JR PassJR Pass bestellen
Zurück zu Itinerary check

18 days in August around Honshu

kuzine
kuzine
vor etwa 10 Jahre
2 Antworten

My girlfriend and I are currently planning a (rough) itinerary for our Japan trip in a few weeks and trying to figure out if the best way of getting around would be rail pass or a combination of seishun 18 / single tickets + we're also not adverse to a nightbus transfer a few times since we're on a bit of a budget.

Our rough plan with constraints is as follows:

-29/7 arrival in Haneda -first week travel around northern Honshu up to at least Akita (friend lives there and Kanto festival is happening). Tono area, Dewa Sanzan interest us from what we've read so far. -5-6/8 Tokyo since we're attending a wedding there (the reason for the trip initially) -second part travel towards Kyoto & Nara, visit Kansai region, up to Horishima/Miyajima if time allows, Onomichi region interests us as well. -16/8 departure Narita.

We will be catching up with friends in Tokyo/Yokohama as well so at the beginning or end or around the wedding will be spending some days in the Tokyo area (which I've visited before, unlike the rest of the country) but not clear yet when exactly.

So without having a detailed plan yet, I'm wondering what the most sensible option is transport-wise?
The 14 days JR pass makes a lot of sense since it would cover most of our trip (and we'll probably have tokyo days either at the end or beginning). But since we can also buy the seishun 18 bundles combining that with some single tickets and nightbusses for longer transfers could be cheaper, but would it be worth the longer time travel will probably take? We're not really in a rush, but on the other hand don't want to spend whole days in a train too much...
Flexibility of the JR pass is of course appealing, but that's something that the seishun 18 tickets can also offer (to a certain,slower, extent). In a way the choice of tickets/pass would influence the final itinerary of course.

Any opinions or different recommendations appreciated..
Thanks!

avatar
Daniel-san
19375 posten
vor etwa 10 Jahre
Expert

Hello there,

Given the distance, using a 14 day JR Pass is if you ask me the obvious choice here. Doing the route Akita - Hiroshima by local trains is something hard to imagine, unless you are a die hard train fan. Even if you where the route over 5 days or so, its too much. Just ask any Japanese person and they will tell you likewise. To give you an example: Tokyo - Kyoto by local line takes 9 hours with 6 transfers. While the Hikari Shinkansen takes 160 minutes and has no transfers.

With the JR Pass all your travel is included and you can travel in comfort. You can also take the Sunrise Express between Tokyo and Kansai (and back) if you want to save some on accommodation costs (just be sure to book your tickets a couple of days in advance).

I would also avoid night buses if you are in Japan for sightseeing. Personally I find it impossible to sleep on the bus and losing the next day to fatigue is just a waste when you have limited time in Japan.

Hope this helps,
Daniel

kuzine
kuzine
2 posten
vor etwa 10 Jahre

Thanks a lot Daniel, this sure helped!


Hätten Sie gerne weitere Informationen? Suchen Sie im Forum

Kategorie auswählen

Sofortangebot

Ab 459,00$ für 7 Tage unbegrenztes Reisen mit Japan Rail

Können Sie die Antwort nicht finden?

Lernen Sie aus mehr als 19145 Fragen zum Japan Rail Pass, oder fragen Sie unsere Japan Rail-Reiseexperten

Frage stellen

Pocket WiFi in Japan bekommen

Pocket WiFi in Japan bekommen

Besuchen Sie uns auf Facebook

Lassen Sie sich von uns auf Instagram für Ihren nächsten Besuch in Japan inspirieren und vergessen Sie nicht, Ihre eigenen Schnappschüsse zu zeigen, sobald Sie dort sind.


Finden Sie heraus, wo Sie den Japan Rail Pass online kaufen können.

Bestellen Sie jetzt Ihren JR Pass!

Wir haben Sonderpreise für Kinder und vorzügliche Erste-Klasse-Angebote. Sich alle Tickets ansehen. Oder siehe unser Sortiment an Regional Pässe