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🗾 10-Day Plan · Updated 2026

Japan in 10 Days — Golden Route + Hiroshima & Miyajima

Ten days is the sweet spot — enough to do the full Golden Route and still run west to two more World Heritage Sites: Tokyo · Hakone onsen · Kyoto · Nara · Osaka · Hiroshima · Miyajima. We map it out day by day, with shinkansen times, where to stay in each city, and the JR Pass tips that actually save you money.

Start Here

10 Days Is Where the Golden RouteBecomes a Dream Trip

With 7 days you can do the Golden Route, but in a hurry. Stretch it to 10 days and everything gets room to breathe — you get an unrushed onsen night in Hakone, enough time to see Kyoto's temples properly, and still have days to spare to take the shinkansen west to two World Heritage Sites that people short on time usually have to cut: the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park and the floating torii gate at Miyajima.

This plan runs one way (Tokyo → west) so you never double back and waste time, and it uses just 4 main bases to cut down on checking in and out of hotels. It also lines up the long travel days with the days the JR Pass pays off most. We'll walk you through it day by day — what to do when you wake up, which train to catch, and which city to sleep in.

🚄 Straight up, first things first: the travel times and prices on this page are based on 2026 data — the Tokyo–Kyoto shinkansen is about 2 hr 15 min, Osaka–Hiroshima about 1 hr 25 min, and a 7-day JR Pass is roughly 50,000 yen (rising to 53,000 yen through overseas agents from October 1, 2026). These numbers can change, so before you lock in your plan, check the latest with Hyperdia/Google Maps and run the pass through a JR Pass calculator.
🗼
Both Big Cities
2 days in Tokyo + Osaka — two cities with completely different personalities.
♨️
An Onsen Night
One night in a Hakone ryokan, soaking in mineral baths with mountain views.
⛩️
Old Temples + Deer
3 nights in Kyoto, with room for a day-trip to Nara's tame deer.
🕊️
On West You Go
Hiroshima + Miyajima — two World Heritage Sites that are hard to fit in.
The 10 Days at a Glance

Which Day You're inWhich City

A quick overview of the whole trip — you can see exactly how many times you change base, which days are the long travel days, and the highlight of each day. Scroll down for the full day-by-day breakdown.

DayCity / BaseRegionHighlightsTravel
Day 1–2TokyoTokyo 2 nights in TokyoKantoSenso-ji · Shibuya · Meiji-Harajuku · SkytreeIn-city
Day 3HakoneHakone 1 night in a ryokanKantoLake Ashi · Owakudani · onsen soakRomancecar ~80 min
Day 4–5KyotoKyoto 3 nights in KyotoKansaiFushimi Inari · Gion · Golden Pavilion · bamboo groveShinkansen ~2 hr 15
Day 6Nara → OsakaNara, then move to Osaka 2 nights in OsakaKansaiNara deer · Great Buddha at Todai-ji · DotonboriTrain ~45+15 min
Day 7OsakaOsaka Osaka (continued)KansaiOsaka Castle · Kuromon Market · shoppingIn-city
Day 8HiroshimaHiroshima 1 night in HiroshimaChugokuPeace Memorial Park · A-Bomb Dome · museumShinkansen ~1 hr 25
Day 9MiyajimaMiyajima (day-trip) stay per your way homeChugokuFloating torii gate · Itsukushima Shrine · deerTrain+ferry ~30 min
Day 10HomeTravel home fly home / back to TokyoPack up · souvenir shopping · head to the airportShinkansen ~4 hr
📅 How to read the table: your only bases are Tokyo · Hakone · Kyoto · Osaka · Hiroshima — leave your big suitcase at the main base and take just a small bag for the one night in Hakone. The longest travel day is the last one (Hiroshima–Tokyo, about 4 hours), so if you can fly home from Kansai/Hiroshima instead, you skip that day and gain another half-day of sightseeing.
Day by Day

These 10 Days —What to Do, Where to Sleep

Working through it one day at a time from the moment you land to your travel day home — each day tells you what to see in what order, which train to take, and the small tips that keep you from wasting time. Feel free to swap the order within each city.

Senso-ji temple in Asakusa, Tokyo, with visitors in front of the main hall 🗼 Tokyo1
Day 1 — Arrival + Asakusa + Shibuya
Day 1 · Arrival → Asakusa → Shibuya

Don't pack the first day too tight — you'll be tired from the journey. Drop your bags at the hotel and start easy at Senso-ji temple in Asakusa, wandering Nakamise street for hot snacks. In the evening, ride out to Shibuya to watch a thousand people cross the scramble at once, then head up to the Shibuya Sky deck for the city after dark.

