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Tokyo-in Shinkansen + Kanazawa 7-Day — with the Fukui Dinosaur Museum

Tokyo 2 days + Hokuriku Shinkansen + Kanazawa city + Shirakawa-go + Kagaya ryokan + Fukui Dinosaur Museum

Kanazawa 7-Day Itinerary — Quick Answer

As of 2026
Trip length
7 days
Est. cost / person (mid, ex-flights)
$2,141
Budget–luxury
$1,230–$4,378

As of 2026, the recommended Kanazawa 7-day route runs Day1 Arrive in Tokyo + Asakusa + Shibuya · Day2 Tokyo core — Meiji Shrine + Tokyo Tower + Ginza · Day3 Hokuriku Shinkansen Tokyo → Kanazawa + city core · Day2 21st Century Museum + Chaya districts + Ninja Temple + Kaga cuisine · Day3 Kanazawa → Shirakawa-go gassho-zukuri overnight · Day4 Shirakawa-go → Noto Peninsula Kagaya ryokan · Day7 Fukui Dinosaur Museum + Kagaya → Kanazawa + departure, grouping the must-see sights with minimal backtracking. Estimated cost per person (excluding flights) is around $2,141 on a mid-range budget. Seven days allows the full Tokyo-in Shinkansen loop. A Tokyo-in / Kanazawa-out (or reverse) routing is popular, especially as Komatsu has limited direct flights. Days 1-2 cover Tokyo's core (Asakusa, Shibuya, Tokyo Tower); Day 3 takes the Hokuriku Shinkansen to Kanazawa and the city core; Days 4-5 are Shirakawa-go and Kagaya ryokan; Day 6 is the Fukui Dinosaur Museum (30 min by Shinkansen, Japan's #1 dinosaur museum) and back to Kanazawa; Day 7 departs. The JR Hokuriku Area Pass (4 days, ¥7,000) plus a separate Tokyo Shinkansen ticket, or a 7-day JR Pass (¥50,000), make the loop good value.

7-Day Total Budget at a Glance

Budget

$1,230

Per person, flights excl.

Recommended

Mid-Range

$2,141

Per person, flights excl.

Luxury

$4,378

Per person, flights excl.

Book Hotels & Flights for This Itinerary

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Day-by-Day Detailed Schedule

DAY 1

Arrive in Tokyo + Asakusa + Shibuya

Narita/Haneda - Asakusa Kaminari-mon - Senso-ji - Shibuya Scramble - ramen

Activities

  1. 10:00 Arrive at Narita/Haneda + transfer to the city 2h

    After immigration, take the Narita Express (N'EX, 1h, ¥3,070) or the Haneda Monorail (20 min, ¥500) into the city. Free for JR Pass holders.

    Cost: N'EX ¥3,070 or Monorail ¥500 TIP: A 7-day JR Pass (¥50,000) covers the N'EX, Monorail, Tokyo's Yamanote Line, and the Hokuriku Shinkansen. Buy in advance and exchange at the airport. Transfer at Tokyo or Shinjuku Station.
  2. 13:00 Hotel check-in + Asakusa Kaminari-mon & Senso-ji 2h30

    Check in around Shinjuku/Shibuya, then visit Asakusa's Kaminari-mon gate, Senso-ji temple (free), and Nakamise shopping street — classic old Tokyo.

    Cost: Senso-ji free, snacks extra TIP: Kaminari-mon and Senso-ji are signature Tokyo sights — a five-story pagoda and a photo-spot temple. Go on a weekday around 14:00 (weekends bring an hour's queue). Nakamise's ningyo-yaki (¥150) and melon bread (¥350) are good-value snacks.
  3. 16:00 Shibuya Scramble Crossing + Hachiko statue 2h

    A signature Tokyo scene — 500,000+ daily pedestrians crossing, the Hachiko statue, and the Shibuya Sky rooftop deck (¥2,500).

    Cost: Sky deck ¥2,500 (optional) TIP: Shibuya Sky is a top night-view spot, with Tokyo Tower and (on clear days) Mt. Fuji. Sunset (17:00-18:00) plus the night lights are best. Reserve ahead.
  4. 19:00 Dinner — Tokyo ramen + izakaya 1h30

    A Shinjuku/Shibuya ramen shop (Ichiran, Ippudo, Afuri) for ¥800-1,500, or an izakaya for ¥2,000-4,000. Signature Tokyo ramen.

