There’s a moment on every first trip to Japan when it clicks. Maybe it’s standing at Shibuya Crossing as thousands of people flow past in perfect order, or watching the sun rise behind a temple gate in Kyoto, or sitting down to a bowl of ramen that somehow tastes better than anything you’ve had at home. Japan holidays have a habit of doing that, turning ordinary moments into the ones you talk about for years.
For UK travellers, Japan holidays offer a rare mix: futuristic cities, centuries-old shrines, snow-capped mountains, quiet gardens and some of the best food on the planet, all connected by a rail network so smooth and punctual it becomes part of the appeal. Whether you’re a couple planning a once-in-a-lifetime trip, a family after something different from the usual beach holiday, a first-time visitor to Asia or someone chasing a proper luxury escape, Japan tends to deliver more than expected.
This guide covers the best places to visit, itinerary ideas for different trip lengths, what to look for in a Japan holiday package. The best time to travel and the practical questions UK travellers ask most before booking. If you’d rather skip the research and let someone else handle the details. Tell GenZ Travel your preferred dates, UK airport and travel style, and our team will help build your Japan holiday from there.
Share your dates, airport and budget style with GenZ Travel, and our team will help build a smooth Japan itinerary around it.
Get My Japan QuoteBest places to visit on Japan holidays
Japan’s appeal comes from contrast. Cities like Tokyo and Osaka move at full speed, while Kyoto, Nara and Miyajima slow things right down. Most Japan itineraries work best when they combine at least one fast-paced city with one or two calmer, more traditional stops.
Tokyo: Best for first-timers, food, shopping and modern Japan
Tokyo is where most Japan holidays begin, and for good reason. Between Shibuya Crossing, the neon streets of Shinjuku, the old-town charm of Asakusa, the anime and electronics of Akihabara, the polished shopping of Ginza and a day out at Tokyo Disneyland, there’s enough here to fill a week on its own.
Tokyo also works well as a starting point logistically. Its major airports, wide choice of hotels and excellent transport links make it the natural first stop before heading further into Japan.

Kyoto: Best for temples, shrines and traditional Japan
Kyoto is the cultural heart of most Japan holidays. The thousands of orange torii gates at Fushimi Inari, the gold-covered Kinkaku-ji, the geisha district of Gion and the bamboo grove at Arashiyama all sit within easy reach of each other, and the pace here suits couples, photographers and anyone after some slower, quieter travel.
Basing yourself near Kyoto Station makes day trips and bullet train connections far more straightforward, which matters if you’re moving on to Osaka or Nara afterwards.

Osaka: Best for street food, nightlife and theme parks
Osaka holidays are built around food. Dotonbori’s canal-side stalls, the shopping streets of Shinsaibashi, the view from Osaka Castle and a day at Universal Studios Japan all make Osaka one of the liveliest stops on any route. Takoyaki, okonomiyaki and ramen are practically compulsory here.
Osaka also makes a handy base for day trips to Nara, Kyoto and Hiroshima, which is one reason it often features as the final stop on a Japan itinerary.

Mount Fuji and Hakone: Best for nature, hot springs and ryokan stays
For a break from city life, Mount Fuji and Hakone bring lake views, ropeway rides over Lake Ashi and proper onsen hot spring experiences into the mix. It’s a favourite for couples and honeymooners, and works especially well as a peaceful stop between Tokyo and Kyoto.
Weather plays a bigger role here than elsewhere, since Mount Fuji only reveals itself clearly on good visibility days, so it’s worth building a little flexibility into this part of the trip.

Hiroshima and Miyajima: Best for history and scenic culture
Hiroshima’s Peace Memorial Park and Atomic Bomb Dome offer a moving, important part of Japan’s history, told with real care. Nearby Miyajima adds a very different mood, with its famous floating torii gate sitting quietly offshore.
Together they make a thoughtful addition for longer Japan holidays, usually reached from Osaka or Kyoto.
This part of Japan gives your itinerary more meaning and depth, balancing beautiful scenery with powerful history. Hiroshima is best visited at a calm pace, while Miyajima offers a peaceful island escape with temples, sea views and one of Japan’s most memorable cultural landmarks.