📍Route: Airport (Narita/Haneda) → hotel → Asakusa → Shibuya
🕐Pace: a half-day, afternoon to evening — leave time to check in and shake off jet lag
🚆Getting around: in the city, an IC card (Suica/Pasmo) is the easiest way to tap onto trains
💡Tip: Buy your IC card right at the airport and top it up — you can use it the whole trip, in every city.
Tokyo Travel Guide →
Shibuya Crossing in Tokyo at night with neon signs and crowds crossing the street 🗼 Tokyo2
Day 2 — A Full Day in Tokyo
Day 2 · Meiji · Harajuku · Skytree

Start the morning at Meiji Shrine, set in a forest in the middle of the city, then walk out into Harajuku for the youth fashion. Pick your afternoon by taste — art lovers to teamLab, gadget fans to Akihabara. Finish up the Tokyo Skytree for the city from above, or stroll Ginza for upscale shopping.

📍Route: Meiji–Harajuku (morning) → teamLab / Akihabara (afternoon) → Skytree / Ginza (evening)
🕐Pace: a full day — pick 3–4 spots, don't try to cram everything in
🎟️Book ahead: teamLab sells timed tickets and often sells out — book online before you go
💡Tip: Go up an observation deck near sunset and you'll catch both the daytime view and the night lights in one visit.
Tokyo Attractions →
Owakudani volcanic valley in Hakone with sulphur steam rising from the ground ♨️ Hakone3
Day 3 — Tokyo → Hakone Onsen
Day 3 · Hakone · Lake Ashi · Onsen

Catch the Romancecar from Shinjuku to Hakone in about 80–85 minutes. Today, ride the ropeway up to Owakudani to see sulphur steam rising from the volcanic vents, then take a pirate ship across Lake Ashi with Mount Fuji as the backdrop. In the evening, check into your ryokan, change into a yukata, and have a long soak in the onsen before your kaiseki dinner.

📍Route: Shinjuku → Hakone-Yumoto → the Hakone loop (the Hakone Free Pass is handy)
🧳Bags: leave the big suitcase at your Tokyo hotel and bring just one night's worth
♨️Stay: one night in an onsen ryokan, including kaiseki dinner + a Japanese-set breakfast
💡Tip: If you have tattoos, check before booking whether the ryokan has a private bath (kashikiri) or an in-room bath.
Hakone Travel Guide →
Fushimi Inari Shrine in Kyoto with rows of red torii gates forming a tunnel ⛩️ Kyoto4
Day 4 — Hakone → Kyoto + Fushimi Inari
Day 4 · Shinkansen → Fushimi Inari → Gion

Have one last morning soak and breakfast, then come down from Hakone to catch the shinkansen at Odawara straight to Kyoto (~2 hr 15 min). Drop your bags at the hotel and spend the afternoon at Fushimi Inari, walking up through tens of thousands of red torii gates. In the evening, stroll Gion and you might spot a geisha slipping through the old wooden lanes.

📍Route: Hakone-Yumoto → Odawara → (shinkansen) Kyoto → Fushimi Inari → Gion
🚄Getting around: take a Hikari/Sakura if you have a JR Pass (Nozomi costs extra)
🕐Pace: half a day travelling + half a day sightseeing — start of 3 nights in Kyoto
💡Tip: Fushimi Inari is open 24 hours — go in the evening for fewer crowds and pretty lantern light.
Kyoto Travel Guide →
Arashiyama Bamboo Grove in Kyoto with a path running through tall bamboo ⛩️ Kyoto5
Day 5 — Kyoto Temples + Bamboo Grove
Day 5 · Kinkaku-ji · Arashiyama · Kiyomizu

A full day of classic Kyoto. Start at the Golden Pavilion (Kinkaku-ji) mirrored in its pond, then on to Arashiyama to walk through the towering bamboo grove and cross the Togetsukyo bridge. In the afternoon, climb up to Kiyomizu-dera, with its wooden stage jutting out over the valley, then wander down the old Sannenzaka lane for souvenirs.

