One card to ride JR trains all across Japan — but now that the price has climbed to ¥50,000 (7 days), is it still worth it? This guide walks you through the new 2026 prices, which Shinkansen lines it covers, when it pays off, how to buy and exchange it, and how to work out whether your trip should buy one at all.
If you're planning a Japan trip and keep seeing "JR Pass" pop up in every blog and forum — yes, that's the Japan Rail Pass, a flat-rate travel ticket that lets you ride JR-group trains almost without limit right across the country. It's issued jointly by all six companies of the JR Group and sold only to foreign visitors on a short-stay basis. In plain terms: buy one ticket, then hop on Shinkansen between cities for your whole trip without buying a fare each time.
The JR Pass used to be the automatic answer for every Japan trip. But after the big price rise in late 2023 (the 7-day jumped from around ¥29,650 to ¥50,000), the question has changed — it's no longer "which one should I buy" but "is it even worth buying for my trip?" Honestly, not every trip pays off anymore. So this page walks you through the real 2026 prices, what's covered, the break-even point that makes it worth it, and a simple way to do the maths before you hand over the cash.
The JR Pass is valid for the chosen number of consecutive days (a 7-day pass means 7 days straight, counting from the first day you activate it). Children aged 6–11 pay half price · Ordinary is standard class, while Green Car is first class with roomier seats.
| Duration | Ordinary (adult) | Green Car (adult) | Child 6–11 (Ordinary) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 7 days | ¥50,000 | ¥70,000 | ¥25,000 |
| 14 days | ¥80,000 | ¥110,000 | ¥40,000 |
| 21 days | ¥100,000 | ¥140,000 | ¥50,000 |
The thing to understand before buying: the JR Pass covers JR-group trains nationwide very widely, but the fastest Nozomi and Mizuho services are not included — this is the point people trip over most.
You can buy before you fly or buy in Japan — either works. Follow these 4 steps and you won't get lost.
The simplest rule of all: it's worth it when your trip has roughly 3 or more long-distance Shinkansen rides (combined fares over ¥50,000) · it's not worth it if you stay in one city or only do one long-distance return. Weigh these two sides before you decide.
The nationwide JR Pass isn't your only option. If your trip stays in one region, a regional pass or single tickets are often far cheaper. This table helps you see the picture before deciding.
| Option | Best for | Cross-region Shinkansen | Price | In-city (Metro/bus) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| JR Pass (nationwide) | Multi-region trips, long rides ≥3 times | Yes, nationwide* | ¥50,000 (7 days) | Not included |
| Regional pass (e.g. Kansai) | Based in one region, exploring around it | Within the region only | Much cheaper | Not included |
| Single tickets (point-to-point) | Few long rides, 1–2 trips | Pay as you go | Pay only what you ride | Buy separately |
| IC card (Suica/ICOCA) | Mostly travel within the city | Pay full | Top up as you use | Works on everything |
Don't guess — drop your real route into the JR Pass calculator and it'll compare single-ticket fares against the pass price, showing you clearly whether buying the pass beats buying tickets one at a time. Decide in about a minute.
Open our itinerary guides, the calculator, and how to get around the main cities to fit the rest of your Japan-trip jigsaw together.
Enter your real route and let it compare single-ticket fares against the pass price to show whether it pays off.
Calculate now →The classic Tokyo–Kyoto–Osaka route that squeezes the most value out of a JR Pass.
Open the 7-day plan →Go deeper, adding Hiroshima/Kanazawa — a longer trip where the JR Pass pays off best.
Open the 10-day plan →Subways, JR trains and IC cards in the capital — the part the JR Pass doesn't cover.
How to get around Tokyo →Trip staying entirely in Kansai? This regional pass is far cheaper than the nationwide JR Pass — compare first.
See the Kansai pass →Visa · eSIM · IC cards · budgets — and everything else you need to know before flying to Japan.
Japan guide →Open an itinerary to see the routes that squeeze the most from a JR Pass, or start booking a hotel somewhere with easy JR access — so every day of the trip runs smoothly without a hitch.