Great Wide Open

Travel guides and transformative journeys

Day Trips from Tokyo

Mountains, hot springs, a giant Buddha and a shy volcano — all back in time for dinner

Why bother leaving?

Tokyo is one of the world's great railway hubs and that makes it the finest base in Japan for days out. Within two hours of Shinjuku or Tokyo Station you can be standing before an eight-hundred-year-old bronze Buddha, drifting across a crater lake with Mount Fuji on the skyline, or walking a street of Edo-era merchant warehouses.

Best of all, you keep your Tokyo hotel. No packing, no checking out — just a train, a day somewhere utterly unlike the city, and a return before dark. Here are the ones worth your time, from a thirty-minute hop to a proper mountain expedition.

Japan's rail network makes all of this almost absurdly easy, and the contrast is the whole point: leave the largest metropolis on earth after breakfast, and be among cedar forests, coastline or volcanic steam by mid-morning. Below, the trips are grouped by how far you'll travel — because the honest question isn't "which is best?" but "how much of my day am I willing to spend on a train?"

At a glance

DestinationTime each wayBest for
Yokohama~30 minHarbour, Chinatown, an easy half-day
Kawagoe~30–45 minEdo-era streets without the crowds
Mount Takao~1 hrA real hike, a temple, Fuji on a clear day
Kamakura & Enoshima~1 hrThe Great Buddha, temples and the sea
Hakone~1.5 hrsOnsen, art, a crater lake, Fuji views
Nikkō~2 hrsJapan's most ornate shrine, in a mountain forest
Kawaguchiko (Fuji)~2 hrsGetting close to the mountain itself

    Under an hour — the easy ones

    Perfect if you want a lie-in, a half-day, or something gentle after a heavy few days of Tokyo.

    ~30 minutes away

    Yokohama

    Japan's second-largest city sits close enough to be a Tokyo suburb, yet feels nothing like it: open, breezy and turned to face the sea. Yokohama was one of the first ports forced open to foreign trade in the 1850s, and it has been outward-looking ever since — home to Japan's largest Chinatown, a handsome brick-and-water waterfront, and an appealing lack of hurry.

    It's the easiest escape on this list, and the cheapest. Wander Chinatown for lunch, walk the Minato Mirai waterfront, and be back in Tokyo whenever you like.

    The practical bit: ~30 minutes on JR from Tokyo or Shibuya, roughly ¥500 each way. Covered by the JR Pass, and your IC card works without a thought. So easy it barely counts as a day trip — which is exactly its charm. Our full Yokohama guide →
    ~30–45 minutes away

    Kawagoe

    Nicknamed "Little Edo," Kawagoe kept what Tokyo lost. Its Kurazukuri street is lined with squat, clay-walled merchant warehouses built to survive fire — the kind of townscape that once filled old Edo before earthquake, war and progress erased it. The Toki no Kane bell tower still rings four times a day, as it has for centuries.

    Add Candy Alley — a lane of traditional sweet shops that grew to feed Tokyo's craving after the 1923 earthquake destroyed the capital's confectioners — and Kitain Temple, with its 500-odd stone disciples, no two alike. It's said one of them resembles every person who visits.

    The practical bit: ~30 minutes from Ikebukuro on the Tobu Tojo line (around ¥490 each way), or the JR line from Shinjuku. The Tobu route isn't covered by the JR Pass. Far quieter than Kamakura — genuinely underrated, and the best-value half-day here.
    ~1 hour away

    Mount Takao

    Proof that Tokyo has a mountain. Takao rises about 600m at the western edge of the metropolis and is the most-climbed peak in the region — a properly wooded hike with a mountain temple, Yakuōin, halfway up, guarded by long-nosed tengu statues. From the top, on a clear winter's day, Fuji floats on the horizon.

    The walk takes roughly ninety minutes; a cable car halves it if you'd rather. It's the cheapest day out on this page and the one that gets you properly into the trees.

    The practical bit: ~50–60 minutes from Shinjuku on the Keio line to Takaosanguchi, around ¥390 each way. Wildly popular for autumn colour — go on a weekday if you can, or start early. Wear real shoes.

    An hour or so — the classic

    ~1 hour away

    Kamakura & Enoshima

    If you take only one day trip from Tokyo, most people would tell you to take this one — and they'd be right. Kamakura was Japan's capital eight hundred years ago, and it kept the temples to prove it. The Great Buddha at Kōtoku-in, cast in 1252, sits thirteen metres tall in the open air, its hall long since washed away by a tsunami; you can, for a few coins, step inside the bronze and see how it was built from the hollow within.

    Beyond it are hillside temples, Hase-dera's hydrangea paths, and — a genuine surprise an hour from the world's largest city — a beach with surfers on it. Hop the little Enoden tram along the coast to Enoshima, an island of sea-goddess shrines, grilled seafood and tidal caves, and you have one of the most varied days in Japan.

    The practical bit: ~1 hour on the JR Yokosuka line from Tokyo Station, around ¥940 each way, JR Pass covered. Kamakura to Enoshima on the Enoden takes ~25 minutes. Doing both in a day is entirely realistic. Weekends are busy — aim to reach the Buddha by 9:30.

    Around two hours — the big ones

    These need an early start and most of your day, and they repay it. Take the first train you can face.