Nara: Best for families and easy day trips
For families and first-time visitors, Nara is one of the simplest and most rewarding day trips in Japan. Its friendly deer, the towering Todai-ji Temple and the lantern-lined paths of Kasuga Taisha create a relaxed cultural day that is easy to enjoy from Kyoto or Osaka.
It adds a softer, slower moment to Japan holidays, especially after the busy streets of Tokyo, Kyoto and Osaka. It is easy to explore in a single day, with gentle walking routes, family-friendly sights and a peaceful atmosphere that makes Japanese history feel simple, memorable and enjoyable.

Japan holiday itinerary ideas
How long should a Japan holiday be? It depends on how much ground you want to cover, but here’s how most itineraries break down by trip length.
| Trip length | Route | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| 7 nights | Tokyo and Kyoto | Short first-time holidays, couples, solo travellers, culture-focused trips |
| 10 nights | Tokyo, Hakone, Kyoto and Osaka | The best balanced route for first-time UK travellers, city energy plus scenery and culture |
| 12 nights | Tokyo, Mount Fuji, Kyoto, Nara, Osaka and Hiroshima | A deeper Japan experience with more history and day trips |
| 14+ nights | Add Kanazawa, Takayama, Hokkaido or Okinawa | Luxury travellers, repeat visitors and slower-paced trips |
If you’re extending beyond 12 nights, each region adds something different: Kanazawa for gardens and samurai districts, Takayama for old mountain towns, Hokkaido for open landscapes, snow and flowers, and Okinawa for beaches and island scenery.
For most first-time travellers though, ten nights across Tokyo, Kyoto and Osaka, exploring our tour, hits the balance most people are after.
Best Time to Visit Japan
Late March to mid April and mid October to late November are the best times for most Japan holidays, offering cherry blossom or autumn colour with comfortable temperatures. Every season has a case, though, and quieter months can mean better hotels for less.
- Spring (March to May): cherry blossom season, the single most in demand window of the year. Book the earliest you can; blossom departures regularly sell out 8 to 12 months ahead.
- Summer (June to August): lively festivals, fireworks and fits UK school holidays, but expect 30°C heat with high humidity and a rainy spell in June and early July.
- Autumn (September to November): crimson maple leaves, mild days and crisp evenings. Superb for couples and photography, with November the peak for colour in Kyoto.
- Winter (December to February): snow scenes, steaming onsen baths, world class skiing in Hokkaido and Nagano, and the clearest Mount Fuji views of the year.
One date to avoid unless you enjoy queues: Golden Week, a run of national holidays from 29 April to around 5 May, when the whole of Japan travels at once and prices jump. New Year and the mid August Obon week are similarly busy. Before you book anything, check current entry rules, safety updates and insurance guidance on the official GOV.UK Japan travel advice page.