📍Route: Kinkaku-ji (morning) → Arashiyama (late morning) → Kiyomizu-dera + old lanes (afternoon–evening)
🚌Getting around: Kyoto relies heavily on buses — allow for traffic and crowds in high season
🕐Pace: start early — the famous temples get very busy after 10 am
💡Tip: Get to Arashiyama before 8 am and you'll have the bamboo nearly to yourself — better photos, no jostling for the shot.
Kyoto Attractions →
The Great Buddha, a large bronze statue inside the Todai-ji hall in Nara 🦌 Nara → Osaka6
Day 6 — Nara Day-Trip, Then On to Osaka
Day 6 · Nara day-trip → Osaka

In the morning, take the train from Kyoto to Nara (~45 min) to feed the tame deer in the park, then step into Todai-ji temple to see the giant bronze Great Buddha inside an enormous wooden hall. Late afternoon, carry on by train to Osaka, check into your new hotel, and spend the evening at Dotonbori eating street food under the Glico sign.

📍Route: Kyoto → Nara (deer park + Todai-ji) → Osaka → Dotonbori
🚆Getting around: Kyoto–Nara ~45 min, Nara–Osaka another 45 min to an hour by train
🧳Bags: check out of Kyoto in the morning and store or forward your luggage to Osaka
💡Tip: Buy the deer crackers (shika senbei) from the park stalls, don't feed them anything else, and watch out — the deer can get pushy.
Osaka Travel Guide →
Dotonbori in Osaka at night, the canal reflecting the neon signs along both banks 🍜 Osaka7
Day 7 — A Full Day in Osaka
Day 7 · Osaka Castle · Kuromon · Shopping

Start the morning at Osaka Castle, a white-and-gold keep in a wide park, and go up the tower for the city view. Mid-morning, stop by Kuromon Market for fresh seafood — grilled squid, scallops on the shell. In the afternoon, shop the kilometre-long Shinsaibashi arcade. If you'd rather, swap the whole day for Universal Studios Japan.

📍Route: Osaka Castle (morning) → Kuromon Market (late morning) → Shinsaibashi/Namba (afternoon–evening)
🎢Alternative: for USJ, book tickets + an Express Pass ahead and give the whole day to the park
🕐Pace: a full day — Osaka is best after dark, so leave plenty of time for a long food crawl
💡Tip: Osaka is a food town — try takoyaki and okonomiyaki from a few famous spots in a single day.
Osaka Attractions →
Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park, the arched cenotaph framing the A-Bomb Dome beyond 🕊️ Hiroshima8
Day 8 — Osaka → Hiroshima
Day 8 · Shinkansen → Peace Memorial Park

Catch the morning shinkansen from Shin-Osaka west to Hiroshima (~1 hr 25 min). Drop your bags, then walk the Peace Memorial Park, see the A-Bomb Dome — the building shell preserved as a memorial — and visit the Peace Memorial Museum, which tells the story plainly and honestly. In the evening, try Hiroshima-style okonomiyaki with yakisoba noodles layered in.

📍Route: Shin-Osaka → Hiroshima → Peace Memorial Park → A-Bomb Dome → museum
🚄Getting around: Nozomi ~1 hr 25, Sakura ~1 hr 30 (Sakura is covered by the JR Pass)
🛏️Stay: one night in Hiroshima so you can head to Miyajima early before the crowds
💡Tip: The museum is emotionally heavy — allow time and headspace, and read up a little before you go.
Hiroshima Travel Guide →
Itsukushima floating torii gate at Miyajima, the red gate standing in the sea with mountains behind ⛩️ Miyajima9
Day 9 — Miyajima Day-Trip
Day 9 · Miyajima · Floating Torii

In the morning, take the JR to Miyajimaguchi and the ferry across to Miyajima island. The highlight is the floating torii gate of Itsukushima Shrine — at high tide it appears to float on the sea, and at low tide you can walk right out to it. Deer roam the whole island, and if you're up for it, take the ropeway or hike up Mount Misen for views over the Inland Sea.

📍Route: Hiroshima → Miyajimaguchi (JR ~20 min) → ferry ~10 min → Miyajima island
⛴️Getting around: JR ferry 200 yen/way (covered by the JR Pass); some sailings loop near the torii
🌊Check first: look up the tide times in advance — the "floating" shot is best at high tide
💡Tip: Go early to beat the tour groups, and try momiji-manju (maple-leaf cakes), the island's famous treat.
Hiroshima Travel Guide →
Day 10 — Souvenirs + Travel Home
Day 10 · Souvenirs → Departure

The last day depends on your flight home. If you can fly out of Kansai (KIX), you skip the train back to Tokyo entirely and get another half-day in Hiroshima/Osaka. If you have to fly from Tokyo, allow for the Hiroshima–Tokyo shinkansen of about 4 hours before heading to the airport. Stop at a station along the way to pick up regional treats — they carry a full range of local foods.

