2 Weeks in Japan: A First-Timer's Complete Itinerary
Everything you need to plan an unforgettable two-week trip to Japan — from Tokyo and Hakone to Kyoto, Hiroshima, and Osaka — with practical advice on visas, rail passes, and the best time to go.
2 Weeks in Japan: A First-Timer's Complete Itinerary
Japan stops you in your tracks the moment you step off the plane. The train whisks you silently into the city at 300 km/h. A convenience store sells hot ramen and premium whisky side by side. A 1,200-year-old temple sits two blocks from a robot café. Nowhere else on earth compresses so much into two weeks — and nowhere rewards a well-planned itinerary more generously.
This guide covers a classic 14-day route built for first-timers: big cities, mountain towns, ancient temples, and the kind of quietly extraordinary moments that Japan does better than anywhere. Read it end to end, then hand the heavy lifting to us.
Before You Land: Visas, Passes, and Planning
Do You Need a Visa?
Citizens of 68 countries — including the US, Canada, the UK, Australia, and most of the EU — can enter Japan visa-free for up to 90 days. You will need a valid passport, a return ticket, and proof of accommodation. Some nationalities can apply for an electronic visa through the official JAPAN eVISA portal before departure. Always confirm with the Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs closer to your travel date, as requirements can shift.
Japan introduced a tourist departure tax and small visa-fee adjustments in recent years, so budget a few extra dollars for those formalities.
When to Go
Spring (late March – early April) is Japan's most iconic season. Cherry blossoms erupt across the country in a sequence that starts in Kyushu and Okinawa and tracks north toward Tohoku. Tokyo and Kyoto typically peak in the final days of March or the first week of April. The Japan Tourism Agency publishes annual cherry blossom forecasts — bookmark that page if you're targeting sakura. Just know that spring is also the most crowded and most expensive time to travel; book hotels at least five or six months out. If you want to plan your trip around the blossoms, our complete hanami guide covers everything from peak timing to the best viewing spots.
Autumn (October – November) is the quieter rival. Maples and ginkgos flame red and gold across temple gardens, the temperatures drop to a comfortable 14–18 °C, and the crowds thin compared to spring. Kyoto's Jidai Matsuri festival on 22 October draws a 2,000-person historical parade through the city centre — worth timing your trip around if you can.
Summer (June – August) brings monsoon humidity and powerful heat. Experienced Japan travellers love it for the Gion Matsuri festival in Kyoto (July) and the energy of Obon season, but it demands more stamina. Winter (December – February) is cold, far less crowded, and superb if you want to pair a city loop with a ski trip to Niseko or the Japanese Alps.
The JR Pass Question
A 7-day Japan Rail Pass costs roughly ¥50,000 (~USD 330) in 2026. After a significant price increase in recent years, it is no longer automatically the best choice. For the classic Tokyo–Kyoto–Osaka–Hiroshima loop, the pass saves ¥5,000–15,000 — worthwhile if you plan to ride multiple Shinkansen legs. If you're staying mostly in one region, a cheaper regional pass (the JR Kansai Wide Area Pass costs around ¥12,000 for five days) often makes more sense. Use the Japan Guide rail pass calculator to run the numbers for your specific route before buying. Either way, get a Suica or Pasmo IC card loaded with cash for city metros, buses, and convenience store payments.
The 14-Day Itinerary
Days 1–5: Tokyo
Arrive into Narita (NRT) or Haneda (HND). Take the Narita Express or Keikyu Line straight to your neighbourhood. Most first-timers do well staying in Shinjuku, Shibuya, or Asakusa — each walkable to major sights and packed with good food at every price point.
Day 1 is for recovery and neighbourhood walking. Wander Yanaka, one of Tokyo's few neighbourhoods that survived the war bombings, with its wooden shopfronts, graveyards overhung with trees, and tiny galleries. Eat tonkatsu at a counter seat; drink a Sapporo from a vending machine.
Day 2 — go west. Start at Shinjuku Gyoen (the city's grandest garden, extraordinary in cherry blossom season), walk through Harajuku's backstreets, then follow Omotesando Avenue south for architecture and coffee. End the evening on the observation deck of the Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building — free, and the view rivals anything you'd pay for.
Day 3 — east and geek culture. Cross the Sumida River to Asakusa and Senso-ji, Tokyo's oldest temple, then jump on the Yamanote Line to Akihabara, where six-storey electronics shops and retro arcades crowd every block. Ramen dinner in a standing-only shop near the station.
Day 4 — day trip to Kamakura (one hour by train). The giant bronze Daibutsu Buddha, 13.4 metres tall and cast in 1252, sits in an open hillside clearing. Hike the Daibutsu Hiking Course through bamboo forest to Zeniarai Benzaiten shrine, where local legend holds that money washed in the spring cave will double.
Day 5 — slow morning. Tokyo's Tsukiji Outer Market (the fishmonger stalls, not the relocated auction site) is best before 9 am: grilled scallops on a stick, sea-urchin hand rolls, thick tamago. Afternoon: the teamLab digital art installations in Odaiba or Toyosu — book tickets well in advance.
Day 6: Hakone
Board the Romancecar from Shinjuku (reserved seats, panoramic front window — worth every yen) to Hakone, a volcanic hot spring town at the foot of Mount Fuji. On a clear day you will see the mountain's perfect cone reflected in the surface of Lake Ashi. A ryokan stay here — even one night in a small family-run guesthouse with tatami rooms and an outdoor onsen — resets whatever stress the Tokyo crowds introduced. This is Japan without the superlatives; quiet, mineral-scented, and excellent.
