Exploring the Japanese Alps Tour

Shibu Onsen in Nagano, Japan

What to expect on this itinerary

You will discover the many faces of the past and present during your 10-day Japan cultural tour. From ultra-modern cities to sleepy villages, you can follow in the footsteps of ancient travelers or plunge into the majesty of technology. Expert guides will lead you on excursions to find authentic accommodations and monkeys lounging in hot springs. Castles, forest trails, and artisan masters will create precious memories in Japan’s Alps.

Countries Visited

Japan

Places Visited

Tokyo, Matsumoto, Magome, Tsumago, Takayama, Shirakawa-go, Kyoto

Suggested Duration

10 Days

Customizable Itinerary

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Day 1

Tokyo – Yokoso to Japan!

Your flight arrives in mid-afternoon. Your guide meets you at baggage claim and guides you to a shared shuttle bus going to your Tokyo hotel.

You are free to relax for the rest of the day. Or, if you still have energy after your flight, take advantage of Tokyo’s nightlife.

What's Included:

Transfer
Accommodation
Day 2

Tokyo – A City of Many Layers

Day 3

Matsumoto – Experience the Life of a Samurai

Day 4

Matsumoto – Meet the Wildlife

Day 5

Tsumago – Walk in the Footsteps of the Past

Day 6

Takayama – A Gem of a City

Day 7

Takayama – Where the Past is Still the Present

Day 8

Kyoto – The City at Your Fingertips

Day 9

Kyoto – Ancient Treasures

Day 10

Kyoto – The Story Is Not Over

Trip Highlights

  • Spend several nights in ryokans, traditional Japanese inns featuring tatami mats and onsens, thermal hot springs
  • Encounter Japan’s famous snow monkeys relaxing in natural outdoor onsens, thermal hot springs
  • Tour the inside of the Matsumoto Castle, an authentic Edo Period castle, and learn about the history of the Samurai
  • Sample the finest Japanese cuisine, including Hida beef, famous for its melt-in-your-mouth texture
  • Traverse sections of the Nakasendo Trail, as Japanese natives have for centuries
  • Embark on a bicycle tour of Kyoto, enjoying a tour of the manmade and natural splendors at your own pace
  • Visit Takayama's old town to find centuries-old buildings where artisans continue making sake, furniture, and textiles using traditional methods

Detailed Description

You arrive in Tokyo, Japan’s capital and the largest city in the world. To help you navigate this bustling metropolis, an expert guide shows you the city’s best sites while avoiding the crowds of other travelers. From an idyllic teahouse or seat on a riverboat cruise, you soak in the city’s ancient and modern beauty.

Matsumoto is a city of treasures. At Matsumoto Castle, learn about the life of the samurai and the commoners who called feudal Japan home. The castle’s gardens are a lovely sight, made more so by the spring cherry blossoms and colorful fall foliage. While in Matsumoto, you take a day trip to Jigokudani, home to Japan’s famous snow monkeys. There, you can get up close with these amazing creatures.

Magome and Tsumago are two restored cities in the Kiso Valley. During the Edo Period (1603-1868), tens of thousands of travelers stopped there during their journey between Kyoto and Tokyo, then called Edo. Today you follow in these travelers’ footsteps, walking on a restored section of the Nakasendo Trail. When you stop for the night, a ryokan inn and delectable cuisine await you, just as it did for travelers in centuries past.

Takayama is one of the most well-preserved cities in Japan. With an expansive old town, the city is a jewel in the heart of the Japanese Alps. From sake breweries to magnificent museums, Takayama provides an incomparable immersion into Japan’s past. While there, you have the opportunity to sample Hida beef, hailed worldwide for its delicate taste and melt-in-your-mouth texture.

From Takayama, you take a day trip to Shirakawa-go, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picturesque is an understatement when describing this immaculate village, where local residents continue practicing the construction techniques handed down over the last 300 years. You can freely wander through the village, learning about everything from house building to silkworm farming.

