Skyscrapers, Sumo & Shrines: Exclusive Ten-Day Japan Tour

What to expect on this itinerary
Your 10-day exclusive Japan tour will reveal the different eras and preserved culture from millennia-old shrines to opulent skyscrapers. You will discover the enticing secrets of sumo and the elegant traditions of sake during custom-tailored excursions with specialist guides. Custom will take center stage in charming ryokans and authenticity will emanate from artisan studios as you explore and experience the hidden perspectives of Tokyo, Hokuriku, and Kyoto.
Customizable Itinerary
Tokyo – Lunch in the Sky and Old-Town Tokyo
Japan is a paradoxical country, where the old and the new sit comfortably side by side, and the sense of tradition mingles with the exuberance of fast-paced 21st-century life. After landing in Tokyo and an airport transfer, two contrasting experiences will put the paradox to the test. Begin with the glass and the lights of the skyscrapers and the sights. Zoom up Tokyo Skytree, the world’s tallest freestanding tower. From the observation deck, you can watch how the city unfolds with clusters of towers interspersed with more low-cut neighborhoods. A spiral glass-enclosed skywalk takes you to the highest viewpoint as a complete city stretches out before you.
High up in the 634-meter tower, you can sit down for lunch with the fine French-Japanese fusion cuisine far from traditional, but an excellent introduction to the variety of flavors you will encounter in the country. Come down to earth again, and you will explore a neighborhood where very little is higher than four stories. Shitamachi literally means “downtown” and it provides a great taste of how Tokyo was before the economic boom. Wander to a temple guarded by giant red lanterns, find wooden houses and surreal calligraphy, and feel how the pace of life remains slow here. To complete your first-day experience, you can get an omikuji fortune at the temple to explore how Buddhism and Shinto are different.
What's Included:
Tokyo – Kaiseki Cooking and Kiriko Glass Cutting
Tokyo – Inside a Sumo Studio and Taiko Drumming Lesson
Kanazawa – Old Japan: Castle, Garden, and Market
Kaga – Soto Buddhism Before a Private Onsen Springs Bath and Ryokan
Kyoto – Kyoto Temple Impressions and Fushimi Sake
Kyoto – Kyoto Ceramics and an Afternoon in Nara
Kyoto – Arashiyama by Rickshaw and Closed-Door Gardens
Miyama – Ending the Tour in Rural Japan
Miyama – Depart for Home
Trip Highlights
- Learn kaiseki cooking in a Michelin-starred Tokyo restaurant
- Travel through Arashiyama by rickshaw, stopping to explore temples, gardens and bamboo forest
- Visit the spiritual headquarters of Soto Buddhism and meet local priests in a moving experience in Eihei-ji
- Experience rural Japan by spending your final night in Miyama, an authentic hamlet with old thatched roofs
- Spend time inside a sumo stable to experience Japan’s national sport
- Enjoy a private ceramics workshop in Kyoto and learn Kiriko glass cutting in Tokyo
- Explore the highlights of Kanazawa, including a food-centered tour of its Edo-period market
- Stand in awe of the world’s largest wooden building over an afternoon in Nara
- Start your vacation with lunch in Japan’s tallest building, and then explore Tokyo’s old downtown
- Discover Taiko drumming, Fushimi sake, and the nuance of Kyoto’s temples
- Divide your exploration with a quiet night in the hot spring village of Kaga, where a ryokan and private bath are yours to indulge in
Detailed Description
Japan is not a country that can be summarized in a few words, and nor is it a place that you can come to understand without some local guidance. Japan is probably the most paradoxical nation there is, stuffed full of complications and contradictions. Nothing is clear cut, and much is kept behind closed doors. This handcrafted 10-day tour will take you on a journey behind the scenes. Through an insider’s perspective, you will take a deep dive below the surface. This itinerary is a tour for the curious traveler that wants to experience local culture and tradition fully.
This tour is split across three destinations. Tokyo is the obvious place to start, although unknown and exclusive experiences will dominate your three-day stay. Spend 90 minutes in a Sumo stable, learn kaiseki cooking in a Michelin-starred restaurant, take a Taiko drumming lesson and try your own Kiriko glass cutting. On the first day in the city, you will compare lunch in Japan’s tallest building with dinner in the city’s old downtown. Hokuriku is 2 ½ hours away by Shinkansen bullet train, and here you will explore old-world Japan with a day in Kanazawa, including a food tour of a 400-year-old market, meet with priests at the temple where Soto Buddhism is headquartered, and relax in private onsen hot springs in Kaga.
