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Tokyo Travel Guide | Bonne Vacances Travel Agency

Tokyo — Neon Dreams, Quiet Shrines, Next-Gen Cool

Travel guide by Bonne Vacances Travel Agency

On this page: Introduction • When to Visit • Getting There & Local Transport • Top Attractions & Traveler Picks • Culture & Experiences • Food & Drink • Where to Stay • Day Trips • Practical Tips & Safety • 7-Day Sample Itinerary • Image Gallery • Plan with Bonne Vacances

1) Introduction

Tokyo feels like three trips at once: shrine-quiet mornings, neon nights, and a design pilgrimage of architecture, fashion, and cafés. It’s endlessly efficient yet full of small surprises — a hidden kissaten (retro coffee house), a pocket park with koi, a ramen counter you’ll dream about later. We’ve mapped routes that flow because we already tripped the hard parts for you.

2) When to Visit

  • Autumn (late Oct–mid Nov): Crisp air, fiery parks — a sweet spot for comfort and color.
  • Spring (late Mar–early Apr): Sakura magic; book early and expect crowds.
  • Winter (Dec–Feb): Bluebird skies, illuminations, less crowded museums.
  • Summer (Jun–Aug): Festival season — hot and humid but joyful, with fireworks and matsuri.
BV Pro Tip: We track bloom forecasts and illumination schedules to time your prettiest evenings.

3) Getting There & Local Transport

Airports & Transfers

HND (Haneda): Closer to the city, great for late arrivals. NRT (Narita): More long-haul options.

  • To city: Monorail (HND), Keisei Skyliner (NRT), Narita Express (N’EX), limousine bus, or taxi.
  • JR Pass: Only if you’re taking intercity Shinkansen — we’ll advise based on your route.

Move Smoothly

  • IC cards (Suica/PASMO) work on JR, metro, buses — and in convenience stores.
  • Google Maps is excellent; mind exit numbers to pop up exactly where needed.
  • Taxis are immaculate and cashless-friendly; perfect late night or with luggage.

Etiquette & Comfort

Stand left on escalators (Tokyo), keep voices low, and queue neatly. Some lines have women-only cars during rush hours.

Locker Hack: On big sightseeing days, park bags in station coin lockers and roam light.
Heads-up: Trains get crowded; avoid rush hour (7:30–9:30, 17:00–19:30) when possible.

4) Top Attractions & Traveler Picks (8–10 by Style)

Family

  • teamLab Planets (immersive digital art)
  • Ueno Zoo & National Museum
  • Odaiba waterfront & science museum
  • Ghibli spots (Mitaka Museum if tickets available)

Couples

  • Shibuya Sky at sunset
  • Rooftop onsen hotel evening
  • Garden strolls (Hamarikyu, Rikugien, Shinjuku Gyoen)
  • Jazz bars in Golden Gai

Solo

  • Asakusa dawn photo walk (Sensō-ji)
  • Yanaka Ginza snacks & cats
  • Akihabara retro arcades
  • Daikanyama → Nakameguro design crawl

Groups

  • Baseball at Tokyo Dome
  • Karaoke + izakaya crawl
  • Sumo tournament (seasonal) or morning practice
  • Food hall blitz (depachika)

5) Culture & Experiences

  • Tea ceremony lessons (learn the choreography of calm)
  • Baseball game day (cheer squads + stadium snacks) or sumo practice viewing
  • Design pilgrimage: Daikanyama → Nakameguro → Aoyama architecture and boutiques
  • River cruise under rainbow-lit bridges to Odaiba

6) Food & Drink

Tokyo is the world’s most exciting food city — from humble ramen counters to once-in-a-lifetime omakase. Eat with curiosity and don’t fear the ticket machines.

RamenSushiTempuraTonkatsuYakitoriKatsu sandoWagashi

Restaurant Suggestions

  • Budget: Ramen alleys (Ebisu/Yokohama style), standing sushi bars, konbini treasures (onigiri, egg sando).
  • Mid-range: Cozy izakaya (Omoide Yokocho, Harmonica Yokocho), kissaten for retro coffee, tonkatsu specialists.
  • Luxury: Omakase counters and kaiseki — we book traveler-friendly spots with counter seats and English menus.

7) Where to Stay — Areas & Hotel Picks

Best Areas

  • Shinjuku/Shibuya: Nightlife, shopping, and transit — great for first-timers.
  • Ginza/Tokyo Station: Refined hotels, easy airport rail, Imperial gardens.
  • Asakusa/Ueno: Traditional feel with top museums and budget/value stays.

By Budget (Examples)

  • Budget: APA/Remm business hotels; Book-and-Bed capsule (novelty).
  • Mid-range: Shibuya Excel Tokyu; Hotel Ryumeikan Tokyo (near Tokyo Station).
  • Luxury: Park Hyatt Tokyo; Aman Tokyo; Palace Hotel Tokyo.

Booking Tips

Rooms run compact; twin rooms often mean more space. Request high floors for views and quieter nights; consider luggage forwarding between cities.

8) Day Trips & Excursions

  • Hakone: Onsen, outdoor sculpture park, Lake Ashi; Fuji views when clear. Use Hakone Freepass for easy transfers.
  • Kamakura/Enoshima: Great Buddha, seaside shrines, surf cafés, and sunset island views.
  • Nikkō: Ornate shrines in cedar forests and river trails; cooler summer escape.

9) Practical Tips & Safety

Essentials

Currency: JPY • Language: Japanese (English signage common) • Tipping: Not customary.

Costs (ballpark)

  • Metro: ¥200–400
  • Casual lunch: ¥1,000–2,000
  • Mid-range dinner: ¥3,000–6,000 pp

Etiquette & Packing

Quiet transit, queue neatly, slip-on shoes for tatami rooms. Pack layers and a compact umbrella; summers are humid.

Apps

Google Maps, Japan Travel (JR/metro), Tabelog (restaurants), Suica/PASMO in Wallet.

Accessibility

Elevators and tactile paving are widespread. We plan low-stair routes and book accessible rooms; station staff assist with ramps on request.

10) Sample Itinerary — 7 Full Days (Morning / Afternoon / Evening)

  1. Day 1: Asakusa Sensō-ji • Sumida riverside walk • Sushi counter dinner
  2. Day 2: Meiji Jingu • Harajuku/Omotesandō • Shibuya Sky + ramen crawl
  3. Day 3: Tsukiji Outer Market • Ginza galleries • Cocktail bar with skyline views
  4. Day 4: Ueno museums • Akihabara retro arcades • Yakitori alley (Omoide Yokocho)
  5. Day 5: Day trip to Hakone or Kamakura • Onsen/sea views • Back to Tokyo
  6. Day 6: Daikanyama → Nakameguro design walk • Canal cafés • Onsen hotel night
  7. Day 7: Free browsing for stationery & ceramics • Depachika picnic • Departure assistance

11) Image Gallery

We’ll thread the needle between neon and quiet.

From onsen hotels to sushi counters, we choreograph timing and routes so Tokyo simply flows.

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