Cherry blossom queues or autumn foliage crowds — timing is everything in Japan. Our guides cover the full calendar, regional differences, and the neighbourhoods that reward slow travel beyond the Tokyo–Kyoto corridor.
19 articles

28 May 2026
Matsumoto Travel Guide: The Black Castle and the Japanese Alps
Matsumoto Castle was built between 1593 and 1614 and is one of only twelve original castles remaining in Japan — meaning the wooden keep and tower are the genuine 16th–17th-century structure, not a 20th-century reinforce
Henrik Vinter

28 May 2026
Nikko Travel Guide: The Toshogu Shrine Complex and the National Park
Nikko is 150km north of Tokyo in Tochigi Prefecture, a 2-hour journey by Tobu Limited Express from Asakusa. The town itself is unremarkable, but the forested hillside above it contains the Toshogu Shrine — the mausoleum
Henrik Vinter
28 May 2026
Takayama Travel Guide: The Mountain Town with Japan's Best-Preserved Old Quarter
Takayama sits at 573 metres in the mountains of Gifu Prefecture, 2.5 hours by limited express train from Nagoya through the Hida range. The city's two preserved merchant districts — Sanmachi Suji — date from the Edo peri
Henrik Vinter

19 May 2026
Kanazawa Travel Guide: Kenroku-en, Seafood Markets, and a City That Missed the Bombs
Kanazawa escaped Allied bombing in World War II — its industrial base was light enough not to be a priority target. The result is one of the best-preserved pre-Meiji urban environments in Japan: a geisha district, a samurai neighbourhood, a functioning morning fish market, and the castle garden rated among Japan's three finest.
Henrik Vinter

18 May 2026
Okinawa Travel Guide: Japan's Subtropical Islands, Explained
Okinawa Prefecture consists of 160 islands spread across 1,000km of ocean between Japan and Taiwan. The main island has traffic, Shuri Castle, and the most US military bases outside the continental United States. The outer islands have some of the clearest water in Japan and almost no one on them.
Henrik Vinter

17 May 2026
Kamakura Day Trip Guide: The Great Buddha, Coastal Temples, and When to Go
Kamakura is 50 minutes from Tokyo Station and contains 19 major temples, 5 major shrines, and a 13.35-metre bronze Great Buddha that has been sitting outdoors since the wooden building around it blew away in a 1334 typhoon. It is the easiest and most rewarding day trip from Tokyo.
Henrik Vinter

9 April 2026
Tokyo Neighbourhoods: Where to Stay and What Each Area Is Like
Tokyo spans 627 km² across 23 special wards and over 40 distinct neighbourhoods, each with its own character, price tier, and convenience profile. Where you stay determines your daily commute pattern and which parts of the city feel accessible — staying in the wrong area for your interests can add 45 minutes of transit time to every outing. The Yamanote Line, the circular JR loop connecting 29 stations in 60 minutes, forms the city's backbone. East of it (Asakusa, Ueno, Akihabara) tends toward tradition and affordability; west (Shinjuku, Shibuya, Harajuku, Omotesando) leans contemporary and expensive. Understanding this geography before booking is more useful than comparing hotel star ratings.
Henrik Vinter
24 March 2026
Japan Rail Pass: Is It Worth It for Your Trip?
The fastest Shinkansen trains between Tokyo and Osaka—the Nozomi services—don't accept the Japan Rail Pass. Only the slower Hikari trains are covered. On this route, that's a difference of 50 minutes (Nozomi: 2h 25m vs. Hikari: 3h 15m). If your itinerary relies on Nozomi for speed, the JR Pass math changes immediately.
Henrik Vinter
22 March 2026
Nara Day Trip from Kyoto or Osaka: Deer, Temples, and How to Do It
Nara was Japan's first permanent capital from 710–794 AD and is now home to 370,000 people and over 1,200 freely roaming sika deer. The deer are the draw — they will bow, headbutt you for crackers, and occasionally eat your map. It is exactly what it sounds like, and it is excellent. Most visitors from Kyoto or Osaka can see the essential sights in three to four hours, though the experience easily stretches to a half day. The question isn't whether to go — it's how to fit it into your existing itinerary without wasting time.
Henrik Vinter
22 March 2026
Japan on a Budget: What Things Cost and Where to Save
Japan costs roughly 60% of what a comparable trip to London, Paris, or Sydney costs in 2026, and this gap has widened since 2023 due to yen weakness. A mid-range traveller spends £40–65 per day on everything except long-distance trains and accommodation—substantially less than the same itinerary in Western Europe. The persistent myth that Japan is prohibitively expensive dates from 2010–2015, when the yen was strong and budget options were genuinely scarce. In 2026, with a weak yen hovering around 150–155 to the US dollar and 190–200 to the pound, and with capsule hotels, business hotel chains, and ramen culture thriving, Japan is one of the most sensible budget destinations in developed Asia.
Henrik Vinter
21 March 2026
Hakone and Mount Fuji: The Practical Guide
Mount Fuji is hidden by cloud approximately 60% of the time year-round. This single fact should shape your entire itinerary. If you plan to see the mountain from a summit or base viewpoint, allocate multiple days in the Hakone and Fuji area, or accept that you may see nothing but grey. The mountain is most visible in October and during clear spells in December to February. If you're set on summiting, July to early September is the only window — and even then, you'll climb into cloud cover roughly half the time. The area remains rewarding without Fuji views: Hakone itself is a functional mountain resort with geothermal water, ropeway access to volcanic vents, and an excellent open-air museum. But the Fuji element is the draw, and pretending otherwise leads to disappointment.
Henrik Vinter

