Japan Tour
#1
Original Poster

Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: Sydney, Australia
Programs: MH Enrich, VS FC, HH Gold, PC, SPG Gold, Marco Polo Gold, Accor Plat
Posts: 1,106
Japan Tour
Hi All,
Just need some advice
I have been to tokyo before but only for 4 nights. I am planning to go again sometime this year, probably late this year at this stage. This time will be for my honeymoon. Now basically this is my plan:
I will fly from SYD-HKG-SYD. I will have 1 month off. So I was thinking maybe 5 days in HKG and the rest for Japan. So leaves me around 3 weeks for Japan. Should I get a tour package from HKG to Japan and back to HKG or should I buy my own return tickets for HKG-NRT-HKG and purchase some tours in tokyo? I prefer the free and easy method while having some guided tours outside of tokyo. I wanted to visit hot springs, hokkaido, kyoto, osaka, mt fuji if time permits. Should I leave anything out of the list or are these nice places ot get a feel of japan.
Are any of those doable for 1 night or I need 2 nights for each one?
Also I will need to make it as affordable as possible
Accomodation and travel.
I would prefer to have 4-5 days in tokyo, I will be stayin gat ANA IC most probably as I had a fantastic 4 night stay before.
Hotels don't need to be 5 star, Holiday Inn type will be good enough I think. Say 3-4 stars.
Cheers,
Kenn.
Just need some advice
I have been to tokyo before but only for 4 nights. I am planning to go again sometime this year, probably late this year at this stage. This time will be for my honeymoon. Now basically this is my plan:I will fly from SYD-HKG-SYD. I will have 1 month off. So I was thinking maybe 5 days in HKG and the rest for Japan. So leaves me around 3 weeks for Japan. Should I get a tour package from HKG to Japan and back to HKG or should I buy my own return tickets for HKG-NRT-HKG and purchase some tours in tokyo? I prefer the free and easy method while having some guided tours outside of tokyo. I wanted to visit hot springs, hokkaido, kyoto, osaka, mt fuji if time permits. Should I leave anything out of the list or are these nice places ot get a feel of japan.
Are any of those doable for 1 night or I need 2 nights for each one?
Also I will need to make it as affordable as possible
Accomodation and travel.I would prefer to have 4-5 days in tokyo, I will be stayin gat ANA IC most probably as I had a fantastic 4 night stay before.
Hotels don't need to be 5 star, Holiday Inn type will be good enough I think. Say 3-4 stars.
Cheers,
Kenn.
#2
FlyerTalk Evangelist



Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: London
Posts: 19,077
It's impossible to reply to your question as to whether it's better to get a tour from Hong Kong than make your own bespoke holiday from scratch. Sometimes tours can offer unbeatable value for money and can be tweaked to taste.
When friends of ours from Tokyo came to the UK for our wedding they were able to get package deals that included a week's accommodation in London, airport transfers between the airport and the hotel as well as the flight itself for about 500 inclusive (about 100,000yen at the time). This was less than the cost of most of the flights.
I just don't know what is available from Hong Kong. As the yen is very strong at the moment there might be schemes and discounts to encourage visitors to Japan available right now.
I'd look for consolidator tips in the Hong Kong forum and make enquiries there:
http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/searc...archid=4142270 (this should get you started)
Alternatively, you might be able to book a flight to Tokyo with a carrier that uses Hong Kong as a hub and stay in Hong Kong as a 'stopover' enroute to, or back from, Japan. This would be my first approach.
As to whether you'd want to actually go to Mount Fuji rather than go somewhere nice with a hot spring from where you can see it (and Mount Fuji can, weather permitting, be seen from Tokyo - ask for a Fuji facing room at the ANA) here's a recent thread:
http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/japan...ji-hakone.html
I've never been to Mount Fuji and have no current inclination to, I honestly don't believe I'm missing out on much.
When friends of ours from Tokyo came to the UK for our wedding they were able to get package deals that included a week's accommodation in London, airport transfers between the airport and the hotel as well as the flight itself for about 500 inclusive (about 100,000yen at the time). This was less than the cost of most of the flights.
I just don't know what is available from Hong Kong. As the yen is very strong at the moment there might be schemes and discounts to encourage visitors to Japan available right now.
I'd look for consolidator tips in the Hong Kong forum and make enquiries there:
http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/searc...archid=4142270 (this should get you started)
Alternatively, you might be able to book a flight to Tokyo with a carrier that uses Hong Kong as a hub and stay in Hong Kong as a 'stopover' enroute to, or back from, Japan. This would be my first approach.
As to whether you'd want to actually go to Mount Fuji rather than go somewhere nice with a hot spring from where you can see it (and Mount Fuji can, weather permitting, be seen from Tokyo - ask for a Fuji facing room at the ANA) here's a recent thread:
http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/japan...ji-hakone.html
I've never been to Mount Fuji and have no current inclination to, I honestly don't believe I'm missing out on much.
Last edited by LapLap; Jul 2, 2009 at 2:18 am
#3
Suspended
Join Date: May 2006
Location: HKG
Programs: A3, TK *G; JL JGC; SPG,Hilton Gold
Posts: 9,952
There is a japan air pass for both oneworld and *A, with information here, if you fly into japan using JL/ANA/CX from HK or QF/NZ from down under, you can grab a ticket for 10K yen. cheaper than shinkansen in most cases- if you want a SKS experience then you can get it for one of your shorter/unflyable trips.
Also, i would suggest you to fly into Osaka/KIX rather than Tokyo if you have been there before, then work your way north. You can try some travel agents who does open jaws in japan as well. Although the price MAY be higher than using the air passes. One note: air passes need to be sorted out before your trip!
Also, i would suggest you to fly into Osaka/KIX rather than Tokyo if you have been there before, then work your way north. You can try some travel agents who does open jaws in japan as well. Although the price MAY be higher than using the air passes. One note: air passes need to be sorted out before your trip!
#4
Original Poster

Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: Sydney, Australia
Programs: MH Enrich, VS FC, HH Gold, PC, SPG Gold, Marco Polo Gold, Accor Plat
Posts: 1,106
Hi,
Thanks for the replies. With the airpass for 10k yen, what can I do with it? 1 return flight e.g. NRT->KIX->NRT?
Thanks for the replies. With the airpass for 10k yen, what can I do with it? 1 return flight e.g. NRT->KIX->NRT?
#5

Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Hong Kong
Programs: BA Gold, JGC Sapphire, OZ Diamond, AF Silver, CX GR, Marriott Lifetime SL
Posts: 3,598
Hi All,
Just need some advice
I have been to tokyo before but only for 4 nights. I am planning to go again sometime this year, probably late this year at this stage. This time will be for my honeymoon. Now basically this is my plan:
I will fly from SYD-HKG-SYD. I will have 1 month off. So I was thinking maybe 5 days in HKG and the rest for Japan. So leaves me around 3 weeks for Japan. Should I get a tour package from HKG to Japan and back to HKG or should I buy my own return tickets for HKG-NRT-HKG and purchase some tours in tokyo? I prefer the free and easy method while having some guided tours outside of tokyo. I wanted to visit hot springs, hokkaido, kyoto, osaka, mt fuji if time permits. Should I leave anything out of the list or are these nice places ot get a feel of japan.
Are any of those doable for 1 night or I need 2 nights for each one?
Also I will need to make it as affordable as possible
Accomodation and travel.
I would prefer to have 4-5 days in tokyo, I will be stayin gat ANA IC most probably as I had a fantastic 4 night stay before.
Hotels don't need to be 5 star, Holiday Inn type will be good enough I think. Say 3-4 stars.
Cheers,
Kenn.
Just need some advice
I have been to tokyo before but only for 4 nights. I am planning to go again sometime this year, probably late this year at this stage. This time will be for my honeymoon. Now basically this is my plan:I will fly from SYD-HKG-SYD. I will have 1 month off. So I was thinking maybe 5 days in HKG and the rest for Japan. So leaves me around 3 weeks for Japan. Should I get a tour package from HKG to Japan and back to HKG or should I buy my own return tickets for HKG-NRT-HKG and purchase some tours in tokyo? I prefer the free and easy method while having some guided tours outside of tokyo. I wanted to visit hot springs, hokkaido, kyoto, osaka, mt fuji if time permits. Should I leave anything out of the list or are these nice places ot get a feel of japan.
Are any of those doable for 1 night or I need 2 nights for each one?
Also I will need to make it as affordable as possible
Accomodation and travel.I would prefer to have 4-5 days in tokyo, I will be stayin gat ANA IC most probably as I had a fantastic 4 night stay before.
Hotels don't need to be 5 star, Holiday Inn type will be good enough I think. Say 3-4 stars.
Cheers,
Kenn.
Few notes first:
As you mention "Tour" to Japan, can you clarify if you are interested in joining Hong Kong-ese tour group to Japan or you intend to do the tour on yourself? It does make a big difference in the whole planning. Most if not all tour operator from HK is Cantonese based.
As OP did not mention when was his intended travel period, I assume the OP is planning for post summer holiday and pre-Christmas, aka low season.
A random check on Sep origin date shows the following
A$1,173.30 SYD --> HKG --> NRT --> xHKG --> SYD (stopover can be on return)
A$939.00 SYD --> HKG --> HKG
HK$1,457 difference
While in low season we saw HKG --> HND --> HKG ticket for 2K HKD, 0/7 day ticket, which is too little for OP required 3 week Japan stay. Should consider purchase CX based NRT ticket for the value run.
For the Japan Air pass, what you exactly looking for is Yokoso Japan Pass, which each coupon worth JPY 10K (+ tax), however, as OP will be in Japan for 3 weeks, you should consider a combination of JR all pass / JR area pass / Metro Pass / Yokoso Japan pass. It will be the best if you can provide a rough plan for your travel.
If you will be flying CX, you can purchase hotel from cxholidays.com (definitely not the best rate), do shop around with your travel agent / local online hotel site / Japanese hotel site like http://travel.rakuten.co.jp/en/ . If you want to go cheap you can try Toyoko-inn / Super Hotel
In addition, if you plan to go Furano you will more interest to go for home-stay at the area
Cheers!
#6

Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Hong Kong
Programs: BA Gold, JGC Sapphire, OZ Diamond, AF Silver, CX GR, Marriott Lifetime SL
Posts: 3,598
For the best travel plan you should plan single direction travel, HKG have flight to the following major ports in Japan
Served by CX: Fukuoka / Osaka / Nagano / Tokyo / Sapporo
Not Served by CX : Okinawa
If you plan to go to Okinawa, most likely you will need to detour to Fukuoka
#7


Join Date: May 2007
Location: Reno, NV
Programs: UA 2MM
Posts: 1,462
One possibility is HKG-TPE-OKA on China Airline.
#8
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Minneapolis, Minnesota,USA
Programs: UA, NW
Posts: 3,752
If you're an experienced traveler and have been to Tokyo before, why do you need a guided tour? Japan is incredibly easy to get around in.
Since you're coming from outside the country, just read a guidebook (supplemented by the PDFs from the Japan National Tourist Organization website), figure out where you want to go, buy a JR Pass, and have fun.
If you need economical accommodations, there are clean, safe, and reasonable (if someone lacking in amenities) business hotels in every city. In some locations, there's a tourist information office in the local train or bus station that will find accommodations for you if you don't have a reservation. For food, just wander around until you find something that looks appealing.
Don't worry about traveling solo. I and other visitors to Japan have had the delightful experience of being "adopted" by groups or families. It's easier if you speak the language, but I know people who speak no Japanese who have met up with a Japanese family at some famous site or other and have ended up with an invitation to join the family's next excursion.
The Air Pass can be handy if you have little time and want to visit far-flung locations on the same trip, but on the whole, I prefer the up close and personal view of Japan that you get from the train. It's also easier to meet people on the train, both Japanese and foreign.
Since you're coming from outside the country, just read a guidebook (supplemented by the PDFs from the Japan National Tourist Organization website), figure out where you want to go, buy a JR Pass, and have fun.
If you need economical accommodations, there are clean, safe, and reasonable (if someone lacking in amenities) business hotels in every city. In some locations, there's a tourist information office in the local train or bus station that will find accommodations for you if you don't have a reservation. For food, just wander around until you find something that looks appealing.
Don't worry about traveling solo. I and other visitors to Japan have had the delightful experience of being "adopted" by groups or families. It's easier if you speak the language, but I know people who speak no Japanese who have met up with a Japanese family at some famous site or other and have ended up with an invitation to join the family's next excursion.
The Air Pass can be handy if you have little time and want to visit far-flung locations on the same trip, but on the whole, I prefer the up close and personal view of Japan that you get from the train. It's also easier to meet people on the train, both Japanese and foreign.
#9
Original Poster

Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: Sydney, Australia
Programs: MH Enrich, VS FC, HH Gold, PC, SPG Gold, Marco Polo Gold, Accor Plat
Posts: 1,106
Thanks for the replies guys.
Basically I will be travelling with my wife on honeymoon. I will redeem my tickets with VS for our SYD-HKG-SYD using miles.
So that leaves us with NRT on a separate ticket. I looked up on CX and NH and they were pretty much the same price to fly from HKG-NRT-HKG. Worked out to be A$1200 approx.
I was thinking to do the tours ourselves but at the same time worried it might be difficult and inconvinient for places like Hokkaido, Osaka, Hot springs (Hakone)?, Mount fuji , Kyoto. I can do Tokyo ourselves no problem as I was there 2 years ago and got around pretty much trouble free.
Travel to Japan would be around late December, maybe 29th Dec arrival. And probably need to leave NRT for HKG at around 15 January. Will this be too rushed for the places I want to go, or should I leave out a city of 2 in my list? Or do I need to increase my stay
I wonder how much budget I need to set back for this amount of days in Japan? Can anyone give me a guide?
So I can get an idea.
I was thinking 5 nights in Tokyo? Didn't really want to rush, although 5 might not be enough. I have been there 2 years ago for 4 nights and didin't find it was enough time I will probably go to disneyland again.
Another option, not sure if I can do this from Australia, basically book the land tours? i.e. make my own way to NRT and then I can join tours to go to all those places I wanted to go to?
Chris Li: You mentioend most tours if I join from HKG to go to Japan are in cantonese? None of them will be in english? My cantonese is very limited so I would require an english guide.
Cheers,
Kenn.
Basically I will be travelling with my wife on honeymoon. I will redeem my tickets with VS for our SYD-HKG-SYD using miles.
So that leaves us with NRT on a separate ticket. I looked up on CX and NH and they were pretty much the same price to fly from HKG-NRT-HKG. Worked out to be A$1200 approx.
I was thinking to do the tours ourselves but at the same time worried it might be difficult and inconvinient for places like Hokkaido, Osaka, Hot springs (Hakone)?, Mount fuji , Kyoto. I can do Tokyo ourselves no problem as I was there 2 years ago and got around pretty much trouble free.
Travel to Japan would be around late December, maybe 29th Dec arrival. And probably need to leave NRT for HKG at around 15 January. Will this be too rushed for the places I want to go, or should I leave out a city of 2 in my list? Or do I need to increase my stay
I wonder how much budget I need to set back for this amount of days in Japan? Can anyone give me a guide?
So I can get an idea.I was thinking 5 nights in Tokyo? Didn't really want to rush, although 5 might not be enough. I have been there 2 years ago for 4 nights and didin't find it was enough time I will probably go to disneyland again.
Another option, not sure if I can do this from Australia, basically book the land tours? i.e. make my own way to NRT and then I can join tours to go to all those places I wanted to go to?
Chris Li: You mentioend most tours if I join from HKG to go to Japan are in cantonese? None of them will be in english? My cantonese is very limited so I would require an english guide.
Cheers,
Kenn.
#10
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Minneapolis, Minnesota,USA
Programs: UA, NW
Posts: 3,752
December 29th arrival? That means being in Tokyo for New Year's. By all means go to a shrine at midnight on New Year's Eve. Your hotel will tell you where the nearest large shrine is.
You may have trouble finding things open during the first few days of the New Year. Just about everything except hotels and convenience stores will be closed on New Year's Day.
You may have trouble finding things open during the first few days of the New Year. Just about everything except hotels and convenience stores will be closed on New Year's Day.
#11
Original Poster

Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: Sydney, Australia
Programs: MH Enrich, VS FC, HH Gold, PC, SPG Gold, Marco Polo Gold, Accor Plat
Posts: 1,106
Hi,
Thanks for that. Yeah would love to visit a shrine for new years.
Cheers,
Kenn.
Thanks for that. Yeah would love to visit a shrine for new years.
Cheers,
Kenn.
December 29th arrival? That means being in Tokyo for New Year's. By all means go to a shrine at midnight on New Year's Eve. Your hotel will tell you where the nearest large shrine is.
You may have trouble finding things open during the first few days of the New Year. Just about everything except hotels and convenience stores will be closed on New Year's Day.
You may have trouble finding things open during the first few days of the New Year. Just about everything except hotels and convenience stores will be closed on New Year's Day.
#12

Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Hong Kong
Programs: BA Gold, JGC Sapphire, OZ Diamond, AF Silver, CX GR, Marriott Lifetime SL
Posts: 3,598
Thanks for the replies guys.
Basically I will be travelling with my wife on honeymoon. I will redeem my tickets with VS for our SYD-HKG-SYD using miles.
So that leaves us with NRT on a separate ticket. I looked up on CX and NH and they were pretty much the same price to fly from HKG-NRT-HKG. Worked out to be A$1200 approx.
Basically I will be travelling with my wife on honeymoon. I will redeem my tickets with VS for our SYD-HKG-SYD using miles.
So that leaves us with NRT on a separate ticket. I looked up on CX and NH and they were pretty much the same price to fly from HKG-NRT-HKG. Worked out to be A$1200 approx.
JAL / ANA provide even cheaper add on sector if you fly them into Japan. As I remember it is 500 HKD per sector + tax
In addition, HK people are famous for "last minute" travel where discounted ticket / package won't be available 2 months before departure. If you want to secure your package you probably want to use cxholidays.com / http://www.anaskyholiday.com.hk / http://www.jalselect.com.hk/
Actually it may worth you to check if it is cheaper to redeem the HKG NRT segment instead of redeem SYD HKG segment. as HKG NRT vv will be in super peak season, and any ticket beyond valid beyond 17 days prices like fraud. at the time you travel and as you probably will fly domestic in Japan, depend on your miles program, it may earn you 2 free domestic flight (they are super expensive)
Current Price
HKG NRT out 29/12/2009 in 15/01/2009
CI T-class via TPE 5920 0/1Y
KE S-class via SEL 6850 0/1Y
CX H-class 6950 1D/1M
I was thinking to do the tours ourselves but at the same time worried it might be difficult and inconvinient for places like Hokkaido, Osaka, Hot springs (Hakone)?, Mount fuji , Kyoto. I can do Tokyo ourselves no problem as I was there 2 years ago and got around pretty much trouble free.
Basically all tour group from HK are Cantonese based .....
Last edited by ChrisLi; Jul 3, 2009 at 2:57 am Reason: Sorry .. oversaw OP travel scheldue .. but $ wise same LOL
#13



Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: WAS
Posts: 892
Since you're coming from outside the country, just read a guidebook (supplemented by the PDFs from the Japan National Tourist Organization website), figure out where you want to go, buy a JR Pass, and have fun.
If you need economical accommodations, there are clean, safe, and reasonable (if someone lacking in amenities) business hotels in every city. In some locations, there's a tourist information office in the local train or bus station that will find accommodations for you if you don't have a reservation. For food, just wander around until you find something that looks appealing.
Don't worry about traveling solo. I and other visitors to Japan have had the delightful experience of being "adopted" by groups or families. It's easier if you speak the language, but I know people who speak no Japanese who have met up with a Japanese family at some famous site or other and have ended up with an invitation to join the family's next excursion.
If you need economical accommodations, there are clean, safe, and reasonable (if someone lacking in amenities) business hotels in every city. In some locations, there's a tourist information office in the local train or bus station that will find accommodations for you if you don't have a reservation. For food, just wander around until you find something that looks appealing.
Don't worry about traveling solo. I and other visitors to Japan have had the delightful experience of being "adopted" by groups or families. It's easier if you speak the language, but I know people who speak no Japanese who have met up with a Japanese family at some famous site or other and have ended up with an invitation to join the family's next excursion.
As an example: I planned a 5-day trip through Kyushu by collecting JNTO papers for all the cities I could find, and narrowing my choices to five cities. After figuring out the order of the cities, I picked hotels mentioned on each sheet for convenience to public transport and/or proximity to the train station. For fun, I picked mostly (lower-end) ryokans, but business hotels were the same price. From that point on, I only needed to figure out what I would see each day.
I have a basic conversational knowledge of Japanese, which helped me find a few places and make a few friends, but I would have been okay knowing none.
If you've only been to Tokyo, you have yet to witness the incredible friendliness and kindness of Japanese strangers around the country. Over my two trips, I've hitched a ride on a truck to a suburban museum in Kumamoto, escorted to my hostel by a bunch of curious teenagers in Hiroshima, guided on a subway across town in Kyushu by a gorgeous lady... mostly just by asking basic directions in limited Japanese.
#14
Original Poster

Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: Sydney, Australia
Programs: MH Enrich, VS FC, HH Gold, PC, SPG Gold, Marco Polo Gold, Accor Plat
Posts: 1,106
Thanks all for the info.
It looks like I am better off skip on the tour guides and go solo with my wife
Just thinking are those places that I listed doable in the timeframe I was suggesting? If I was in NRT first, which city should I visit first out of the whole lot? I was thinking leaving tokyo my last destination before going back to HKG. Say leave around 4-5 days for tokyo.
Also I was thinking flying into NRT, spend a night in Tokyo. Then either fly to Hokkaido, spend say 2-3 nights then fly back to Tokyo. Then go to Osaka, Kyoto via Shinkansen for say 3 nights. Then go back to Tokyo and spend4-5 nights and then back to HKG. Is this a good option? Or I was thinking just pass on Hokkaido and just go to Osaka,Kyoto,Mount fuji, Hot springs.
How do I obtain the visit japan pass for the flight?
Cheers,
Kenn.
It looks like I am better off skip on the tour guides and go solo with my wife

Just thinking are those places that I listed doable in the timeframe I was suggesting? If I was in NRT first, which city should I visit first out of the whole lot? I was thinking leaving tokyo my last destination before going back to HKG. Say leave around 4-5 days for tokyo.
Also I was thinking flying into NRT, spend a night in Tokyo. Then either fly to Hokkaido, spend say 2-3 nights then fly back to Tokyo. Then go to Osaka, Kyoto via Shinkansen for say 3 nights. Then go back to Tokyo and spend4-5 nights and then back to HKG. Is this a good option? Or I was thinking just pass on Hokkaido and just go to Osaka,Kyoto,Mount fuji, Hot springs.
How do I obtain the visit japan pass for the flight?
Cheers,
Kenn.
Last edited by k3nnis; Jul 3, 2009 at 12:40 am
#15

Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Hong Kong
Programs: BA Gold, JGC Sapphire, OZ Diamond, AF Silver, CX GR, Marriott Lifetime SL
Posts: 3,598
HKG --> xHND
HND --> CTS / AKJ (If you heading Furano)
Alternatively, via NRT
HKG --> xNRT --> CTS
CTS --> ITM (Osaka, it seems strange to fly to Tokyo in order to transit to train)
ITM --> HND (or do it on Shinkensen if time fits)
HND / NRT --> HKG
However, I just found out that Japan air pass is not valid between 22 December 2009 and 05 January 2010 due to their domestic super peak season. Your best bet is to book the HKG Japan ticket with JAL / ANA and see if they can do anything for you on that
As listed, I suggest you to fly direct to ITM instead of passing via Tokyo and save time ($ also) unless you want to pass the 2010 year line at Tokyo
You can buy 3 day JR West + Kyoto Pass (on regular train) for 5000 Yen JR West Pass
Buy it when you buy your HKG TYO ticket.
Last edited by ChrisLi; Jul 3, 2009 at 2:58 am