Continue to Kyoto, the famous home of temples. Explore some of the most important before an evening of sake in Fushimi. Take a ceramics workshop the next day and discover why Kyoto has always been so central to the international ceramics industry. Spend your next afternoon in Nara, travel around Arashiyama by rickshaw, and visit Zen gardens usually closed to the public. Your final night will be spent in Miyama, a small village of thatched roofs that is yet to gain international fame, in comparison to the architecturally similar Shirakawa-go. It is remote and traditional here, without television or Wi-Fi, so you will continue to connect with the Japanese people before a half a day in contemporary Osaka and your flight home.
Everywhere has its own distinct era and style in Japan, something that is visible even in Central Tokyo. An old downtown of squat houses juxtaposes with a maze of skyscrapers, which is all completely different from places like Kanazawa or Nara. Visit Japan, and you will see the eras. Travel with the country’s best guides, and you will begin to understand as you learn why they developed in such a way. It will be the insider experiences that really show off the country, as few travelers get to glimpse inside a sumo stable, and hardly any understand kaiseki.
Over these ten days, you will see the sights as well. Tokyo’s different neighborhoods impress with their lights and surprises, Shinjuku and Shibuya just two to visit. Kanazawa’s castle and the Kenrokuen garden are the finest of their kind in the country. Kyoto has sights to last for months, but your guide will help to pick out a representative selection, so you can appreciate how architecture changed over the centuries and avoid the tour group crowds. But you will soon find that it is the experiences you most take away, whether that’s a ryokan and onsen evening, or the tap-tap of drums in a small Tokyo studio. Consider learning more about our travelers’ favorite Japan travel experiences by reading their Japan travel reviews.
Starting Price
$5,400 per person (excluding international flights)
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.
Verified Traveler Reviews
Based on 559 reviews
Zicasso’s travel company did such a great job putting the trip together. I was charged for an extra night at our hotel in Paris, but they are refunding that and the Cairo portion of the trip we had to cancel.
Our Paris tour guide was great and I’d recommend her to anyone. Our Rome tour guides were very good. Hong Kong was fine. Our Tokyo guide was wonderful.
Really, the only hiccup on the trip was our hotel in Hong Kong. The company that picked us up dropped us at one hotel, not the correct one. Thankfully, a couple of their bellhops walked us and all our luggage several blocks to the correct hotel. Our tour guide the next day also went to the wrong hotel, but we only lost about 45 minutes before we figured out the issue. If you use that hotel again, please make sure folks know which hotel is which.
The "Fast and Furious" car experience was OK; however, my grandson was so tired he slept through most of it. The chopstick-making was fun, as was the glass-blowing experience.
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Zicasso's ground support team was fabulous. The guides were very knowledgeable and friendly. The ryokan experience planned by the tour operator was stellar.
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Zicasso's travel company planned a trip to our specifications and provided excellent guides and a good transportation schedule.
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Having had Japan during the cherry blossom season on our bucket list for a very long time, it was important to use the services of an experienced and trustworthy travel agent. Zicasso’s travel specialist not only met, but exceeded our expectations. The icing on the cake included a private traditional tea ceremony, a visit to an out-of-the-way tea plantation, and a remarkable remote temple where we were the only people present. Personal English-speaking guides throughout, including the travel specialist while in Kyoto, made the trip stress-free and fun.
The entire journey of 13 days was packed with lifetime memories. Many thanks. We hope the Dream Catcher ensures you and your wife a lifetime of pleasant dreams.
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Zicasso’s travel specialist really listened to our needs for this trip and planned just the right amount of guiding to help us acclimate to the area, while still being free to roam and explore on our own.
His hotel recommendations placed us in very walkable areas and close to train stations, which we appreciated. We loved that he took the time to personally guide us through Nara and Uji on another perfect day in Japan. We would definitely book with him for our next Japan adventure.
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Zicasso’s travel company created a very good itinerary, with great pacing. They definitely listened to our input when trip planning was taking place.
There was very good communication and dynamics. We received a fast response to requests, even if some were difficult to grant. There was strong support during the trip and a robust pre-travel session.
Opportunities: Improve guides overall. English or Spanish proficiency was very limited in a couple of cases. The other one: With such a great transportation system in Japan, the need for personal drivers might be more selective (i.e. fewer personal drivers).
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