    Cost: ¥800-4,000 TIP: Ichiran and Ippudo are favorites. An evening walk through Shinjuku's Kabukicho is also fun. Back to the hotel after 22:00.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

In-flight breakfast

En route · Included

Breakfast on your arriving flight.

Lunch

Asakusa street food

Asakusa · ¥1,000-2,000

Ningyo-yaki, melon bread, and a light udon.

Dinner

Tokyo ramen or izakaya

Shinjuku / Shibuya · ¥800-4,000

Ichiran/Ippudo ramen, or an izakaya with sake.

Transit:

Narita → city N'EX 1h (¥3,070), or Haneda → city Monorail 20 min (¥500). In the city, the JR Yamanote Line and subway.

DAY 1 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $81 Mid $163 Luxury $333
DAY 2

Tokyo core — Meiji Shrine + Tokyo Tower + Ginza

Meiji Shrine - Harajuku - Tokyo Tower - Ginza tax-free - Tsukiji Market

Activities

  1. 09:00 Breakfast + Meiji Shrine 1h30

    After hotel breakfast, visit Meiji Shrine (free) — founded 1920 (105 years), one of Japan's foremost Shinto shrines, with 70 hectares of forest around the main hall.

    Cost: Free TIP: A flagship Tokyo Shinto shrine, and free. Weekday mornings (9:00-11:00) are best, and you may catch a traditional wedding. A 5-minute walk from Harajuku Station.
  2. 11:00 Harajuku Takeshita Street + Omotesando 1h30

    Takeshita Street, Tokyo's youth-fashion strip — crepes (¥600) and cosplay — plus the luxury avenue of Omotesando (Mitsukoshi, Don Quijote).

    Cost: Shopping/snacks extra TIP: Takeshita crepes (¥600) are a Tokyo treat — Marion Crepes and Santa Monica are popular. Best on a weekday (11:00-13:00).
  3. 13:00 Lunch — Tsukiji Market kaisendon or Shibuya tempura 1h

    A Tsukiji Market kaisendon (¥3,000-5,000, e.g. Sushizanmai), or tempura (Tsunahachi) in Shibuya/Shinjuku for ¥1,500-3,000. Good-value lunch.

    Cost: ¥1,500-5,000 TIP: Tsukiji Market (since 1923) is a top fish market with great kaisendon. Lunch (11:00-13:00) brings queues. Shibuya/Shinjuku tempura is the value option.
  4. 15:00 Tokyo Tower or Tokyo Skytree 2h

    Tokyo Tower (¥1,200, 333m) or Tokyo Skytree (¥2,800, 634m) — signature Tokyo views, best near sunset.

    Cost: ¥1,200-2,800 TIP: Tokyo Tower is the value, classic choice; Skytree is taller but pricier. Sunset (17:00-18:00) plus the night lights are best.
  5. 18:00 Ginza tax-free shopping + dinner 3h

    Tax-free shopping at Ginza's Mitsukoshi, Isetan, and Don Quijote — Tokyo's luxury avenue. Dinner is Ginza sushi (Sushizanmai, ¥3,000-10,000) or Kyushu ramen (¥1,500).

    Cost: Shopping + meal ¥3,000-10,000 TIP: Ginza is Tokyo luxury — Mitsukoshi/Isetan tax-free with passport. Popular buys: Shiseido, SK-II, Japanese cosmetics, and Tokyo Banana. A special-occasion choice.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel breakfast

Shinjuku / Shibuya · ¥1,800-3,000

A solid Tokyo hotel breakfast.

Lunch

Tsukiji kaisendon or tempura

Tsukiji / Shibuya · ¥1,500-5,000

Tsukiji kaisendon, or value tempura.

Dinner

Ginza sushi or Kyushu ramen

Ginza · ¥1,500-10,000

Ginza sushi — Tokyo luxury.

Transit:

The JR Yamanote Line and subway cover central Tokyo. Free for JR Pass holders on the Yamanote Line.

DAY 2 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $96 Mid $207 Luxury $444
DAY 3

Hokuriku Shinkansen Tokyo → Kanazawa + city core

Tokyo Station - Hokuriku Shinkansen 2h30 - Tsuzumi-mon - Kenrokuen - Kanazawa Castle - Omicho

Activities

  1. 08:30 Breakfast + check-out → Tokyo Station Hokuriku Shinkansen 3h30

    After breakfast, take the Hokuriku Shinkansen (Kagayaki) from Tokyo Station to Kanazawa — 2h30 for ¥14,000. Free for JR Pass holders, departing hourly.