    ~1.5 hours away

    Hakone

    Hakone is a day trip where the transport is the sightseeing. The classic loop threads a mountain railway that switchbacks up the hillside, a funicular, a ropeway sailing over the sulphurous steam vents of Owakudani, and a boat across Lake Ashi — a caldera lake with a torii gate standing in the water and, if the mountain is feeling generous, Fuji behind it.

    Along the way: the Open-Air Museum, where sculpture is set loose among forested hills, and hot springs everywhere. It is the most satisfying single day out from Tokyo, and the one most likely to make you wish you'd booked a night.

    The practical bit: ~90 minutes from Shinjuku on the Odakyu Romancecar. Get the Hakone Free Pass (around ¥7,100 from Shinjuku) — it covers the whole loop, every leg of it, and is far better value than the JR Pass here, which doesn't cover Odakyu at all. Romancecar seats need a reservation and sell out on weekends, so book ahead. Our full Hakone guide →
    ~2 hours away

    Nikkō

    Nikkō is where Japan decided to stop showing restraint. Tōshō-gū, the mausoleum of the shogun who unified the country, is a UNESCO complex of astonishing, riotous carving — some fifteen thousand craftsmen worked on it — set incongruously among towering cedars and mountain mist. The famous three wise monkeys are here, and the Yōmeimon gate is so dense with detail it's known as the gate you cannot stop looking at.

    Beyond the shrines lies a national park: Kegon Falls dropping ninety-seven metres, and Lake Chūzenji, magnificent in autumn. The contrast — gold leaf and dark forest — is the whole point of the place.

    The practical bit: ~2 hours by Tobu limited express from Asakusa (not JR Pass), or shinkansen to Utsunomiya then the JR Nikkō line (JR Pass covered). Two warnings worth heeding: local buses are thin on the ground, and restaurants close early — often by 5pm. Pack snacks and check return times. Our full Nikkō guide →
    ~2 hours away

    Kawaguchiko & Mount Fuji

    Everyone wants to see Fuji, and Kawaguchiko — a lake town sitting almost beneath it — is the closest you'll get on a day trip. When the mountain shows itself, reflected in the lake or framed by the five-storey Chūreitō Pagoda above Arakurayama, it is one of the great sights on earth, and no photograph prepares you for the scale.

    The catch is the mountain's temperament. Fuji makes its own weather and is notoriously shy: it clouds over as the day warms, and plenty of visitors never see it at all.

    The practical bit: ~2 hours by highway bus from Shinjuku (around ¥4,400 return) — usually easier than the train. Go in the morning, and go in winter if you can: afternoon cloud is the norm year-round, and the clearest views of the year are in the cold months. The local Fujikyu railway isn't fully IC-card compatible, so carry cash. Note that climbing Fuji is a July–September overnight affair, not a day trip.
    A cyclist's aside: if the Fuji region tempts you and you'd rather earn the view than photograph it, the roads and lakes around Fuji's base make for memorable riding. See our Japan cycling guide for where the good routes run.

    If you have more time, or the season is right

    Four more, each with its moment.

    DestinationTime each wayWhy, and when
    Karuizawa~70 minHighland resort town by shinkansen — cool air in summer, outlet shopping, JR Pass covered
    Chichibu~80 minMountains and river boats; the shibazakura moss-phlox hillside in spring, and a famous December night festival
    Hitachi Seaside Park~90 min + busThe sky-blue nemophila bloom in late April–May; fiery red kochia in autumn. A one-trick day, but what a trick
    Odawara~35 minThe nearest feudal castle to Tokyo, and a natural stop on the way to Hakone

    Making it work

    The essentials

    Five things that make the difference

    1. Go early. Aim to be on a train by 8am and at the main sight by 9:30. You'll get thirty to sixty minutes of near-silence before the tour coaches arrive — at Kamakura, Hakone and Nikkō this is the difference between a lovely day and a queue.

    2. Go on a weekday if you possibly can. The same ropeway that takes fifteen minutes on a Tuesday in November can take three hours on a Golden Week Saturday.

    3. Your IC card won't cover everything. Suica and Pasmo work seamlessly on the JR lines to Yokohama and Kamakura. But the Tobu line to Nikkō and the Fujikyu railway aren't fully IC-compatible — buy a paper ticket and carry some cash.

    4. Buy the right pass, not the famous one. More on this below.

    5. Buy breakfast at the konbini in the station. An onigiri and a hot coffee eaten on the train as Tokyo thins into countryside is one of the small perfect pleasures of Japanese travel.

    The JR Pass trap. The instinct is to buy the nationwide JR Pass and day-trip freely. Resist it. At around ¥50,000 for seven days, it only pays off across long shinkansen legs — and crucially, many of the best day trips aren't JR at all: Hakone is Odakyu, Nikkō's direct route and Kawagoe are Tobu, Kawaguchiko is a highway bus. It does cover Yokohama, Kamakura, Karuizawa and the JR route to Nikkō. If day trips are your plan, buy individual tickets or the destination's own pass — the Hakone Free Pass being the obvious example. See our cost of visiting Japan page for the full arithmetic.

    So which one?

    If you have one day and it's your first trip: Kamakura. It's close, it's varied, and the Great Buddha earns its reputation. If you have one day and want to be astonished: Hakone, for the loop and the chance of Fuji. If you have one day and you've been to Japan before: Kawagoe or Mount Takao, for the pleasure of somewhere the coaches don't go. And if the sky is clear and the season is cold, drop everything and go and look at the mountain.

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