How to cut costs on vacation to Japan?

Anonymous
When is the cheapest time to visit?

What’s a good airfare? Best time to book? Tips?

Suggestions on clean and affordable accommodations? Specific areas?

In addition to Tokyo, what else would you add on?

Ways to keep food costs down?

I realize everyone travels differently and I’ve heard a wide range of experiences, but I’m hoping to get some real world experiences from seasoned dcum travelers.
Anonymous
I'm not doing all your work for you, but food-wise the smaller places catering to commuters/office workers are cheap. Ramen, donburi (rice bowls -- one big chain is Yoshinoya) and stuff like that. Also convenience stores. They have good sandwiches as well as food you can microwave in-store.
Anonymous
We just came from spending time in Tokyo and Osaka last week. I only have a few recommendations, but to be honest, I didn't find it that expensive. In fact, we found food to be much cheaper there than here at home.

As for recommendations, set a price alert on Google and watch flight prices. Also, we found it cheaper to book the flight there and home separately, which is unusual. We ended up American the entire way but on two separate reservations.

We've been to Tokyo twice. The first time we stayed at Hotel Groove Shinjuku, which was an amazing hotel with an awesome view, but there weren't that many places to eat, especially with kids, in walking distance.

This past time, we stayed at Karaksa Tokyo Station Hotel, which had a ton of stuff within walking distance, especially in Tokyo Station itself. We much preferred the location. We even let our 15-year old teenagers go walk around the neighborhood and Tokyo Station on their own to get food, go to 7/11, shop at Character Street, etc.
Anonymous
Stay in non western chain hotels. Look up ryokans and love hotels in major cities.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:We just came from spending time in Tokyo and Osaka last week. I only have a few recommendations, but to be honest, I didn't find it that expensive. In fact, we found food to be much cheaper there than here at home.

As for recommendations, set a price alert on Google and watch flight prices. Also, we found it cheaper to book the flight there and home separately, which is unusual. We ended up American the entire way but on two separate reservations.

We've been to Tokyo twice. The first time we stayed at Hotel Groove Shinjuku, which was an amazing hotel with an awesome view, but there weren't that many places to eat, especially with kids, in walking distance.

This past time, we stayed at Karaksa Tokyo Station Hotel, which had a ton of stuff within walking distance, especially in Tokyo Station itself. We much preferred the location. We even let our 15-year old teenagers go walk around the neighborhood and Tokyo Station on their own to get food, go to 7/11, shop at Character Street, etc.


Thanks for your detailed response!

How long were you in Tokyo?

Did you visit anywhere else?

What did your teens enjoy most?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Stay in non western chain hotels. Look up ryokans and love hotels in major cities.


Great tip!

Any specific suggestions?
Anonymous
This is not a cheap trip...
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:We just came from spending time in Tokyo and Osaka last week. I only have a few recommendations, but to be honest, I didn't find it that expensive. In fact, we found food to be much cheaper there than here at home.

As for recommendations, set a price alert on Google and watch flight prices. Also, we found it cheaper to book the flight there and home separately, which is unusual. We ended up American the entire way but on two separate reservations.

We've been to Tokyo twice. The first time we stayed at Hotel Groove Shinjuku, which was an amazing hotel with an awesome view, but there weren't that many places to eat, especially with kids, in walking distance.

This past time, we stayed at Karaksa Tokyo Station Hotel, which had a ton of stuff within walking distance, especially in Tokyo Station itself. We much preferred the location. We even let our 15-year old teenagers go walk around the neighborhood and Tokyo Station on their own to get food, go to 7/11, shop at Character Street, etc.


You didn't find it expensive...? We spent 13K on plane tickets and the AirBNB for 5 before money spent there
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:We just came from spending time in Tokyo and Osaka last week. I only have a few recommendations, but to be honest, I didn't find it that expensive. In fact, we found food to be much cheaper there than here at home.

As for recommendations, set a price alert on Google and watch flight prices. Also, we found it cheaper to book the flight there and home separately, which is unusual. We ended up American the entire way but on two separate reservations.

We've been to Tokyo twice. The first time we stayed at Hotel Groove Shinjuku, which was an amazing hotel with an awesome view, but there weren't that many places to eat, especially with kids, in walking distance.

This past time, we stayed at Karaksa Tokyo Station Hotel, which had a ton of stuff within walking distance, especially in Tokyo Station itself. We much preferred the location. We even let our 15-year old teenagers go walk around the neighborhood and Tokyo Station on their own to get food, go to 7/11, shop at Character Street, etc.