✈️Option A: fly home from Kansai (KIX) — saves the train day, leaves time to sightsee
🚄Option B: back to Tokyo (~4 hr), spend one more night, and fly from Narita/Haneda
🛍️Souvenirs: big stations carry every city's signature sweets — buy them all in one go before you leave
💡Tip: Check which airport you fly home from, then plan your last city to be the one closest to it.
Japan Travel Prep →
Travel Smooth

3 Travel ThingsThat Keep This Trip Running Smoothly

These 10 days mix the shinkansen, city trains, and a ferry. Sort these three things out before you fly and the rest gets a whole lot easier.

THING 1
Weigh Up the JR Pass

This trip has several long shinkansen rides, especially the return Hiroshima–Tokyo of about 4 hours — that one leg alone is nearly half the price of a pass. The 7-day JR Pass is about 50,000 yen (rising to 53,000 yen through overseas agents on October 1, 2026), so for most people it pays off. But the pass doesn't cover Nozomi, so take Hikari/Sakura — run the numbers first.

THING 2
Carry an IC Card in the City

City trains and buses (Tokyo, Kyoto, Osaka) take IC cards like Suica/Pasmo/ICOCA — far easier to tap on and off than buying single tickets. Pick one up at the airport or a station machine; a single card works across cities and operators nationwide, and you can keep topping it up all trip.

THING 3
Leave Slack on Travel Days

On the days you change city (days 3, 4, 6, 8, 10), don't load the morning with sights — you have to check out, haul your bags, and ride. Plan for half a day travelling, half a day sightseeing and it's far more comfortable. Reserve shinkansen seats ahead in high season so you're not left standing.

Where to Stay

Pick the Right Basefor Each Stretch of the Trip

This plan uses 4 main bases + 1 night in Hiroshima. Choose neighbourhoods close to a train station first and changing cities and getting out each day is easiest. Each card links to the city guide for real hotels.

🗼
Tokyo — 2 Nights
Pick a neighbourhood near a big station (Shinjuku/Tokyo/Ueno) for easy trains, and Shinjuku gives you a direct line to Hakone. Tokyo Guide →
♨️
Hakone — 1 Night (Ryokan)
Tonight, go for an onsen ryokan with both meals included so you get the full mineral-bath-and-kaiseki experience. The price is per person. Hakone Guide →
⛩️
Kyoto — 3 Nights
Three nights in one place cuts the bag-hauling and makes the Nara day-trip easy. Stay near Kyoto Station or the Gion area. Kyoto Guide →
🍜
Osaka — 2 Nights
The Namba/Shinsaibashi area is great for late-night eating, and the shinkansen to Hiroshima leaves easily from Shin-Osaka. Osaka Guide →
🕊️
Hiroshima — 1 Night
Stay near the station or the Peace Memorial Park so you can head out to Miyajima early, before the tour groups arrive. Hiroshima Guide →
📅
Book Ahead + Free Cancellation
High season fills up fast — book months ahead and choose free-cancellation rooms so you can adjust the plan later if you need to.
Map

The 10-Day RouteTokyo Heading West, on One Map

You can see clearly that this trip runs one way, from Tokyo down to Hiroshima–Miyajima — no doubling back, every city strung along one continuous line, which saves the most time and gets the most out of your train tickets.

Before You Fly

6 Things That Make a 10-Day TripFlow From Day One

💴
Budget Enough
A mid-range trip runs about 90,000–150,000 yen/person (not counting international flights). Run a detailed estimate on the budget calculator →
🚄
Weigh the JR Pass First
This route has several long train rides and the pass pays off for most people — but compare the prices on the JR Pass calculator →
📶
Set Up an eSIM Before You Fly
You'll be navigating Google Maps across cities all trip — get online the moment you land. See how in the eSIM/WiFi guide →
🙇
Know the Basic Etiquette
Temples, trains, onsen — each has customs worth knowing. Read the short version in the Japan etiquette guide →
🧳
Pack Light + Forward Your Bags
Japan has a luggage-forwarding service (takkyubin) between hotels, if you'd rather not haul your bags onto the shinkansen every day.
🗾
Still Unsure About the Length?
If you're not sure 10 days is right, compare the other plans on the Japan trip-planning page →
Related Guides

More Days or Fewer? Compare Other Plans and Tools

🗾

Plan Your Japan Trip

The starting hub — how many days, which month to go, which route, who it suits, with links to every plan.