Kyoto was the birthplace of much of Japan’s culture. Home to innumerable sites, your expert guide shows you the best of these on a leisurely bicycle tour of the city. As you travel between the temples and bamboo groves, it is easy to lose yourself in Kyoto’s natural and manmade wonders.

This tour is perfect for couples, friends, and families. It is best taken in the spring or fall when Japan’s weather is ideal for outdoor touring. 

Starting Price

$6,500 per person (excluding international flights)

Your Zicasso trip is fully customizable, and this sample itinerary is a starting place for your travel plans. Actual costs are dynamic, and your selection of accommodations and activities, your season of travel, and other such variables will bring this budget guideline up or down. Throughout your planning experience with your Zicasso specialist, your itinerary is designed around your budget. You can book your trip when you are satisfied with every detail. Planning your trip with a Zicasso travel specialist is a free service.

What's Included

  • Accommodations
  • In-country transportation
  • Some or all activities and tours
  • Expert trip planning
  • 24x7 support during your trip

Your final trip cost will vary based on your selected accommodations, activities, meals, and other trip elements that you opt to include.

4.8

Verified Traveler Reviews

Based on 224 reviews

Travel Review: Custom Japan Tour, Tokyo, Kyoto, Shinkansen Bullet Train, Edo Museum, Geisha District
Avi organized our trip in Tokyo and Kyoto, in both cities we had wonderful, knowledgeable Japanese guides with total command of the English language, in Tokyo it was Machiko and in Kyoto, Emi was lots of fun. While before the trip we were slightly apprehensive of "public transportation", we really enjoyed the combination of metro, train and taxis, it was seamless, fast and economic.

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Travel Review: Luxury Tour of Japan, Hiroshima, Tokyo, Kyoto, Kanazawa, Mt Fuji, Takayama Autumn Festival, Tottori Sand Museum

We just returned from a wonderful 16-day trip to Japan.  Circled the main island - Tokyo, Mt Fuji, Takayama (for the autumn festival), Kanazawa, Kyoto, Totorri, Hiroshima/Miyajima.  Fabulous experiences everywhere.  The trip was very well-organized and the guides provided (two days in Tokyo, two days in Kanazawa, two days in Kyoto) were all terrific.  The trip had an excellent combination of outdoor activity, cultural experiences, travel time, free time to explore.  The Japanese people were marvelous - very respectful (didn't hear one person yelling or a car horn blowing the entire time we were there) and courteous, also very helpful even when we didn't have a common language.

When planning a trip like this, it's important to do your own research and not depend totally on the travel company.  Totorri, as an example, is rarely included on itineraries but we had seen a TV news feature about the Sand Museum and dunes there and wanted to include it.  It was outstanding and well worth the few hours it took to get there.

The travel company was very easy to work with and was responsive but it's important to check all travel arrangements and details.  There were some glitches (e.g. our original hotel in Takayama was an hour away from the town which we caught due to planned taxi rides back and forth; that was unacceptable and we asked that it be changed.  They were able to get us a room in town at a late date which was difficult since most hotels were sold out for the festival.)  We were originally scheduled to take a train from Hiroshima to Osaka just to stay overnight and then fly to Narita the next day for our flight home (with no real time in Osaka).  Didn't make sense to us so at our suggestion we just took a train from Hiroshima up to Narita airport and stayed overnight in an airport hotel which worked out well. Finally, while most travel was very easy, there were a few times when a bit more explanation on the itinerary would have been helpful, such as explaining the trains to Narita and the fact that we were to get off in Narita town and not go all the way to the airport.  We figured it out but we are more experienced travelers than others and coincidentally after our return we heard from others who have gotten on the wrong train to Narita and almost missed their flights.  It's important for the client to take an active role in the planning process and understand all details.

The travel company did stay in touch with us during our trip - there was a last minute change to one day's itinerary and we were fully informed before that day so we knew what to expect.

