A 7–8 day route where the kids have the time of their lives and the grown-ups don't walk themselves into the ground — 1–2 days at Tokyo Disney plus easy days around the city, then south to Osaka for the castle, the aquarium, and Universal Studios Japan, finishing with a deer-feeding day trip to Nara, complete with the stroller, locker, and advance-ticket tips every parent needs.
Picture day one at Tokyo Disney: the kids are tearing around, buzzing, unstoppable — until about 3 pm when little legs give out, Mum's carrying one of them, Dad's hauling the bags, and you hit a 90-minute ride queue. That's the scene every family runs into when the trip isn't planned well. The truth is, a good family trip isn't measured by how much you cram in — it's measured by whether everyone is still smiling at the end of the day. Japan is brilliant with children because it's clean, safe, the trains run on time, and it has two world-beating theme parks on opposite sides of the country — Tokyo Disney and Universal Studios Japan in Osaka.
This page lays out a 7–8 day route paced so the kids have a blast and the adults don't burn out — start in Tokyo and go all-in on Disney, then alternate with easy, walkable days around the city, ride the shinkansen down to Osaka for the castle, the aquarium, and Universal, and finish with a deer-feeding day trip to Nara. We've ordered the days so a "heavy" one is always followed by a "light" one, and slotted in the stroller, locker, advance-ticket, and luggage-forwarding tips along the way.
Tokyo for 3 days → Osaka for 4 days + a Nara day trip · "heavy theme-park days" alternate with "light walking days" so kids don't wear out and parents don't run out of steam · Day 8 is a buffer for the flight home or anything you missed.
| Day | Base | Kid-friendly highlight | Pace | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Day 1Day 1 | Tokyo | Tokyo Disneyland, full day | Heavy | Kids of all ages |
| Day 2Day 2 | Tokyo | DisneySea (or a second day at Land) | Heavy | Older kids / Disney-mad families |
| Day 3Day 3 | Tokyo | Ueno Zoo · Asakusa · Skytree · teamLab | Light, easy walking | Rest legs / city sightseeing |
| Day 4Day 4 | → Osaka | Shinkansen · Osaka Castle · Kaiyukan Aquarium | Moderate | City-change day |
| Day 5Day 5 | Osaka | Universal Studios Japan · Super Nintendo World | Heavy | Older kids / ride lovers |
| Day 6Day 6 | Osaka | A second USJ day, or stroll Dotonbori | Flexible | Adjust to the kids' energy |
| Day 7Day 7 | Nara day trip | Feed the deer · Todai-ji Temple · Nara Park | Light, easy walking | Animal-loving kids |
| Day 8Day 8 | Fly home | Souvenir shopping · mop up anything near the airport | Relaxed | Last day |
Following the 7–8 day route — two theme parks on opposite sides, easy walkable city days, an aquarium, and the deer day trip to Nara. Each card has the location, how to get there, and the family tips parents actually want.
The part of the trip the kids count down to. Disneyland leans into classic cartoon characters and suits little ones; DisneySea has a sea-adventure theme with wilder rides that older kids and teens love. One day is plenty of fun, but if your family is all-in, two days across both parks is well worth it.
Japan Theme Parks Guide →
🗼 Tokyo · Day 32
A leg-resting city day that's still fun — stroll Nakamise Street in front of Sensoji Temple munching hot snacks (kids love drawing an omikuji fortune), then hop one quick train to Skytree and head up to the observation deck for a view across the whole of Tokyo. There's a mall and a small aquarium at the base, so it works even in the rain.
Tokyo Attractions →
🗼 Tokyo · Day 33
Another easy half-day kids adore — Ueno Zoo has pandas and plenty of open space to run around, with walkable children's museums nearby. If you'd rather go interactive, take them to teamLab (a digital art museum where you wade through water and light), where every room leaves the little ones wide-eyed. Book timed tickets in advance.
Tokyo Travel Guide →
🏯 Osaka · Day 44
City-change day — take the morning shinkansen, drop your bags at the hotel, then ease into some light sightseeing. Osaka Castle has wide gardens for kids to run around and a little road-train to ride; in the afternoon, head to Kaiyukan, one of Japan's largest aquariums, whose highlight is the whale sharks in the giant central tank — kids could watch them all day.
Osaka Attractions →
🎢 Osaka · Days 5–65
The Kansai highlight — Super Nintendo World lets you step into a real-life Mario world with the Mario Kart ride and a Power-Up Band for kids to bash blocks with. The Minion and Harry Potter areas pack the day too, and for little ones, Universal Wonderland has gentle rides with no height worries.
Japan Theme Parks Guide →
🦌 Nara · Day 76
An easy day to close out the trip that the kids will talk about for ages — Nara Park has thousands of deer roaming freely, and you can buy "shika senbei" (deer crackers) to hand-feed them; some even bow their heads to ask, which is hugely endearing. Walk on to Todai-ji Temple to see the Great Buddha (Daibutsu) housed in a colossal wooden hall — all of it within an easy half-day on foot.
Osaka Attractions →This trip changes base just once, Tokyo → Osaka, and the rest is city trains and day trips. Get these three things right and the travelling is far easier.
From Tokyo Station to Shin-Osaka is ~2 hours 30 minutes (Nozomi). Reserve seats so the family sits together, and the end-of-row seats have space for big luggage. If you're using a JR Pass, switch to a Hikari/Sakura train instead (Nozomi isn't covered). Check the 2026 timetable and fares.
Carry a Suica/ICOCA (IC card) and just tap on and off every train and bus in the city — no fiddling with single tickets while wrangling kids. Children get a half-price kids' card · for the Nara day trip, take the Kintetsu/JR from Namba, ~45–60 min.
Trains are packed 7–9 am and 5–7 pm, no fun with a stroller, so plan a slightly later start · on the day you change cities, use a luggage-forwarding service (takkyubin) from hotel to hotel so the kids travel hands-free instead of dragging heavy bags.
Strollers, lockers, nappy-changing rooms, kid-friendly food — six little things that become big things when you're travelling with children. Sort them out ahead and you won't be improvising on the spot.
See clearly how the trip changes base just once — Tokyo (including Disney at Maihama), then south to Osaka, with a day trip out to nearby Nara.
The simple family rule — stay near a major station or close to the parks, so you're never dragging a tired child a long way · choose a family/triple room or one that takes an extra bed.
Disneyland/DisneySea, Universal Studios Japan, rides for kids, Express Pass tickets, and skip-the-line tips.
Theme Parks Guide →Where to stay, easy walkable sights, family hotels, and how to get around the capital.
Tokyo Guide →Your Kansai base — the castle, the aquarium, USJ, Dotonbori, and day trips to Nara, Kyoto, and Kobe.
Osaka Guide →The classic non-themed 7-day route, in case you'd rather tweak it yourself or add Kyoto into the mix.
7-Day Plan →Pick your number of days, your trip style, and your route, and let the tool build a Japan plan for you.
Plan a Trip →Visa · eSIM · IC card · JR Pass · yen · power plugs · etiquette — everything before you fly.
Travel Prep →Open the theme parks guide to map out smooth Disney and USJ days, or start hunting for a family room near a station and the parks well ahead of time, so nobody has to walk far when the little ones get sleepy.