Plan Your Japan Trip →
5️⃣

5-Day Plan (First Trip)

Short on time, focused on Tokyo + Kyoto — a first-timer's plan that hits the main highlights in five days.

5-Day Plan →
7️⃣

7-Day Plan (Golden Route)

The full Golden Route — Tokyo–Hakone–Kyoto–Osaka — without heading west.

7-Day Plan →
🏔️

2-Week Plan (In Depth)

Fourteen days adds the Japanese Alps, Takayama, Kanazawa, and the countryside to the route.

14-Day Plan →
🚄

JR Pass Calculator

Compare ticket-by-ticket fares against the JR Pass to see whether it pays off for your route.

JR Pass Calculator →
ℹ️

Japan Travel Prep

Visa · eSIM · IC card · JR Pass · yen · power plugs · etiquette — everything before you fly.

Travel Prep →
Frequently Asked Questions

Questions Abouta 10-Day Japan Trip

What can you see in Japan in 10 days?
Ten days is just right for the full Golden Route (Tokyo–Hakone–Kyoto–Nara–Osaka) plus an easy run west to Hiroshima and Miyajima. This plan gives you 2 days in Tokyo, 1 day soaking in Hakone's onsen, 2 days in Kyoto, 1 day in Nara then on to Osaka, 1 day in Osaka, then the shinkansen down to Hiroshima for 1 day, a day-trip across to Miyajima, and a final travel day home. You get the big cities, the old temples, an onsen night, and two western World Heritage Sites.
Should I buy a JR Pass for a 10-day Japan trip?
This route includes several long shinkansen rides (Tokyo–Kyoto, Osaka–Hiroshima, and the return Hiroshima–Tokyo of about 4 hours), and that return leg alone costs nearly half the price of a pass. The 7-day JR Pass is roughly 50,000 yen (in 2026 it rises to 53,000 yen through overseas agents from October 1), so for most of this trip it pays off — but the pass doesn't cover Nozomi trains, so you'll take Hikari or Sakura instead. Run the numbers on the JR Pass calculator before you decide, and carry an IC card (Suica/ICOCA) for city trains.
How long is the train from Osaka to Hiroshima?
From Shin-Osaka Station, the Sanyo Shinkansen reaches Hiroshima in about 1 hour 25 minutes on a Nozomi, or about 1 hour 30 minutes on a Sakura (Sakura is covered by the JR Pass at no extra charge). Every train departs from Shin-Osaka, not Osaka Station. Prices and times for 2026 are worth checking before you travel.
How do you get to Miyajima from Hiroshima?
From Hiroshima Station, take the JR Sanyo Line to Miyajimaguchi Station (about 20 minutes, covered by the JR Pass), then walk 2 minutes to the pier and catch the JR ferry across to Miyajima island in about 10 minutes. The fare is 200 yen each way (also covered by the pass). Ferries run roughly every 15 minutes from 9:10–16:10, and some sailings loop close to the floating torii gate for photos. Once you land, it's another 10-minute walk to Itsukushima Shrine.
Which cities do you stay in on a 10-day trip?
This plan uses 4 main bases to cut down on lugging your bags around: Tokyo for 2 nights, Hakone for 1 night in an onsen ryokan, Kyoto for 3 nights (handy for the Nara day-trip), and Osaka for 2 nights. You'll also overnight in Hiroshima for 1 night so you can reach Miyajima early the next morning before the crowds. The last night depends on your flight home — some travellers spend an extra night in Osaka or Tokyo before flying out.
How much does a 10-day Japan trip cost?
For a mid-range trip, not counting international flights, budget around 90,000–150,000 yen per person (roughly 21,000–35,000 baht). That breaks down into accommodation of about 7,000–15,000 yen per night (the Hakone ryokan costs more because it includes two meals), a 7-day JR Pass of about 50,000 yen, food of 3,000–6,000 yen a day, plus admission fees and city trains. It shifts up or down with your hotel level and the season — run a detailed estimate on the budget calculator.
Ready to Set Off?

Lock In the 10-Day Route
and Start Booking City by City

Open each city's guide to see real hotels, sights, and how to get around — or start by lining up your first night in Tokyo. Rooms go fast in high season, so the earlier you book, the better the location and the price.

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