Japan Travel Tips for First-Time Visitors: The Complete 2026 Guide
Japan is one of the most rewarding countries in the world to visit, and one of the most logistically different from anywhere most Western travelers have been before. The transport system works with a precision that will feel surreal. The food is extraordinary at every price point. The streets are clean, the crime rate is among the lowest in the developed world, and the general level of service in hotels, restaurants, and shops will reset your expectations of what “good service” means.
But Japan also has a set of unwritten rules, practical systems, and cultural norms that are genuinely different from what most visitors are used to. Getting these right makes the difference between a trip that feels smooth and one that involves daily confusion. This guide covers the essential Japan travel tips that will help you navigate your first visit confidently — from the airport to the onsen, from the convenience store to the JDM rental car counter.
Before You Go

Get a Japan Rail Pass Before You Leave Home
The Japan Rail Pass (JR Pass) covers unlimited travel on most JR trains including the shinkansen (bullet train) for 7, 14, or 21 consecutive days. Crucially, it must be purchased outside Japan — once you have arrived, you cannot buy one. If you plan to travel between cities (Tokyo to Kyoto, Kyoto to Hiroshima, etc.), the math almost always works in the pass’s favor.
See our Japan Rail Pass Guide for a breakdown of coverage and when the pass is and is not worth buying.
Get an International Driving Permit Before You Leave
If you plan to drive in Japan — whether for a road trip through the countryside or to rent a JDM sports car in Tokyo — you need an International Driving Permit (IDP) issued in your home country. Japan does not issue IDPs to foreign visitors, and an IDP cannot be obtained after arrival. Apply through your country’s automotive association (AAA in the US, AA in the UK, CAA in Canada) at least 2–4 weeks before departure.
For the JDM sports car rental experience — GT-R, Supra, RX-7 — that many car enthusiasts consider the highlight of their Japan trip, see our JDM Car Rental Japan guide. Samurai Car Japan in Shibuya offers these rentals with full English support and requires both your IDP and your home country license.
Sort Out Connectivity
Japan has excellent mobile connectivity, and you have several options:
- eSIM (recommended): Purchase before departure and activate on arrival. Services like Ubigi, Airalo, and IIJmio offer Japan eSIMs at competitive rates. No physical SIM swap required.
- Pocket WiFi rental: A dedicated WiFi router that multiple devices can share. Pick up at the airport on arrival. More expensive than eSIM but useful for groups or devices without eSIM support.
- Physical SIM card: Available at airports and major electronics stores. Requires a physical SIM slot in your device.
Download These Apps
- Google Maps: The most reliable navigation app in Japan, with accurate train and bus routing.
- Google Translate: The camera function (point at text to translate in real time) handles menus, signs, and any situation where Japanese text appears.
- Hyperdia or Navitime: More detailed Japan rail routing than Google Maps, useful for complex multi-line journeys.
- Tabelog: Japan’s restaurant review platform. The ratings are reliable and used by locals — any restaurant with a Tabelog score above 3.5 is genuinely worth visiting.
- PayPay: Japan’s most widely used mobile payment app. International cards are now accepted in setup.
Money and Payments
Japan Is Still Largely Cash-Based
This is changing, but Japan is significantly more cash-reliant than most developed countries. Many restaurants, shrines, temples, small shops, and vending machines operate on cash only. Credit cards are accepted at major hotels, department stores, convenience stores, and tourist-facing businesses, but you cannot rely on card-only across a Japan trip.
Carry at least 10,000–20,000 yen in cash at all times. Refill at 7-Eleven or Japan Post ATMs — these reliably accept international cards. Bank ATMs in smaller cities often do not.
IC Cards (Suica/Pasmo/ICOCA)
An IC card is a rechargeable transit card that works on virtually all public transport in Japan — trains, subways, buses, and trams. It also functions as a payment method at convenience stores, vending machines, and many restaurants. Getting one is one of the single most useful things you can do on arrival.
Get a Suica or Pasmo at any JR machine at Narita or Haneda Airport on arrival. Add 3,000–5,000 yen to it and you will not need to buy individual tickets for most of your transport. The card works everywhere in Japan with the same balance.
Getting Around Japan
The Train System Is Your Best Friend
Japan’s train system is the finest in the world by most measures: punctual to the minute, comprehensively networked, clean, and safe. The shinkansen connects Tokyo to Kyoto in 2 hours 15 minutes, Tokyo to Hiroshima in 4 hours, and Tokyo to Fukuoka in under 5 hours. Local train and subway networks cover every corner of every major city.
The system looks intimidating on a map and is straightforward in practice. Google Maps handles routing accurately. Major stations have English signage. Ticket machines have English-language options.
Taxis Are Expensive but Available
Japanese taxis are clean, reliable, and significantly more expensive than in most countries. A 20-minute ride in Tokyo can cost 2,000–3,000 yen. Use them when the train option is inconvenient or unavailable — particularly for getting to/from airports with heavy luggage, or navigating rural areas without rail connections. Uber operates in Japan but prices are similar to regular taxis.
Renting a Car
Driving in Japan is practical outside of major cities, and provides access to areas that trains do not reach — rural onsen, mountain driving roads, coastal scenic routes. You need an IDP plus your home country license. Driving is on the left (same as the UK and Australia). Road signs are mostly in both Japanese and English on national routes.
For car enthusiasts, the Japan driving experience extends to JDM sports car rentals in Tokyo. See our Driving in Japan Guide for full requirements and practical information.
Where to Stay
Types of Accommodation
- Western hotels: Business hotels (Toyoko Inn, APA Hotel, Dormy Inn) offer reliable rooms at 6,000–12,000 yen per night. Luxury international brands (Park Hyatt, Aman, Four Seasons) are available in major cities at premium prices.
