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Japan

Destinations · East Asia

Japan

Precision and softness in equal measure.

FUSHIMI INARI · NOVEMBER

Japan operates at a frequency most countries can’t quite reach — attentive without being obtrusive, beautiful without being decorative, ancient in a way that never feels preserved behind glass. You feel it in the ryokan where the futon is laid while you’re at dinner, in the soba served the instant the lacquer lid is lifted, in the taxi driver who folds the newspaper corner to corner and leaves no crease. The country is the product of ten thousand small decisions, taken seriously, every day. That is what people are actually paying to be inside when they go, and it takes a trip or two to understand it.

The mistake most first Japan itineraries make is trying to cover it. Tokyo, Kyoto, Osaka, Hiroshima, Hakone, Nara — eleven nights becoming a blur of shinkansen departures and hotel lobbies seen briefly. The right version is fewer stops with more room: Tokyo for four nights minimum to understand the scale of it; Kyoto for three, based in Higashiyama so the early mornings in the lanes are yours before anyone else arrives; Hakone as the hinge, a ryokan night with Fuji in the window. The nationwide JR Pass, once the automatic first purchase, now requires fresh arithmetic — a Tokyo–Kyoto–Osaka circuit no longer earns it back, and point-to-point tickets on the faster Nozomi trains often beat it on both price and time.

We book Japan regularly, and the difference is in the calls that aren’t on any website. The sushi counter in Tokyo that seats eight and requires an introduction from a hotel the chef trusts — that introduction comes through the concierge chain at the right property, not from any booking platform. The ryokan in the mountains outside Kyoto where the Buddhist cuisine is quietly close to Jain principles, the right answer for the family that’s been bracing for a hard country on that front. The October window when the maples turn and the light on the temples turns every photograph into something from a scroll. We know which week of November and which temple faces which way at four in the afternoon.

Why with Alp

The Japan that most Indian travellers want — the quiet counter, the mountain ryokan, the temple at dawn — is not the Japan you can book on a website. It comes through introductions the right hotel makes on your behalf, Buddhist-cuisine ryokans we know by name, and a visa timeline built into the planning from day one. The JR Pass arithmetic, the Jain-compatible kitchens, the October light: we’ve done this trip enough times to know which week changes everything.

The places

Where to go, and when

Guohua Song / Pexels

— TOKYO

The scale of it — and the counter dinner no booking platform can find you.

Iban Lopez Luna / Pexels

— HAKONE

The mountain hinge. Fuji in the window, an onsen before dawn.

Dmitry Romanoff / Pexels

— KYOTO

The cultural core. Ancient in a way that never feels preserved behind glass.

Nizar Firmansyah / Pexels

— OSAKA

The city Japan forgot to make formal. The best food in the country, argued loudly.

Stay

Where we book in Japan

All 77 hotels →

Journeys here

Japan, our ways

Journal

How we think about Japan in Bloom

From our travellers

"Japan was on our list for years, but we never quite knew where to start. Abhi built something we would never have found on our own — a private ryokan in the mountains, a tea ceremony that wasn't on any travel site, Kyoto without the crowds. Every day felt considered."
Priya & Rahul S. · Mumbai PRIVATE ACCESS · KYOTO

Japan, designed around you.

Tell us your dates, who's coming, and what the trip should feel like. The visa calendar, the right ryokan, and the October timing are already part of the plan.

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