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Japan Travel |OT| One does simply not visit just once

I;m with chase, so I get charged $5 plus 3% of the withdrawal amount :(

That sucks. I use US Bank and Capital One 360 for my checking accounts. Capital One has no fees on international transactions. I think US Bank just charges $2.50 per ATM withdrawal with no percentage fee on top.

You should switch to a better bank.
 

KiN0

Member
Yeah, I'll have to look in to that after this trip is over. I think I'll bring some usd with me and exchange it for yen over there so I can avoid atm fees.
 

KillGore

Member
So guys this is how my schedule looks like:

May:

TOKYO - 8-11
NAGANO (Tokyo side-trip)- 12
OSAKA - 13-14
NARA (Osaka side-trip) - 15
KYOTO - 16-17
NAGOYA (Kyto side-trip)- 18
MIYAJIMA- 19
TOKYO - 20-24
HAKONE (Tokyo side-trip)- 25
NIKKO (Tokyo side-trip)- 26

What do you guys think?
 

SalvaPot

Member
Man, life in Japan is great. Great food, cold but not freezing climate, convenient transportation. So many great stores. Its been a lot of fun.

Last week I visited Rabbit Island (Okonushima) and it was a blast! Lots of adorable rabbits jumping around and not afraid of humans, they would get close expecting food and loved to eat out of my hand. 100% worth it if you are near the area.
 

Lego Boss

Member
Looks like the sakura will bloom a few days earlier than normal in Tokyo this year, and at about the average time in Kyoto and Osaka:
http://www.japan-guide.com/sakura/
https://tenki.jp/sakura/expectation/

Similar forecast on the other site as well:
http://sakura.weathermap.jp/smt/

Better than last year when they bloomed early everywhere :p

Arriving in Tokyo April 8! It's a shame, but it wasn't the first thing l thought of when l booked - had to arrange it around my daughters' Easter holidays.

Only four weeks to go!
 
8 weeks to go for me, not that I am counting or anything!

This reminded me, I'll be in Japan from April 15th to May 2nd with a friend; If anyone is up for a day of beer, food and several big arcades let me know.

Also, I wanna bring back and food, sake and maybe a video game and some clothing. What should I expect bringing it back to America. I keep trying to find sources on it but most of what I get is people importing and not actually traveling back with it.
 
So I keep looking for passes for what I'd want to do and it's seeming like the one pass I didn't want to get might be the one just to take a lot of thinking out of the equation. Plus I saved 500 on my flight already so it might be worth it.

The JR East Tohoku pass isn't really "unlimited" but more flexible within a 14 day period. So if I use it 5 days in my first week I buy another one and it's basically the same exact price as the truly unlimited JR Rail Pass that also get's me bus access.

Can anyone chime in unless I'm clearly misunderstanding this
 
Arriving in Tokyo April 8! It's a shame, but it wasn't the first thing l thought of when l booked - had to arrange it around my daughters' Easter holidays.

Well, there'll probably still be some late blooming ones to see.


So I keep looking for passes for what I'd want to do and it's seeming like the one pass I didn't want to get might be the one just to take a lot of thinking out of the equation. Plus I saved 500 on my flight already so it might be worth it.

The JR East Tohoku pass isn't really "unlimited" but more flexible within a 14 day period. So if I use it 5 days in my first week I buy another one and it's basically the same exact price as the truly unlimited JR Rail Pass that also get's me bus access.

Can anyone chime in unless I'm clearly misunderstanding this

Aren't you only going outside of Tokyo for 3 or so days? No need to waste money on 2 passes or a JR Pass then. Just get a Suica/Pasmo card and use that within Tokyo.
 
Well, there'll probably still be some late blooming ones to see.




Aren't you only going outside of Tokyo for 3 or so days? No need to waste money on 2 passes or a JR Pass then. Just get a Suica/Pasmo card and use that within Tokyo.

I love that you remember my post <3

Yes I am. But I'm mostly concerned about the amount of travel we'll be doing. We will pretty much be all over Tokyo everyday I'm just concerned about pass itself. Unless I can find pricing for travel so I know what to expect. What's your experience with it?
 
I love that you remember my post <3

Yes I am. But I'm mostly concerned about the amount of travel we'll be doing. We will pretty much be all over Tokyo everyday I'm just concerned about pass itself. Unless I can find pricing for travel so I know what to expect. What's your experience with it?

A single train ride within Tokyo should be around 200 JPY on average.
 

KillGore

Member
So guys this is how my schedule looks like:

May:

TOKYO - 8-11
NAGANO (Tokyo side-trip)- 12
OSAKA - 13-14
NARA (Osaka side-trip) - 15
KYOTO - 16-17
NAGOYA (Kyto side-trip)- 18
MIYAJIMA- 19
TOKYO - 20-24
HAKONE (Tokyo side-trip)- 25
NIKKO (Tokyo side-trip)- 26

What do you guys think?