- Ryokan: Traditional Japanese inn with tatami floors, futon bedding, communal or private onsen, and multi-course kaiseki dinner included in the rate. An authentic cultural experience; rates run 15,000–100,000+ yen per person.
- Capsule hotels: Individual sleeping pods in a shared facility, typically 3,000–6,000 yen per night. Practical and not as cramped as they appear in photos. Most are excellent value, especially the newer “premium capsule” formats.
- Guesthouses/Hostels: Available in all major cities at 2,500–5,000 yen per night for a dorm bed.
Book Early for Peak Seasons
Cherry blossom season (late March – mid April) and autumn foliage season (mid October – late November) are Japan’s most popular travel periods. Accommodation in popular cities (Kyoto especially) sells out months in advance during these periods. Book accommodation 3–6 months ahead if visiting in either season. See our Best Time to Visit Japan guide for seasonal planning.
Food and Eating
The Convenience Store Is Your Friend
Japanese convenience stores (konbini) — 7-Eleven, FamilyMart, Lawson — are genuinely extraordinary. They sell prepared meals (onigiri, sandwiches, hot foods), fresh pastries, excellent instant ramen, seasonal sweets, coffee, and alcohol, all at prices significantly below restaurants. The quality is genuinely good.
Konbini also have ATMs (7-Eleven’s accept virtually all international cards), print services, ticket sales, package shipping (Takkyubin), and phone charging cables. For practical information, see our Japanese Convenience Store Guide.
Dining Etiquette Basics
- Say “itadakimasu” before eating and “gochisosama deshita” after — these expressions of gratitude are noted and appreciated.
- Slurping noodles is acceptable — it is not considered rude and in ramen shops is even seen as a compliment to the soup.
- Do not tip. Tipping is not practiced in Japan and can cause genuine confusion or offense. Good service is standard, not something that requires additional payment.
- Pay at the register, not at the table. In most Japanese restaurants, you take your bill to the counter to pay rather than leaving money at the table.
- Smoking rules vary. Smoking is prohibited in many outdoor public spaces and restaurants but there are designated smoking areas throughout cities.
Cultural Norms to Know
Remove Shoes When Indicated
At traditional restaurants, ryokan, many temples, and most Japanese homes, shoes are removed at the entrance (genkan) and replaced with slippers or left in a locker. Look for a step up from the entrance area — that is the signal. Slippers are usually provided. Do not wear slippers into tatami rooms — leave them at the room entrance.
Escalators and Walking
In Tokyo, stand on the left side of escalators and keep the right side clear for walkers. In Osaka, the convention is reversed (stand on the right, walk on the left). This is followed with genuine conviction.
Quiet on Public Transport
Trains and subways are quiet by convention. Phone calls are made in designated areas or avoided entirely. Many Japanese commuters travel in complete silence. Speaking at normal conversation volume is acceptable; speaking loudly is not.
Onsen Etiquette
Public hot springs (onsen) require full nudity — swimwear is not permitted in traditional onsen. Shower thoroughly before entering the communal bath. Tattoos are prohibited in many onsen; check the facility’s policy before going. The water is very hot by Western standards — 30–60 seconds of slow entry is standard before immersing fully.
Practical Tips
Luggage Forwarding (Takkyubin)
Japan’s luggage forwarding service (takkyubin) allows you to ship suitcases between hotels for approximately 1,500–2,000 yen per bag, with next-day delivery. This is one of the most useful services available to travelers — carry only a day bag on the shinkansen and have your luggage delivered directly to your next hotel. Services are arranged through your hotel or at any convenience store.
Rubbish Bins Are Scarce
Public rubbish bins are nearly nonexistent in Japan — a legacy of terrorism-prevention measures in the 1990s. Carry a small bag for your rubbish and dispose of it at convenience stores (which have bins) or your hotel.
Japan Is Extremely Safe
Japan consistently ranks among the safest countries in the world by crime statistics. Walking alone at night is generally safe throughout major cities. The standard sensible precautions apply, but the threat level is substantially lower than in most comparable cities globally. Items left in restaurants or trains are frequently handed in to lost and found.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need to speak Japanese to visit Japan?
No. Major cities have excellent English signage on transport systems. Tourist-facing businesses increasingly have English-speaking staff. Google Translate’s camera function handles any text-based situation. Learning basic phrases (arigatou gozaimasu, sumimasen, eigo ga hanasemasu ka?) is appreciated but not required.
Is Japan expensive?
Japan is genuinely affordable for mid-range travelers and can be done on a budget. Food at street stalls, convenience stores, and standing ramen shops runs 500–1,500 yen per meal. Business hotels cost 6,000–12,000 yen per night. Transport costs are significant if you’re covering long distances — the JR Pass addresses this. The perception that Japan is expensive is largely based on comparisons with budget backpacker destinations; compared to major Western European cities, Japan is generally cheaper.
What is the best time to visit Japan?
Spring (late March – early May) and autumn (October – November) offer the most comfortable weather and the most spectacular scenery. Summer is hot and humid but festival-rich. Winter is cold but uncrowded and occasionally snow-beautiful. See our Best Time to Visit Japan guide for full seasonal breakdown.
How many days should I spend in Japan?
10–14 days is the most common first visit length and enough to cover Tokyo (4–5 days), Kyoto (3 days), Osaka (2 days), and one day trip to Nara or Hiroshima. Anything under 7 days will feel rushed for a country with this much to offer. See our Tokyo 5-Day Itinerary and Kyoto Guide for city-specific planning.