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Best Day Trips from Tokyo (Ranked, with How to Get There)

Tokyo might be the best city in the world for day trips, purely because of the trains. Hot springs, ancient shrines, a giant bronze Buddha, clear views of Mount Fuji: all of it is roughly two hours from the center, and most of it on lines you just step onto and go. Some run on JR, some on private railways, and a regional pass can take the sting out of the fares.

pagoda surrounded by treesPhoto by Su San Lee on Unsplash

The reach is the whole point. Get on the right train at Shinjuku, Asakusa, or Tokyo Station and an hour or two later you are soaking in a mountain onsen, walking past Edo-era warehouses, or watching Mount Fuji rise over a lake. The one thing to get right is matching the place to the line. Some of these run on private railways like Odakyu and Tobu, others on JR, and a few are easiest with a regional pass that bundles the round trip with local buses and boats. The six here are the classics. Spring and autumn are the prettiest seasons, but every one of them works year-round, and leaving early is the surest way to stay ahead of the crowds at the busiest spots.

  1. 1

    Hakone

    About 85 minutes each way

    Hakone is the onsen trip that asks the least of you and gives the most back. One circuit ties together hot springs, a lake loop, and the steaming Owakudani valley, and on a clear day Mount Fuji floats above Lake Ashi. The open-air art museum is a bonus, and honestly the cable cars, ropeway, and pirate-style boat make the getting-around half the fun.

    Getting there: Take the Odakyu Limited Express Romancecar from Shinjuku to Hakone-Yumoto in around 85 minutes. The Hakone Freepass covers the round trip plus the area's trains, cable cars, ropeway, and boats, which makes the loop simple.

    Best for: Anyone whose ideal day is a soak in a hot spring, a lake view, and a shot at catching Mount Fuji.

    芦ノ湖畔から望む富士山(神奈川県箱根町)
  2. 2

    Nikko

    About 2 hours each way

    What makes Nikko worth the two hours is the Toshogu Shrine, a UNESCO World Heritage site so densely carved it borders on overwhelming, set among towering cedar forest in the mountains north of Tokyo. The wider complex of shrines and temples, the see-no-evil monkeys, and the waterfalls nearby fill an unhurried day with ease.

    Getting there: The simplest route is the Tobu limited express from Asakusa to Tobu-Nikko in about 1 hour 50 minutes. By JR, ride the shinkansen to Utsunomiya and change to the JR Nikko Line. A short bus links the station to the shrines.

    Best for: Anyone who would happily spend a whole day among ornate carving and old forest.

    Yomeimon (陽明門) gate at Nikko Toshogu, Nikko, Japan. The gate dates back to the 1600s and is out of copyright.
  3. 3

    Kamakura

    About 1 hour each way

    Kamakura was once the capital of Japan, and it still carries that history lightly. The Great Buddha sitting in the open air at Kotoku-in is the image everyone comes for, but Hasedera Temple, the hiking trails through the hills, and the beaches a few minutes away round it out. The little Enoden line stitches the whole town together.

    Getting there: Ride the JR Yokosuka Line from Tokyo Station to Kamakura in just under an hour. Around town, the Enoden line links Kamakura, Hase for the Great Buddha, and the coast, so getting between sights is quick.

    Best for: Anyone who wants temples, a famous Buddha, and an hour by the sea, all in the same day.

    Tsurugaoka Hachiman Shrine in Kamakura, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan
  4. 4

    Mount Fuji and the Fuji Five Lakes

    About 2 hours each way

    If the whole point is seeing Fuji up close, base the day at Lake Kawaguchiko, the most reachable of the five lakes. The shoreline lines up those mirror-image reflections of the peak, and there are ropeways, viewpoints, and onsen with the mountain filling the backdrop. Clear winter mornings give the crispest views of all.

    Getting there: Direct highway buses run from Tokyo Station and Shinjuku to Kawaguchiko in about two hours, and they sell out, so book ahead. The Fuji Excursion limited express from Shinjuku reaches Kawaguchiko directly in just over two hours.

    Best for: Anyone whose single goal for the day is getting a good, close look at Mount Fuji.

    Views of Mount Fuji from Ōwakudani
  5. 5

    Kawagoe

    About 30 minutes each way

    They call Kawagoe Little Edo, and the name earns itself: a street of clay-walled merchant warehouses that came through where most of old Tokyo did not. The Bell of Time tower, a lane of candy shops, and Hikawa Shrine make for a relaxed half-day, and it is far closer than most people expect.

    Getting there: The fastest route is the Tobu Tojo Line rapid express from Ikebukuro, which reaches Kawagoe in under 30 minutes. The Seibu line from Seibu-Shinjuku and the JR Kawagoe Line are alternatives. A loop bus links the main sights.

    Best for: Anyone who wants a wander through an Edo-era streetscape without losing a whole day to travel.

    Quiet alley in Kawagoe, Saitama.
  6. 6

    Yokohama

    About 30 minutes each way

    Japan's second-largest city is right next door yet feels nothing like Tokyo. The futuristic Minato Mirai waterfront, a giant Ferris wheel, the cup-noodle museum, and one of the biggest Chinatowns anywhere give you a varied day, and there is more good food than you can reasonably eat in one visit.

    Getting there: Frequent JR trains reach central Yokohama in under 30 minutes from Tokyo Station, with no reservation needed. Some lines run straight to the Minato Mirai and Chinatown areas, so you can step off close to the main sights.

    Best for: Families and anyone who eats their way through a city, after waterfront views and a long lunch in Chinatown.

    みなとみらい

Thumbnail photos by Quercus acuta (CC0), Jpatokal (CC BY-SA 4.0), Fg2 (Public domain), Suicasmo (CC BY-SA 4.0), Collin Grady (CC BY-SA 2.0), Akonnchiroll (CC BY-SA 4.0), via Wikimedia Commons.

If you only have one day

Hakone is the all-rounder, blending hot springs, lake scenery, and a shot at Mount Fuji on one scenic loop. For deeper history go to Nikko or Kamakura, and if Fuji itself is the goal, base yourself at Kawaguchiko. When time is short, Kawagoe and Yokohama deliver a satisfying half-day barely thirty minutes out.

Day trips from Tokyo: FAQs

Not entirely. The JR Pass covers Kamakura, Yokohama, and the JR routes to Nikko and Kawagoe, but Hakone runs on the Odakyu line and the easiest Nikko route is the Tobu railway. Regional passes like the Hakone Freepass often work out better for those specific trips.

Kawaguchiko in the Fuji Five Lakes gives the closest, most direct views, with the peak reflected in the lake. Hakone also offers Fuji views from Lake Ashi on clear days. Visibility is best on crisp mornings, especially in the cooler months.

An early start makes a big difference. Leaving before the morning rush helps you beat crowds at popular spots like Kamakura and Hakone, and it leaves time to explore the further destinations like Nikko and Kawaguchiko before heading back in the evening.

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