Hm... Any particular reason for why you're waiting till the 26th for Nikko? You getting a 2 or 3 week JR Pass?

No reason. I'm actually thinking of going a few days before, maybe the 22. The reason I placed my side trips at the end was so I wouldn't have to write

TOKYO- 20-21
NIKKO (Tokyo side trip) - 22
TOKYO- 23-24
HAKONE (Tokyo side-trip) - 25
TOKYO - 26

:p


Anyways, what do you think Mike? Side-trips means I'll be staying in Tokyo and travelling for the day, returning back.

Edit: I'm getting a 2 week JR Pass. First Week around Tokyo will be without it, then when I go to Osaka I'll "activate" the JR Pass. Sounds good?
 
Anyways, what do you think Mike? Side-trips means I'll be staying in Tokyo and travelling for the day, returning back.

Edit: I'm getting a 2 week JR Pass. First Week around Tokyo will be without it, then when I go to Osaka I'll "activate" the JR Pass. Sounds good?

Ya, that sounds good then. Why not active the JR Pass when you go to Nagano though?
 
http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/20...-ok-japan-sets-rules-home-sharing-businesses/

Airbnb Inc. is finally getting the green light to do business in Japan after years of operating in gray areas of the law.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s Cabinet approved rules on Friday limiting home-sharing by private citizens to 180 days a year, according to the final draft of the legislation. The bill, which also leaves room for local authorities to impose their own restrictions, is now submitted for deliberation and approval by the Diet.

The new legislation, which still needs to pass the Diet, distinguishes between those who share their own dwellings and absentee landlords, anticipating that the latter are more likely to be the source of friction in neighborhoods.

About 90 percent of hosts that aren’t present on the premises said the 180-day restriction would make their businesses unfeasible, according to a survey by the Japan Association of New Economy last year.

Airbnb, like its ride-sharing counterpart Uber Technologies Inc., has faced resistance from local authorities. Still, Japan’s home-sharing limits are relatively lenient, compared with 90 days in London and 60 days in Amsterdam.

For those hosts that decide to stick with it, the good news is that demand will only continue to grow. More than 24 million overseas tourists visited Japan in 2016, topping the record for a fourth straight year, according to the nation’s tourism organization.

Airbnb accommodated 3.7 million of those visitors, according to the company.
 

N0VAM0D

Member
Well it is my first time in Japan, so I am looking forward to see everything :), but I've always wanted to go to Kyoto. I love the golden temple, so probably my highlight. I also managed to plan a nice trip to the five lakes near Fuji-san, I guess that will also be an amazing trip.

I agree there is so much stuff we could see, but I think you need to find the right balance, because otherwise I can imagine that it feels very stressful.

Fingers crossed, that we will see a lot of Sakura and the weather will be good.

Fingers crossed! Anything is better than this gross Australian summer tbh

This reminded me, I'll be in Japan from April 15th to May 2nd with a friend; If anyone is up for a day of beer, food and several big arcades let me know.

Also, I wanna bring back and food, sake and maybe a video game and some clothing. What should I expect bringing it back to America. I keep trying to find sources on it but most of what I get is people importing and not actually traveling back with it.

I might be down! Alcohol, food, and games is probably what heaps of my days in Japan will consist of, so doing it with others could be fun!
I'm kinda nervous to go to the arcade alone also
 

Rydeen

Member
My friend wants to check out Aokigahara while we are there. How do you get there from Tokyo

You have to get there by car or bus, takes about two hours, if you go to Tokyo Station there should be travel planners that will help you put an itinerary together to do it.
 
So I'm thinking of visiting Japan once more before my first child is born, and I'm researching tickets, but I have a question.

I would be traveling from an Airport in OH, to Chicago, then from Chicago to Narita... Then there is an airport change (wut) and only 4 hours to get from Narita to Haneda, so I can catch the flight in Haneda, to Nagoya, which is my destination....

I was thinking of just bailing at Narita and traveling via train to Nagoya.. It seems to me, that I would be picking up my luggage in Narita, where my international flight would arrive into Japan... is that right? They wouldn't somehow shuttle the luggage to Haneda right? Because if I'm just getting my luggage in Narita, I don't see why I shouldn't just take the train to Nagoya.

Just needing to confirm before buying these non refundable tickets.
 
So I'm thinking of visiting Japan once more before my first child is born, and I'm researching tickets, but I have a question.

I would be traveling from an Airport in OH, to Chicago, then from Chicago to Narita... Then there is an airport change (wut) and only 4 hours to get from Narita to Haneda, so I can catch the flight in Haneda, to Nagoya, which is my destination....