When we got to our first hotel we received a printed copy of our itinerary with all required train tickets.  Travel between cities was very easy and efficient. 

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Japan Luxury Vacation Review: Kyoto, Tokyo, Mount Fuji, Sake Brewery Tour, Kintsugi, Pearl Tour, 10-Day Trip

We have used agents found through Zicasso for seven (maybe eight?) trips throughout Europe, Asia, and South America. Our travel team provided a highly tailored and thoughtful itinerary that was among the best, if not the outright best, of all these Zicasso agents.

They arranged a climb of Mount Fuji (which could be daunting to arrange for a foreigner), an excursion to Mie prefecture to explore the pearl industry (we saw no other Westerners), and out-of-the-ordinary Kyoto excursions. (We discovered that beautiful Mikimoto pearls are about 75% less expensive at the source compared to the prices in the United States.)

We gave our agent a list of interests and he delivered. We attended an excellent, small-group cooking class, visited a sake brewery with tasting, and small, well-chosen knife, lacquer, and kintsugi (ceramics with gold detailing) shops. The fabric and kimono shops with working Jacquard looms were quite interesting. We also drove outside Kyoto to a rural town to visit an indigo dye gallery and shop. Again, it was very unique, with no other foreigners.

We have been to Japan before, so we skipped some of the typical tourist temples, but we did squeeze in guided trips to Nara and Ise Jingu Shrine.

The accommodations were top-notch throughout. In particular, our hotel in Kyoto was amazing, with antiquities displayed in our huge rooms, fantastic private meals, and very cool planetarium projectors displaying the stars at night.

Our travel company also arranged a private dinner and performance with maiko and geiko.

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Travel Review: Japan Vacation, Hiroshima, Kyoto, Kanazawa, Takayama, Kameoka, Okayama, Tokyo, Ikebana Lesson, Archery, Gardens

Japan is beautiful, the people are friendly and helpful and polite.  Their public transport system must be the envy of the world, from the Shinkansen bullet train down to local intracity buses.  We asked our travel agency to craft a highly custom trip that emphasized culture and gardens.  Our travel specialist worked all our requests into an itinerary that took us through Okayama, Kurashiki, Hiroshima, Kyoto, Kameoka, Kanazawa, and Takayama with very little time in Tokyo.  This was a tour of great ancient cities.  Two days in Takayama coincided with the annual Spring float festival, and it was crowded, but not unpleasantly so.

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Travel Review: Family Tour of Japan, Kyoto, Tokyo, Kanawaza, Anime Museum, Samurai Show & Lesson, Geisha Dinner

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Luxury Japan Tour Review, Wasabi Farm, Lunch with a Rice Farmer, Fish Auction, Ikebana Lesson, Mountain Tea Farm, Food & Ryokans
We had an outstanding trip terrifically planned by this travel planner.  Our trip, which ran for 16 days, encompassed visits to Takayama, Shikawa-go, Kanazawa, Kyoto, Nara, Osaka, Hiroshima, Shizuoka and a few additional towns.  We primarily stayed at ryokans, at our request.  The ryokans were wonderful and unique, each providing a wonderful Japanese experience, great service and delicious food.We had numerous wonderful encounters including:a visit to the largest wasabi farm in Japan, high in the mountains;a visit to a tea farm in the mountains;lunch at the home of an 84 year old rice farmer in a small mountain town of some 70 villagers;tour of a small town which uses aquifers to provide most of its water;tour of a sake brewery;attending an auction of fish just harvested;seeing fish and vegetable markets; a 3 hour cooking lesson in the chef's home;an ikebana (flower arranging) lesson;the "usual" visits to shrines, castles, museumsThe entire trip was exquisitely planned and flawlessly executed with superb guides, drivers, and staff to meet us at train stations.  

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Customizable Itinerary

This is a sample itinerary to inspire a personalized trip designed with your travel specialist.

28,000+ Verified Traveler Reviews