20 March 2026
Osaka Travel Guide: Food, Neighbourhoods, and What the City Is Actually Like
Osaka's reputation outside Japan is as Tokyo's louder, messier cousin — a characterization that misses the point entirely. The city that other Japanese cities consider too direct, too loud, too willing to talk to strangers. Local saying: "Kyoto people are subtle, Osaka people are direct." The food is richer, the humour sharper, and the street energy closer to Hong Kong or Naples than to Tokyo's contained precision. For many long-term Japan visitors, it is the most approachable Japanese city — and the only one where pointing at a menu and grunting is not just acceptable but expected.
Henrik Vinter

20 March 2026
Hokkaido Travel Guide: Japan's Wild North
Hokkaido is not a smaller version of Honshu — it is a fundamentally different Japan. The island covers 22% of Japan's land area but holds only 4% of the population. The climate is subarctic: winters drop to −10°C in Sapporo, −20°C in rural valleys, with annual snowfall exceeding 15 metres in ski zones. Summers stay dry and mild (20–25°C), free of the humidity that makes Tokyo in July oppressive. This is a choice between two entirely separate Japan experiences, separated by geography and season.
Henrik Vinter
19 March 2026
Hiroshima and Miyajima: What to Know Before You Visit
Hiroshima is simultaneously a modern, well-functioning city of 1.2 million people and the site of the world's first atomic bomb attack on August 6, 1945. Visiting requires some capacity to sit with that contradiction. The Peace Memorial Museum does not simplify or sanitise the event. If you approach it with that expectation, it becomes one of the most worthwhile museum visits in Japan—not as tourism, but as necessary witness.
Henrik Vinter
18 March 2026
Kyoto Travel Guide: What First-Timers Actually Need
Kyoto holds 17 of Japan's UNESCO World Heritage Sites and more temples than any comparable city in the world — 1,700+ temples and shrines scattered across a basin the size of Greater London. The central problem isn't finding things to do. It's deciding how many temples you can genuinely appreciate before they blur into architectural repetition. Two full days is the practical minimum to see the main sites without a sense of rushing. Three days is the threshold where you can actually spend time in places instead of collecting them.
Henrik Vinter
16 March 2026
One Week in Japan: A Practical First-Timer's Itinerary
A one-week Japan itinerary typically follows the Tokyo–Kyoto–Osaka circuit, and it works well for first-timers because these three cities are connected by reliable trains and collectively show Japan's contradictions: megacity noise, temple forests, neon districts, and centuries-old shrine districts within 30 minutes of each other. What first-timers get wrong is thinking seven days is enough to add Hiroshima without rushing—it isn't. This route instead prioritises depth over distance. Decide upfront whether you're optimising for urban exploration, temple culture, food, or sensory contrast. Everything else follows from that choice.
Henrik Vinter
14 February 2026
Best Time to Visit Japan: A Month-by-Month Guide
Japan's peak seasons are narrow, furious, and prices-tripling events. Late March through early April brings cherry blossoms and the year's largest crowd surge; mid-November replicates it with autumn foliage. Between these two poles sits a year that most travellers ignore: July and August are genuinely hot and humid in most of Honshu but manageable in Hokkaido; June is rainy but photographers and budget travellers find underrated value; May 6–31 and October are genuinely excellent with near-zero crowds; January and early December are quiet and cheap.
Henrik Vinter
17 January 2026
Kyoto vs Osaka: How to Split Your Japan Time
Kyoto and Osaka sit 75km apart and are connected by Shinkansen (14 minutes, €12), Hankyu Railway (45 minutes, €3.50), and Kintetsu Railway (35 minutes express, €7). They're close enough to day-trip between but fundamentally different in purpose. Kyoto is the former imperial capital — 17 UNESCO sites, 1,600+ temples, a city designed around cultural pilgrimage. Osaka is the food-forward commercial city that generates revenue instead of nostalgia. Choosing the wrong base for your travel style wastes commute time every morning. This guide clarifies which city to sleep in, how many days each requires, and what actually takes priority when your time is limited.
Henrik Vinter
10 January 2026
72 Hours in Tokyo: The Essential First-Timer's Itinerary
Tokyo rewards structure. The city is vast — 14 million people in the metropolitan area, a subway system with over 280 stations — and first-time visitors who arrive without a plan tend to spend their first day riding the wrong trains and queuing for things that didn't need queuing. This itinerary is built for efficiency, not coverage. Three days won't show you all of Tokyo. They will give you a real foundation: the old city and the new, the commercial and the quiet, the iconic and the actual.
Henrik Vinter