I was thinking of just bailing at Narita and traveling via train to Nagoya.. It seems to me, that I would be picking up my luggage in Narita, where my international flight would arrive into Japan... is that right? They wouldn't somehow shuttle the luggage to Haneda right? Because if I'm just getting my luggage in Narita, I don't see why I shouldn't just take the train to Nagoya.

Just needing to confirm before buying these non refundable tickets.

Just buy your ticket to Narita. You're right, the train is the best option
 

TCRS

Banned
How expensive are cigarettes in Japan? I'm guessing I shouldn't bring my own, don't want to get into trouble with customs.
 
Booked my place to stay in Osaka for October, decided to go with AirBnB, found a great little apartment in Shin-Osaka for $380 (Australian) for 8 days. Its a 15 min walk from the Shin-Osaka station and looks to be the perfect location for what I want to do there.

Now for my place to stay in Tokyo and then I'm almost set until the trip, either going with the Hotel Sakura Ikebukero again or if my friends do decide to join me in Tokyo then I'll try and get an awesome apartment to share via AirBnB.
 
I would be traveling from an Airport in OH, to Chicago, then from Chicago to Narita... Then there is an airport change (wut) and only 4 hours to get from Narita to Haneda, so I can catch the flight in Haneda, to Nagoya, which is my destination....

I was thinking of just bailing at Narita and traveling via train to Nagoya.. It seems to me, that I would be picking up my luggage in Narita, where my international flight would arrive into Japan... is that right? They wouldn't somehow shuttle the luggage to Haneda right? Because if I'm just getting my luggage in Narita, I don't see why I shouldn't just take the train to Nagoya.

Just needing to confirm before buying these non refundable tickets.

Yeah, 4 hours would be tight since you'll need to pass immigration and everything, and it takes 1.5-2 hours by train to get to HND from NRT. And yeah, you'd need to pick up your luggage as well.
 

KrisB

Member
How expensive are cigarettes in Japan? I'm guessing I shouldn't bring my own, don't want to get into trouble with customs.
Extremely cheap but depends what country you are from. I'm from Australia where they are very heavily taxed so the price difference is huge.
 
So I'm thinking of visiting Japan once more before my first child is born, and I'm researching tickets, but I have a question.

I would be traveling from an Airport in OH, to Chicago, then from Chicago to Narita... Then there is an airport change (wut) and only 4 hours to get from Narita to Haneda, so I can catch the flight in Haneda, to Nagoya, which is my destination....

I was thinking of just bailing at Narita and traveling via train to Nagoya.. It seems to me, that I would be picking up my luggage in Narita, where my international flight would arrive into Japan... is that right? They wouldn't somehow shuttle the luggage to Haneda right? Because if I'm just getting my luggage in Narita, I don't see why I shouldn't just take the train to Nagoya.

Just needing to confirm before buying these non refundable tickets.

Just a reminder, if you've bought round trip tickets and you skip the Haneda->Nagoya step they may end up canceling the rest of your ticket.
 
Holy shit. Thanks for the heads up. I already booked.
Calling them now to sort that out.

It depends on the airline and a lot of factors. I figure if you can claim you legitimately missed the flight you might be in the clear, but sometimes people try to exploit airline pricing so that if a ticket for A to B is more expensive than A to B to C, people would buy the latter and just get off early. Airlines have been known to cancel the full ticket if you miss a leg of the journey.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Airline_booking_ploys (Read the "Hidden City Ticketing" bit)
 
Why the heck would it cost me, not just the same amount, to not take the extra leg, but 400 dollars more, apparently, to just stop at the second leg?

Called American Airlines to try to sort this out. After being on hold for maybe 2 hours, It would have been 400 dollars more expensive, that plus the cost of the train from Narita to Nagoya, and I'd be increasing the cost of my trip by quite a bit.
It may have been the cheapest to just stick to the Narita to Haneda schedule, but there's still a fee in between that, though not as substantial as a train ticket from Narita to Nagoya.. Hm..

Ultimately, I changed my departing airport, which isn't too far, going to Narita, will take the train to Nagoya, and the return trip remains the same as it was.

Hooboy. Why is this stuff so complicated? What happened to that convenient direct flight from Chicago to Nagoya I remember so fondly from last time?

Hah well.... Thanks for your help peoples!
 

Ennosuke

Member
Holy shit is only 2 weeks. Today in 2 weeks I am already sitting in the airplane and trying to survive that 12 hour long flight. To be honest, I hate sitting around for 12 hours and I usually don't sleep in an airplane. It is going to be horrible ...