    Cost: ¥14,000 one way TIP: The Kagayaki runs direct Tokyo ↔ Kanazawa in 2h30 (opened 2015, extended to Fukui in 2024). Reserve seats. Free for 7-day JR Pass holders. Enjoy the scenery through Gunma, Nagano, Toyama, and the Kanazawa mountains.
  2. 12:00 Arrive Kanazawa + Tsuzumi-mon gate + hotel check-in 1h

    The Tsuzumi-mon ('drum gate') at Kanazawa Station's north exit — often rated one of Japan's most beautiful stations, blending a traditional drum shape with a glass-cube dome. Check in at a hotel a 5-minute walk away.

    Cost: Free TIP: The Tsuzumi-mon is a top photo spot, best with the evening illumination. A 30-minute photo stop after check-in, connected to the Kanazawa Hyakubangai mall.
  3. 13:30 Lunch — Omicho Market kaisendon 1h30

    Omicho Market (since 1721, 300 years) — Yamasan kaisendon ¥3,500, piled with fresh Sea-of-Japan crab, sea urchin, and squid. Expect an hour's lunch queue (11:00-13:00).

    Cost: ¥2,000-5,000 TIP: The Nov-Mar crab season is the year's best. Yamasan, Ikiiki-tei, and Kinariya are the picks. 15-min walk or 5-min Loop Bus from the station.
  4. 15:30 Kenrokuen — Japan's #1 of three great gardens 1h30

    A 17th-century garden of the Kaga lords, rated the top of Japan's three great gardens for its 'six attributes.' Admission ¥320. 11.4 hectares of 200-year-old trees.

    Cost: Admission ¥320 TIP: April blossoms, November foliage, and Jan-Feb yukitsuri give four distinct seasons — a Kaga signature. Loop Bus to Kenrokuen-shita stop.
  5. 17:30 Kanazawa Castle Park 1h

    Seat of the Kaga Domain from 1583 — a 5-minute walk from Kenrokuen. Free entry (keep ¥320). The reconstructed Ishikawa-mon gate and Gojikken-nagaya.

    Cost: Park free, keep ¥320 TIP: A natural pairing with Kenrokuen — both 600-year Kaga signatures. The evening illumination is best, with 200+ cherry trees in blossom season.
  6. 19:30 Dinner — Kagatei Kaga kaiseki (Hotel Nikko) 2h30

    A Kaga-kaiseki course for ¥6,000-15,000 on the 7th floor of Hotel Nikko Kanazawa — a 12-15 course meal with Noto wagyu and seasonal fugu/crab (Nov-Mar). Good hotel value, a 3-minute walk from the station.

    Cost: ¥6,000-15,000 TIP: Good-value hotel Kaga cuisine — ¥3,000-5,000 less than Tsubajin (¥15,000-25,000). Reservation recommended. English menus available. A special-occasion favorite.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Tokyo hotel breakfast

Tokyo · ¥1,800-3,000

Tokyo hotel breakfast.

Lunch

Omicho Yamasan

Omicho · ¥2,000-5,000

300-year-old market kaisendon.

Dinner

Kagatei (Hotel Nikko)

Kanazawa Station · ¥6,000-15,000

A Kaga-kaiseki course.

Transit:

Tokyo Station → Kanazawa Station Hokuriku Shinkansen 2h30 (¥14,000). In the city, a Loop Bus 1-day pass (¥600).

DAY 3 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $170 Mid $296 Luxury $519
DAY 2

21st Century Museum + Chaya districts + Ninja Temple + Kaga cuisine

21st Century Museum (Leandro Erlich's Swimming Pool) - Higashi Chaya - Kazue-machi - Myoryuji (Ninja Temple) - Kaga kaiseki

Activities

  1. 09:00 Breakfast + 21st Century Museum 2h

    After hotel breakfast, take the Loop Bus to the 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art. Leandro Erlich's 'The Swimming Pool' is the photo-spot star. About 70% is free, with a paid zone (¥450). Opened 2004, a 7-minute walk from Kenrokuen.

    Cost: Paid zone ¥450 TIP: From above the 'Swimming Pool,' people appear underwater; from below you appear submerged while dressed — book ahead and go on a weekday (11:00-13:00). Other favorites: Olafur Eliasson and Patrick Blanc. The 70% free entry is great value. Queues run 1h on weekdays, 2h on weekends.
  2. 11:30 Higashi Chaya district + gold-leaf ice cream 1h30

    An 1820 geisha quarter and one of Japan's three great chaya districts — century-old wooden houses and gold-leaf shops. Hakuza's gold-leaf ice cream is ¥850 (Kanazawa makes 99% of Japan's gold leaf).

