Japan - Another discount airport bus "The Access Narita" launched. Y1,000 year round




O Sora
Aug 26, 12, 5:39 am
Heiwa Kotsu has recently started "The Access Narita" bus service between NRT and central Tokyo. They are not good at PR and I found this service when I happened to see their bus stop. Always 1000 yen one way and operated every hour in the daytime.

Info provided only in Japanese.
http://heiwakotsu.com/na.htm


RichardInSF
Aug 26, 12, 3:18 pm
Pretty good price, and fairly competitive with the Keisei line limited express.

Yub
Aug 26, 12, 8:08 pm
Thank you for posting! Information in English can be found here: http://heiwakotsu.com/img/language2.pdf.


msb0b
Aug 27, 12, 1:16 am
This is great info! I will try this service on my stopover next week.

msb0b
Sep 6, 12, 6:49 pm
Just took this bus to Narita Airport this morning. I hoped to take it into the city too but I just missed it.

The bus is almost brand new. It has 4+1 seats per row. The fare box has a felica reader for ic cards such as suica, but when I inquired the driver said cash only. The bus does not have onboard lavatory. There was another company rep along to assist with loading and unloading of luggages.

I boarded the bus at the starting bus stop near Yurakucho station. 4 passengers in all boarded here. The Yurakucho station is also used for other routes depending on time of hour. The bus left right on time at 7:25.

At the Yaesu stop, the bus picked up about 7-8 pasengers. The bus departed about 3 min late, but still made it to T1 at scheduled time of 8:40. We did not encounter any traffic during the outbound trip.

In all I am very happy with the price and performance of this service.

http://yfrog.com/h3f79ubj
http://yfrog.com/h2iq9xnj

gnaget
Sep 17, 12, 9:46 pm
Just took this bus to Narita Airport this morning. I hoped to take it into the city too but I just missed it.

The bus is almost brand new. It has 4+1 seats per row. The fare box has a felica reader for ic cards such as suica, but when I inquired the driver said cash only. The bus does not have onboard lavatory. There was another company rep along to assist with loading and unloading of luggages.

I boarded the bus at the starting bus stop near Yurakucho station. 4 passengers in all boarded here. The Yurakucho station is also used for other routes depending on time of hour. The bus left right on time at 7:25.

At the Yaesu stop, the bus picked up about 7-8 pasengers. The bus departed about 3 min late, but still made it to T1 at scheduled time of 8:40. We did not encounter any traffic during the outbound trip.

In all I am very happy with the price and performance of this service.

http://yfrog.com/h3f79ubj
http://yfrog.com/h2iq9xnj

How is this viable? 12 passengers equals 12,000 yen. Do buses actually pay the posted tolls? Large vehicles are normally double so it's 900 for the Shuto and then ~1400 yen so 2300 x 2 = 4600 yen in tolls alone.

The Limousine bus got on and off the Shuto to avoid the back-up over the Rainbow bridge (he took the non-toll portion). Getting on and off incurs more cost for a regular vehicle even with the new distance based tolls.

joejones
Sep 18, 12, 1:24 am
How is this viable? 12 passengers equals 12,000 yen. Do buses actually pay the posted tolls? Large vehicles are normally double so it's 900 for the Shuto and then ~1400 yen so 2300 x 2 = 4600 yen in tolls alone.

Most buses are in the "extra large" category so the toll would probably be north of 6,000 yen. I suppose the service is only viable with more passengers....

msb0b
Sep 18, 12, 8:14 am
No doubt they are operating at a loss with only 12 passengers, but it is an early morning schedule. Maybe later buses have more passengers, or perhaps the ridership will pick up in time as more people know about this service. Hope this service will be successful, as competition is good for us consumers.

gnaget
Sep 19, 12, 1:22 am
No doubt they are operating at a loss with only 12 passengers, but it is an early morning schedule. Maybe later buses have more passengers, or perhaps the ridership will pick up in time as more people know about this service. Hope this service will be successful, as competition is good for us consumers.

I think you were close to arriving around the peak for people who arrive 2 hours before mid-morning departures.

joejones
Sep 19, 12, 1:45 am
The service may also be subsidized somehow by NRT, which would make sense as they are making efforts to lure low-yield domestic traffic away from HND.

O Sora
Nov 14, 12, 7:39 am
Now they have five languages on their website.
http://heiwakotsu.com/na_top_english.htm

hamburgler
Nov 15, 12, 6:16 am
I'll note that I took this bus a few weeks ago on my way to the US (happened to be in the area, and it was actually easier to jump on at the Ginza stop than trek over to Tokyo station for the N'Ex) and was quite impressed. Like the others, only a few passengers -- and almost everyone got out at the first T2 bus stop for the LCCs. Only two of us went on to T1, where the stop is right in front of the south side terminal.

Unless there's ridiculous congestion, this basically runs at the same speed as the N'Ex, and for a third of the price. Recommended.

BuildingMyBento
Dec 4, 12, 10:40 am
I took it a few days ago and appreciate its convenient bus stop in Yaesu (hop over to the depachika in Ginza, then maybe a few antenna shop). The bus was less than half-full, and at the same cost as the Keisei line from NRT to Nippori, it's much more preferred.

Nivek
Dec 5, 12, 12:52 am
I remember taking the Airport Limousine (http://www.limousinebus.co.jp/en/) bus last year, and a single trip cost me 3000 Yen from Narita to Shinjuku, compared to 1000 Yen for this :eek: I might give this a try in future if it is a convenient option ^

BuildingMyBento
Dec 5, 12, 3:47 pm
I remember taking the Airport Limousine (http://www.limousinebus.co.jp/en/) bus last year, and a single trip cost me 3000 Yen from Narita to Shinjuku, compared to 1000 Yen for this :eek: I might give this a try in future if it is a convenient option ^

If you're heading to Shinjuku, then you can alight at the Yaesu (by Tokyo station) bus stop, head over to Tokyo station and then hop on the Marunouchi line. Naturally, taking much luggage makes this less fun.

msb0b
Dec 5, 12, 4:25 pm
Going from Tokyo Station to Shinjuku, I would take the orange JR Chuo Kaisoku train. It only stops at Kanda, Ochanomizu and Yotsuya before arriving at Shinjuku station, and therefore be the fastest mode of public transportation.

Keisei Bus also operates a bus service between Narita Airport and Tokyo Station. See Discount airport bus "Tokyo Shuttle" to operate from July 3, 2012 (http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/japan/1361467-discount-airport-bus-tokyo-shuttle-operate-july-3-2012-a.html)

The current fare is 900 yen from Tokyo Station to Narita Airport, and 1000 yen from Narita Airport to Tokyo Station. The bus stop is a bit farther away though.

joejones
Dec 5, 12, 7:20 pm
The Chuo Line and the Marunouchi Line take almost exactly the same amount of time between Tokyo and Shinjuku, the main distinction (in my mind) being which part of Shinjuku you are headed to, and whether you would rather be above ground or below ground.

swy
Apr 3, 13, 12:20 pm
I took this bus last week from Narita. They don't have a counter inside the terminal (at least at T2) and you pay the driver when you board. It was more full than when the previous posters took the bus, with ~60-80% full. Many were foreigners.

We took the 1:30 bus (from #2 bus stop) on a weekday. The traffic was kind of slow and we arrived at Yaesu around 2:55.

I would take this again if I have plenty of time.



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