I learnt so much in the last months, since I have planing the trip and I feel really well prepared, but there are still a few things I need to at least inform myself about, before getting there. But in general thanks to you guys in this thread, it is amazing reading here. (Especially thanks for MikeHattsu)

I have a couple of questions:

1.) Food. I basically know Japanese and what to expect and of course we can try out restaurants spontaneously. But do you guys have any general advice? Any great places I should visit? Any franchises you can recommend to me? Because I fear, that the general offer is going to overwhelm me. I know that I tend to be very picky when selecting a place to eat :D

2.) I am not into the maid, anime Lolita stuff (not saying it is bad), but I like Videogames and Anime such as Dragonball, One Piece, Bleach .... Are there any places I should visit because of this reference? I know about the Kirby Cafe, that on Tokyo Tower there is One Piece stuff, Pokemon center, Sunshine city ... but I guess there is more.

3.) Shopping: I am not planing on buying old SNES games etc., but of course I am going to visit Akihabara and probably Nakano Broadway. So thinking about Anime and Videogame Merchandise. Any stores you can recommend? Probably with some fair prices?
 
For the rail pass, I can buy it from the airport or from an authorized retailer like JTB? It doesn't look like I can buy it directly from japanrailpass.net

Do I specify when I want to activate it when I purchase the pass or do I take it to a JR office to activate it whenever I'm ready?
 
1.) Food. I basically know Japanese and what to expect and of course we can try out restaurants spontaneously. But do you guys have any general advice? Any great places I should visit? Any franchises you can recommend to me? Because I fear, that the general offer is going to overwhelm me. I know that I tend to be very picky when selecting a place to eat :D

2.) I am not into the maid, anime Lolita stuff (not saying it is bad), but I like Videogames and Anime such as Dragonball, One Piece, Bleach .... Are there any places I should visit because of this reference? I know about the Kirby Cafe, that on Tokyo Tower there is One Piece stuff, Pokemon center, Sunshine city ... but I guess there is more.

3.) Shopping: I am not planing on buying old SNES games etc., but of course I am going to visit Akihabara and probably Nakano Broadway. So thinking about Anime and Videogame Merchandise. Any stores you can recommend? Probably with some fair prices?

Check Go Go Curry or CoCo Ichibanya (curry rice), Yoshinoya or Sukiya (beef bowl) and Katsuya (deep fried pork cutlet) for some chains.

The Kirby Cafe is closed down, it was only temporary :p Check out one of the Jump Shops I guess: http://www.shonenjump.com/e/jumpshop/ and J-World Tokyo: http://www.namco.co.jp/tp/j-world/en/

Check the Mandarake stores both in Akihabara and Nakano. If you're into anime cels and stuff there's 2 shops on the 4th floor of Nakano Broadway you shouldn't miss. The Radio Kaikan building in Akihabara is good for first time visitors as well, just go to the 9th floor and work your way down. Other than that, just check as many shops as you can.



For the rail pass, I can buy it from the airport or from an authorized retailer like JTB? It doesn't look like I can buy it directly from japanrailpass.net

Do I specify when I want to activate it when I purchase the pass or do I take it to a JR office to activate it whenever I'm ready?

Get it online from https://www.jrailpass.com/ or https://www.jrpass.com/ up to 3 months before you need it. Just go with whoever's cheaper with shipping to where you're at. You need to exchange the exchange order at a JR Pass exchange office while in Japan: http://japanrailpass.net/en/exchange.html
 
Rather subjective question, but have any tourists who've been in Japan for hanami had problems with hay fever or general allergies acting up? I'll be there during prime cherry blossom time, and just got through a bout of Texas pollen funk, so wondering if I'm likely to experience respiratory misery, joy, or a healthy mixture.

Also, thanks everyone for the great ongoing thread - some nice advice for us first-timers.
 
Get it online from https://www.jrailpass.com/ or https://www.jrpass.com/ up to 3 months before you need it. Just go with whoever's cheaper with shipping to where you're at. You need to exchange the exchange order at a JR Pass exchange office while in Japan: http://japanrailpass.net/en/exchange.html

You're the greatest!

Rather subjective question, but have any tourists who've been in Japan for hanami had problems with hay fever or general allergies acting up? I'll be there during prime cherry blossom time, and just got through a bout of Texas pollen funk, so wondering if I'm likely to experience respiratory misery, joy, or a healthy mixture.

Also, thanks everyone for the great ongoing thread - some nice advice for us first-timers.

You have no idea (it's still worth it)
 
Almost exactly one year ago we were in Japan for the cherry blossoms.
When we came back I thought "Nah, that'll be enough for the next few years. Now I'd really like to go back on the next possible date. :/
Bur maybe only as soon as 2020.
 

Raysoul

Member
I need help. During our stay at Osaka, we will be going to Kyoto for 2 days, but we will still go back to Osaka for each day. What is the best (cheap) train pass that we should get?
 

Rydeen

Member
img_20170314_021344_3kwkkk.jpg


It rained last night in Tokyo. Walking back to your capsule hotel from a retro game bar in Akiba in the rain while listening to this:

https://youtu.be/lMyOWIuZp3g

Stuff that dreams are made of.
 
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