Days 7–10: Kyoto
Shinkansen from Odawara (15 minutes from Hakone centre by local train) to Kyoto: two hours.
Kyoto is the reason many people make the trip at all. Seventeen UNESCO World Heritage sites sit within the city limits. The density of temples, shrines, wooden machiya townhouses, and kaiseki restaurants is absurd. Do not try to see everything. If you want a guided journey through the highlights, A Passage Through Japan is built around exactly this kind of immersive, unhurried experience.
Day 7 — northern Kyoto. The bamboo grove of Arashiyama is best at dawn, before the tour groups arrive. Walk through it quickly, then slow down at Tenryu-ji's moss garden and the small boat landings along the Oi River.
Day 8 — eastern Kyoto. Fushimi Inari Taisha and its 10,000 vermillion torii gates climbing the mountain behind the shrine: arrive by 7 am. Hike at least to the first summit ridge — the lower paths are crowded, the higher trails almost empty. Afternoon: walk the cobblestoned Higashiyama district, from the five-storey pagoda at Yasaka past Kiyomizudera's wooden stage to the preserved teahouses of Ishibei-koji lane.
Day 9 — central and northern temples. Kinkaku-ji (the Golden Pavilion, genuinely gold-leafed, genuinely beautiful despite the crowds), then cycle north to Daitoku-ji, a compound of twenty-odd sub-temples with some of the finest dry rock gardens in Japan. Many are free or charge a few hundred yen. Ryoan-ji's famous fifteen-stone karesansui garden is nearby. Kyoto also makes an excellent base for exploring lesser-known towns nearby — Kanazawa and Takayama are both worth adding if you have extra days.
Day 10 — Nara day trip (45 minutes by express). Todai-ji Temple houses the world's largest bronze Buddha — 15 metres, cast in 752. About 1,200 sika deer roam freely across Nara Park, bowing to tourists (they've learned it prompts a cracker). The deer are officially considered divine messengers.
Days 11–12: Hiroshima and Miyajima
Shinkansen west to Hiroshima (from Kyoto: roughly 90 minutes). The Peace Memorial Museum is not easy to visit but essential. It documents the aftermath of 6 August 1945 with unflinching clarity — allow two to three hours. The Genbaku Dome, the only structure left standing near the hypocentre, stands in a riverside park outside.
A short ferry ride from Hiroshima city takes you to Miyajima Island, where the iconic "floating" torii gate of Itsukushima Shrine rises from the shallow water at high tide. Stay for the evening if you can: after the day boats leave, the island reverts to its quieter self, deer wander the shrine paths, and the gate glows amber after sunset.
Days 13–14: Osaka
Shinkansen east to Osaka (from Hiroshima: 90 minutes; or from Hiroshima back through Kyoto: also fine for a final night there).
Osaka is the place Japan finally tells you to relax and eat. The city's unofficial motto is kuidaore: eat until you drop. The Dotonbori canal district — neon signs, mechanical crabs, the smell of takoyaki and yakiniku — is everything tourists picture when they picture Japan's excess, and it earns it.
Spend Day 13 eating: takoyaki octopus balls at a street stall, kushikatsu (deep-fried skewers) at a counter bar in Shinsekai, ramen at a shop that's been open since 1947, and soft-serve with a wasabi twist from a convenience store. Osaka Castle in the afternoon — a reconstructed replica, but the park and moat are pleasant.
Day 14 is your buffer: pack, grab a final breakfast of tamagoyaki and miso at Kuromon Ichiba market, and ride the Haruka Express back to Kansai International Airport (KIX). You will almost certainly start planning a return trip on the flight home.
Practical Notes
Budget: A comfortable mid-range trip costs roughly ¥200,000–¥350,000 per person (approximately USD 1,300–2,300) for two weeks, covering accommodation, transport, food, and entry fees. Budget travellers can do it for less; eating well in Japan is genuinely affordable.
Connectivity: Pick up a pocket Wi-Fi or SIM card on arrival at the airport. Unlimited-data SIM cards are available from vending machines in most airports.
Language: English signage on trains and in tourist areas is reliable. Google Translate's camera mode handles menus and signs. Learning ten words of Japanese — arigatou gozaimasu, sumimasen, ikura desu ka — earns you disproportionate goodwill.
Etiquette: Remove your shoes before entering traditional spaces. Don't talk on your phone on trains. Walk on the left, keep voices low, and queue patiently. These norms are followed almost universally and make the country a notably civilised place to travel.
Two Weeks Is Enough to Love Japan. It Is Not Enough to Know It.
The route above is a strong foundation for a first trip. It covers the iconic highlights without becoming a checklist sprint — and it leaves room for the unscheduled hour in a temple garden, the dinner that turned into three hours of conversation with the chef, the wrong train that led somewhere better.
If you'd rather hand the logistics to people who know Japan deeply, Viatsy builds tailor-made Japan itineraries from scratch — adapting the route, the pace, and the experiences to what you actually want from the trip. Explore Japan of a Thousand Wonders to see how we put it all together, or get in touch to start planning.
Sources: Japan Tourism Agency – Cherry Blossom Forecast · Ministry of Foreign Affairs Japan – Visa Information · Japan Guide – Rail Pass Calculator · National Geographic – Classic Two-Week Japan Trip · Inside Kyoto – Current Travel Information