Best Japan holiday packages from the UK
A good Japan holiday package takes the guesswork out of a country that, on paper, can look complicated to plan. In practice, once the framework is sorted, Japan is one of the easiest destinations in the world to travel around. A typical Japan package holiday from the UK includes:
- Return flights from a UK airport
- Handpicked hotels in each city
- Multi-city stays across your chosen route
- Bullet train tickets between destinations
- Airport transfers
- Optional guided tours and day trips
- Flexible booking and payment support
For a clearer idea of flights, hotels, transport and daily spending, read our full Japan trip cost guide before planning your holiday.
Japan Holidays for Different travel type
Not every Japan holiday looks the same, and packages are usually built around what kind of trip you want:
- First-time Japan holidays usually focus on the classic Tokyo, Kyoto and Osaka route, giving you a strong mix of modern city life, traditional temples, bullet train travel and famous food spots without making the itinerary too complicated.
- Japan family holidays kids adore Japan. Tokyo Disneyland and DisneySea, Super Nintendo World at Universal Studios, the teamLab digital art museums, robot displays and the Ghibli Museum all rank among the best family attractions anywhere. Trains are punctual, spotless and stress free with children, and convenience stores solve every snack emergency. We book family rooms and connecting rooms early because Japanese hotel rooms are compact and the larger ones go fast.
- Luxury Japan holidays pair 5-star Tokyo names such as Aman, the Peninsula and the Park Hyatt with a night or two in a high end ryokan, where a multi course kaiseki dinner is served in your room and a private open air hot spring bath overlooks the mountains. Add private guides, green car bullet train seats and late checkout, and Japan becomes one of the world’s great luxury destinations.
- Honeymoon Japan holidays often combine the energy of Tokyo and Kyoto with quieter, more romantic places such as Hakone, Mount Fuji or Miyajima. This gives couples a balance of sightseeing, scenic views, hot springs, peaceful evenings and memorable cultural experiences.
- Culture and food-focused Japan trips are ideal for travellers who want to go deeper than the main landmarks. These holidays can include temple visits, local markets, ramen streets, sushi experiences, tea ceremonies, Osaka street food, Kyoto dining and guided walks through historic neighbourhoods.
Whichever style suits you, the value of a package is the same: someone has already thought through the logistics of moving between cities, so you’re not stitching together separate flights, hotels and rail tickets under time pressure.
Planning your first Japan holiday? Share your dates, airport and budget style with GenZ Travel, and our team will help build a smooth Japan itinerary around it.Get My Japan Quote
Japan vs Thailand: Which Asia holiday should you choose?
Japan is perfect for culture, cities, bullet trains, temples and seasonal scenery, but some UK travellers also want beaches, island views and a slower resort-style pace. If you are still comparing Asia holiday ideas, Thailand can be a strong alternative or a brilliant separate trip after Japan.
Best for Culture, Cities and Beach Time
If you like the cultural side of Japan but also want warm beaches and tropical scenery, Thailand is worth considering for a separate holiday. Our 12-night Thailand tour covering Bangkok, Chiang Mai, Krabi and Phuket combines temples, city life, northern culture and beach stays in one smooth multi-centre route.
Best for Island and Beach Resort Stays
Japan has beautiful coastal areas, especially around Okinawa, but most first-time Japan holidays focus on cities, temples and rail travel. If your main priority is island scenery, soft beaches and relaxed resort stays, our Bangkok, Koh Samui, Phuket and Khao Lak tour is a strong Thailand alternative.
Best for Island Hopping and Coastal Scenery
For travellers who want more sea views, boat trips and island variety, Thailand gives a very different kind of Asia holiday. Our Phuket, Phi Phi Island and Khao Lak package is ideal if you are looking for island hopping, turquoise water and a more relaxed beach-focused escape.
Why book Japan holidays with GenZ Travel?
Japan can absolutely be self-planned, but most UK travellers find a specialist saves both time and stress. Here’s what booking with GenZ Travel looks like in practice:
- UK-focused holiday planning, built around your airport and dates
- Help coordinating flights, hotels, transfers and rail routes
- Tailor-made itineraries for couples, families and groups
- Support with Japan and alternative Asia holiday options
- Friendly, honest guidance before you commit to booking
Final Thoughts
Japan holidays suit travellers after culture, modern cities, scenic nature and some of the best food anywhere in the world. For first-timers, Tokyo, Kyoto and Osaka remain the classic route, and if your trip allows for it, adding Mount Fuji, Hakone, Nara or Hiroshima only deepens the experience.
If you’re ready to start planning, GenZ Travel can help build a Japan holiday around your dates, budget and travel style, from a straightforward first-timer route to a longer, more luxury-focused trip.
Japan Holidays FAQs
No visa is needed. UK passport holders can visit Japan visa free for up to 90 days as tourists. Your passport simply needs to be valid for the length of your stay, though we recommend at least six months of validity to keep airline check in smooth. Always confirm current rules on GOV.UK before departure.
Japan is more cash-based than many UK travellers expect, especially outside major hotels and city centres. Cards are widely accepted in Tokyo, Kyoto and Osaka, but it’s worth carrying some yen for smaller restaurants, temples and rural stops.
Both work well. An eSIM is simpler if your phone supports it, since there’s nothing to collect or return. A pocket WiFi device can be a better option for groups or families sharing one connection, and can usually be arranged for airport pickup and drop-off.
Since the 2023 price rise, the JR Pass only pays off on rail heavy routes with several long journeys, such as Tokyo to Hiroshima and back. For a classic Tokyo, Kyoto and Osaka route, individual bullet train tickets are usually cheaper. A good package includes the right tickets, so you avoid the maths.
Yes, with a little planning. Tokyo, Kyoto and Osaka all have dedicated vegetarian, vegan and halal certified restaurants, and apps such as HappyCow and Halal Navi map them clearly. Watch for dashi fish stock in soups and sauces. Tell us your dietary needs and we will build restaurant notes into your itinerary.





