hakone or Kawaguchiko or Nagoya (1 day)

  • Kyoto (3–5 days)

  • Osaka (2–3 days, last city)

This route follows the natural east-to-west flow and avoids repeating train lines.

You can also do this the other way around if you land in Osaka and leave from Tokyo, or Fukuoka.


ONE-WAY ITINERARY

Tokyo → Fukuoka (longer route)

Ideal if you want a full cross-country experience.

Example structure:

  • Tokyo (3–4 days)

  • Mount Fuji area (1 day)

  • Kyoto (3–4 days)

  • Osaka (2 days)

  • Okayama & Kurashiki (1 day)

  • Hiroshima (2 days)

  • Fukuoka (2–3 days, last city)

This route lets you experience multiple regions without rushing back and forth.

For trips like this, a JR Pass or regional pass can make sense, but only if the math works. Always check with a Japan pass calculator based on your exact itinerary. You can also reverse this route if you start in Kyushu and fly out of Tokyo.


MISTAKES TO AVOID

Back-and-forth plans like:
Tokyo → Kyoto → Osaka → Kyoto → Nara → Tokyo

This wastes:

  • time

  • money

  • energy

And makes the trip feel rushed for no reason.

Instead:

  • plan cities in a straight line or in a logical loop (any doubts ? send me a message)

  • group nearby places together

  • limit hotel changes

Clean route = smoother trip.


If you have any doubts about your itinerary and if it makes sense, message me.

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