Day 1 Tokyo.
Arrive at 7:30am
Pick up pocket WiFi and suica card
Get to hotel and ask them to our bags.
< Asakusa >
• Senso-Ji temple
• Kaminarimon
• Nakamise-dori Street
• Capybara cafe
• Tokyo skytree
< Akihabara >
• Super potato
• Play games
• Dinner at T’s tantan Ramen
Day 2 Tokyo.
< Shibuya >
• Hachiko statue
• Nintendo store
• Park on top floor of Nintendo
• Shibuya Crossing
• Shibuya sky at night
• Karaoke room
• Vegan Bistro Jangara
< Shinjuku >
• Cat billboard and Godzilla
• Memory lane for Izakaya for a drink and snack
Day 3. Toyko
• DisneySea
Day 4 Mt Fuji/Tokyo
• fujikawaguchiko
• Go up Mt fuji panoramic
• Climb Chureito pagoda
• Lunch/Dinner at CoCo Ichibanya
Day 5. Kyoto
• Check in
• Ryozen Kannon
• Hokanji Temple Pagoda
• Starbucks Tatami
• Kiyomizu-dera
• Eat dinner at Tu-casa
• Explore Higashiyama
Day 6. Kyoto/Nara.
• Fushimi Inari
• Get the train to Nara
• Mochi pounding at nakatanidou
• Feed deer
• Look around
• Ger the train back to kyoto for the evening
Day 7. Kyoto
• Bamboo forest
• Monkey Grove
• Sagano scenic railway ride
• Glanta ring making
• Eat at Sagano Yudofu
Day 8. Tokyo
• Free day
Day 9. Tokyo.
• Explore Ginza
• Ghibli shop
• Tsukjii market
• Joypolis
• Teamlab planets or borderless with restaurant
Day 10
Home
2 comments
If you have nothing planned for your Tokyo free day, you can consider staying an extra day in Kyoto to visit Osaka
Also Shibuya sky at sunset is pretty crowded so make sure you book your tickets early and get that before the allocated time
Please don’t patronize any animal cafés. The animals lead poor, stressed, shortened lives and are generally badly cared for. In most other countries most of them would have been shut down by now.
Unless you’re only planning to run by and take a couple of photos, your day 1 is far too full. The last time I was at Sensoji (about three weeks ago) it was so crowded that we didn’t even try to approach the temple. I would expect at least a few hours in the Asakusa area if you’re going to look at any shops or anything.
I’m not sure why you have chosen the restaurants you have, but a rule of thumb is that any restaurant you’ve learned about while researching Japanese tourism is going to be jammed and not of any greater quality than the scores of restaurants you’ll see and have not heard of. You can safely choose on the fly in Tokyo. (Coco Ichiban is a cheap chain you’ll see all over Japan. You can get better stuff almost anywhere else).