You didn't find it expensive...? We spent 13K on plane tickets and the AirBNB for 5 before money spent there


When did you travel?

Where did you fly from? (I’m convinced we pay a premium to fly from the DC metro area, so I’m open to driving out of the area for a cheaper flight.)

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:We just came from spending time in Tokyo and Osaka last week. I only have a few recommendations, but to be honest, I didn't find it that expensive. In fact, we found food to be much cheaper there than here at home.

As for recommendations, set a price alert on Google and watch flight prices. Also, we found it cheaper to book the flight there and home separately, which is unusual. We ended up American the entire way but on two separate reservations.

We've been to Tokyo twice. The first time we stayed at Hotel Groove Shinjuku, which was an amazing hotel with an awesome view, but there weren't that many places to eat, especially with kids, in walking distance.

This past time, we stayed at Karaksa Tokyo Station Hotel, which had a ton of stuff within walking distance, especially in Tokyo Station itself. We much preferred the location. We even let our 15-year old teenagers go walk around the neighborhood and Tokyo Station on their own to get food, go to 7/11, shop at Character Street, etc.


You let your 15 year old kids walk around Tokyo without you? Did you at least have armed personal security with them? What a wild life.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:We just came from spending time in Tokyo and Osaka last week. I only have a few recommendations, but to be honest, I didn't find it that expensive. In fact, we found food to be much cheaper there than here at home.

As for recommendations, set a price alert on Google and watch flight prices. Also, we found it cheaper to book the flight there and home separately, which is unusual. We ended up American the entire way but on two separate reservations.

We've been to Tokyo twice. The first time we stayed at Hotel Groove Shinjuku, which was an amazing hotel with an awesome view, but there weren't that many places to eat, especially with kids, in walking distance.

This past time, we stayed at Karaksa Tokyo Station Hotel, which had a ton of stuff within walking distance, especially in Tokyo Station itself. We much preferred the location. We even let our 15-year old teenagers go walk around the neighborhood and Tokyo Station on their own to get food, go to 7/11, shop at Character Street, etc.


You didn't find it expensive...? We spent 13K on plane tickets and the AirBNB for 5 before money spent there


When did you travel?

Where did you fly from? (I’m convinced we pay a premium to fly from the DC metro area, so I’m open to driving out of the area for a cheaper flight.)



We have school aged kids so summer time and yes from DC.

Japan is not a cheap destination. I've lived there, worked there and traveled many times.

Cheap is Thailand or India. Cost of flights is the most expensive part.
Anonymous
Sign up for Air Canada's email list. They have sales every so often, departing from the US and flying to Asia via Canada. The reason is they run a bunch of flights every day to those places but Canada has 1/10th the US population so they offer low prices on trips originating in the US to entice Americans to fill the empty seats.

I go to Japan at least once a year, and most of the time I fly via Canada due to price.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:We just came from spending time in Tokyo and Osaka last week. I only have a few recommendations, but to be honest, I didn't find it that expensive. In fact, we found food to be much cheaper there than here at home.

As for recommendations, set a price alert on Google and watch flight prices. Also, we found it cheaper to book the flight there and home separately, which is unusual. We ended up American the entire way but on two separate reservations.

We've been to Tokyo twice. The first time we stayed at Hotel Groove Shinjuku, which was an amazing hotel with an awesome view, but there weren't that many places to eat, especially with kids, in walking distance.

This past time, we stayed at Karaksa Tokyo Station Hotel, which had a ton of stuff within walking distance, especially in Tokyo Station itself. We much preferred the location. We even let our 15-year old teenagers go walk around the neighborhood and Tokyo Station on their own to get food, go to 7/11, shop at Character Street, etc.


You let your 15 year old kids walk around Tokyo without you? Did you at least have armed personal security with them? What a wild life.


I'm not the PP and my 15 year old also wandered around alone. I traveled extensively as a young person in Japan and it's wild how safe it is. The Japanese carry thousands in cash on them without fear of robbery. A cop once helped a friend search for his bike for 3 hours that someone "borrowed" and they actually found it. But that's how little a cop has to do and how big of a deal a missing bike was...
Anonymous
You don't tip so that is a savings, lol.
OP are you a bot?

My suggestion is also browse TripAdvisor Japan forum lots of real time experiences there, too.

Go to Kyoto. Over visitation is down because Chinese tourists are not going.
Anonymous
The flight is by far the most expensive part. Food and sightseeing are dirt cheap in Japan. For accommodations I'd suggest staying where Japanese people stay and not hotels catering to foreigners.
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