    Cost: Gold-leaf ice cream ¥850 TIP: The gold-leaf ice cream is 24K edible gold over vanilla — a Kanazawa-only treat. Wander the old houses, cafés, and craft shops. Smaller and quieter than Tokyo's Asakusa or Kyoto's Gion. Best on a weekday (11:00-13:00).
  3. 13:00 Lunch — Kohakumura wagashi + matcha set 1h

    Kohakumura, in the Chaya district (since 1625, 400 years) — a matcha + wagashi set for ¥1,200, a signature of the Kaga Domain. One of Japan's three great wagashi cities (Kyoto, Matsue, Kanazawa).

    Cost: ¥1,200-1,500 TIP: A 400-year wagashi house — a memorable matcha + wagashi pairing and a taste of Kaga heritage. The small shop often has a queue. The Kaga hojicha (roasted tea) + wagashi is also an option.
  4. 14:30 Kazue-machi Chaya district + Asano River 1h

    The smallest chaya district, along the Asano River, with the best atmosphere — century-old houses, riverside walks, and cafés. Free to stroll, a 10-minute walk from Higashi Chaya.

    Cost: Free, cafés extra TIP: Kazue-machi is the smallest of the three chaya districts but the most atmospheric — riverside, quiet, and photogenic. Best with the night illumination, though lovely by day. Less known, so fewer crowds.
  5. 16:00 Myoryuji (Ninja Temple) — hidden stairs & traps 1h30

    A temple founded in 1643, packed with hidden passages and traps the Kaga Domain built for defense and to evade Tokugawa surveillance. Reservation required (¥1,200) for a 30-40 minute guided tour. It looks four stories but is actually seven, with 23 rooms.

    Cost: ¥1,200 TIP: No actual ninjas — the nickname comes from its tricks. The hidden passages and traps are the draw. Tours are in Japanese (English handouts). Reserve about a week ahead (no same-day). A 3-minute walk from the Nishi Chaya district.
  6. 18:30 Dinner — Kagatei Kaga kaiseki (Hotel Nikko Kanazawa) 2h30

    A Kaga-kaiseki course for ¥6,000-15,000 on the 7th floor of Hotel Nikko Kanazawa — a 12-15 course meal with Noto wagyu and seasonal fugu/crab (Nov-Mar). Good hotel value, a 3-minute walk from the station.

    Cost: ¥6,000-15,000 TIP: Good-value hotel Kaga cuisine — ¥3,000-5,000 less than Tsubajin (¥15,000-25,000). The lunch mini-kaiseki (¥6,000) is also an option. Reservation recommended. English menus available. A favorite for special occasions.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel breakfast

Kanazawa Station · ¥1,800-3,000

A solid Japanese hotel breakfast.

Lunch

Kohakumura wagashi + matcha

Higashi Chaya · ¥1,200-1,500

400-year Kaga wagashi + matcha.

Dinner

Kagatei (Hotel Nikko)

Kanazawa Station · ¥6,000-15,000

A Kaga-kaiseki course — Noto wagyu + seasonal fugu/crab.

Transit:

Loop Bus 1-day pass (¥600). The Chaya districts and Ninja Temple are reached on foot and by Loop Bus. No subway.

DAY 2 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $74 Mid $148 Luxury $311
DAY 3

Kanazawa → Shirakawa-go gassho-zukuri overnight

Kanazawa - Nohi bus 1h15 - Shirakawa-go village - gassho-zukuri farmhouse - kaiseki

Activities

  1. 08:30 Breakfast + check-out → Kanazawa Station bus terminal 1h

    After breakfast, leave your large luggage at the Kanazawa hotel (ask them to store it after check-out) and pack a small daypack. Shirakawa-go is an extra night, so you'll continue to the Noto Peninsula (or back to Kanazawa) the next day.

    Cost: Hotel bag storage free TIP: It's a round trip from Kanazawa, so leave big bags at the Kanazawa hotel and carry only overnight essentials (pajamas, toiletries, a change of clothes). Some farmhouses provide yukata and bath towels.
  2. 10:00 Kanazawa Station → Shirakawa-go (Nohi bus) 1h30

    From the east-side bus terminal, the Nohi bus to Shirakawa-go takes 1h15 for ¥2,000 one way — closer from Kanazawa than from Nagoya, with 4-5 departures a day through mountain scenery.

