Activities in Japan for your itinerary

Filter by city, type of experience and price range to find what fits your trip.

From free temples and legendary neighbourhoods to food tours, viewpoints and day experiences. We bring together the things to see and do in the main cities of Japan — Tokyo, Kyoto, Osaka and more — with their city, type and indicative price, so you can build your trip without getting lost among a thousand tabs.

21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art of Kanazawa
Kanazawa · Museums · Internationally awarded circular museum with permanent interactive installations; free area + exhibitions ~360 ¥.
1.400 ¥
Hyogo Prefectural Museum of Art (MOPA)
Kobe · Museums · First-rate modern and contemporary art museum designed by Tadao Ando; permanent collection 200 ¥.
510 ¥
Kamakura Museum (treasures of the Japanese medieval period)
Kamakura · Museums, Tradition · National museum with the largest collection of sculptures, paintings and armour of the Kamakura period (1185-1333); admission 300 ¥.
1 - 1.499 JPY
Osaka Museum of Housing and Living
Osaka · Museums · A museum that recreates at full scale a street of Edo-period Osaka, with the option of strolling in a kimono; adult admission around 600 ¥.
600 ¥
Gekkeikan Okura Sake Museum (Fushimi)
Kyoto · Museums · Museum in the historic Gekkeikan brewery in the sake district of Fushimi; admission ~300 ¥ with tasting included.
600 ¥
Samurai and Ninja Museum with experience (Kyoto)
Kyoto · Tradition, Workshops · Museum in central Kyoto with an English-guided tour and a samurai and ninja experience (katana, hakama, shuriken); admission around 3.500 ¥.
2.500 - 4.999 JPY
Nara Palace Site Museum (Heijo-kyu)
Nara · Museums · Archaeological site of the ancient Imperial Palace of the Nara period with reconstructions and a free museum.
500 ¥
Hakata Machiya Folk Museum (the traditional culture of Hakata)
Fukuoka · Museums, Tradition · Restored Meiji-period wooden merchant houses turned into a museum of Hakata culture; admission 200 ¥.
200 ¥
Nara Kingyo Museum (goldfish)
Nara · Animals, Museums · Art museum dedicated to goldfish (kingyo) with artistic aquariums and projections; admission around 1.500 ¥.
1.500 - 2.499 JPY
Kobe Maritime Museum and Kawasaki Good Times World
Kobe · Museums · Two museums on the maritime and industrial history of Kobe under the same roof; combined admission ~700-900 ¥.
900 ¥

How to choose your activities in Japan

Do not try to see everything. A typical two-week trip allows you to combine the essentials of Tokyo, Kyoto and Osaka with one or two day trips (Nara, Hakone, Miyajima). Mix registers: a morning of temples, an afternoon of neighbourhood and food, and leave gaps to improvise. Filter by city to see what fits each stop and by price if you want to balance free and paid.

Many of the best experiences — strolling Fushimi Inari at dawn, getting lost in Shinjuku at night, Nishiki market — cost nothing. Save the budget for what really deserves it: a teamLab, a food tour or a timed-entry ticket. Once you are clear on your favourites, put them into a route with real costs from the planner.

Ready to turn your list into a route? The planner distributes the nights by city and calculates the costs of your trip.
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Frequently asked questions

How much do activities in Japan cost?

There is everything. Many of the great must-dos are free: temples and shrines such as Fushimi Inari, parks, neighbourhoods such as Akihabara or the Arashiyama bamboo grove. Paid activities usually run between 500 and 3,000 ¥ (a museum, a viewpoint, a ticket), and premium experiences (teamLab, theme parks, guided tours) exceed 5,000 ¥. On each card you will see the price when we have it confirmed.

Do I need to book activities in advance?

Most do not: you enter temples, parks and neighbourhoods directly. It is worth booking days or weeks ahead for the ones with limited capacity — teamLab, the Ghibli Museum, some tours and workshops — especially in high season (sakura in spring and momiji in autumn). When an activity allows online booking, you will find the Book button on its card.

Do I need the JR Pass to reach the activities?

It depends on your route. The JR Pass is worth it if you are going to make several long journeys between cities (Tokyo–Kyoto–Hiroshima); for getting around within a single city, almost never. You can check it with our JR Pass calculator or read the JR Pass guide.

Can I add these activities to an itinerary?

Yes. Our trip planner distributes the nights between cities according to your budget and pace, and suggests activities per day with their estimated costs. It is the fastest way to go from "I want to see this" to a complete route with real numbers.