    Cost: ¥2,000 one way TIP: Kanazawa to Shirakawa-go is 1h15 — faster than from Nagoya (3 hours). Reservations recommended (sells out a week ahead at peak holidays). Reserved seats. Carry only a small daypack.
  3. 12:00 Shirakawa-go village walk + Wada House 2h30

    A UNESCO World Heritage village of gassho-zukuri ('praying hands' steep-roofed) farmhouses. Tour the Wada House (¥400) and stroll the village (free) — 250-year-old architecture.

    Cost: Wada House ¥400, lunch extra TIP: The gassho-zukuri V-shaped roofs are built to shed heavy snow — classic Japanese roof craft. UNESCO-listed in 1995, with only 30-40 farmhouses operating as lodging. Lunch at a village restaurant (Hida wagyu curry or sansai udon, ¥1,500-3,000).
  4. 15:00 Shiroyama Viewpoint (old castle site) 1h

    The Shiroyama viewpoint above the village offers the classic panorama of gassho-zukuri V-roofs. A 30-minute walk or a ¥200 shuttle. Free entry.

    Cost: Shuttle ¥200 TIP: The V-roofs, mountains, and village panorama make a top photo — sunset (19:00 summer, 17:00 winter) is best. The shuttle runs hourly, so the 30-minute walk is recommended.
  5. 16:30 Gassho-zukuri farmhouse check-in 1h

    A farmhouse stay with two meals — ¥18,000-30,000 a night for a 250-year-old house, tatami room, kaiseki dinner, breakfast, and an irori (sunken hearth).

    Cost: Two meals included TIP: A rare, authentic gassho-zukuri experience (UNESCO-listed 1995). Dinner is served on tatami by the irori hearth. Sells out 3-6 months ahead at peak periods — only 30-40 farmhouses operate, so book early.
  6. 18:00 Farmhouse kaiseki dinner + irori hearth 2h30

    A 12-15 course farmhouse kaiseki — Hida wagyu (a Takayama signature), grilled river fish, tofu, mountain vegetables, and miso, served on tatami by the irori hearth.

    Cost: Two meals included TIP: Hida wagyu is one of Japan's four great wagyu brands — pricey in Tokyo/Osaka but included here. Grilling river fish by the hearth makes a lasting memory. The mountain vegetables, miso, and tofu suit many palates.
  7. 21:00 Evening village walk + stargazing (seasonal) 1h

    An after-dinner village stroll. Summer and autumn bring great stargazing (no city light, clear mountain skies); winter has illuminations (select Saturdays in Jan-Feb) — gassho-zukuri, snow, and lights together.

    Cost: Free TIP: The winter illumination runs select Saturdays in Jan-Feb — reservation required, with dates varying yearly. Summer stars, autumn foliage at night, and winter snow/lights all make lasting photos. The village is silent after 22:00 — an early night is the norm.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel breakfast

Kanazawa Station · ¥1,800-3,000

Japanese hotel breakfast.

Lunch

Shirakawa-go village restaurant

Shirakawa-go · ¥1,500-3,000

Hida wagyu curry or sansai udon — a light lunch.

Dinner

Gassho-zukuri farmhouse kaiseki

Shirakawa-go · Two meals included

Hida wagyu + river fish + miso — by the irori hearth.

Transit:

Kanazawa → Shirakawa-go Nohi bus 1h15 (¥2,000). Village on foot. Shuttle ¥200.

DAY 3 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $185 Mid $304 Luxury $519
DAY 4

Shirakawa-go → Noto Peninsula Kagaya ryokan

Farmhouse breakfast - Shirakawa-go → Kanazawa → Wakura Onsen - Kagaya ryokan, two meals

Activities

  1. 07:00 Farmhouse breakfast + morning village walk 1h30

    A farmhouse breakfast (grilled fish, miso soup, natto, mountain vegetables, Hokuriku milk — 10-15 items) plus a morning village walk in classic old-house atmosphere.

    Cost: Two meals included TIP: Breakfast is on a fixed schedule (until 8:00) — don't be late. A 30-minute post-breakfast walk is lovely, with morning mist over the gassho-zukuri. The miso soup and mountain vegetables feel familiar to many.
  2. 09:00 Check-out + Shirakawa-go → Kanazawa (Nohi bus) 1h30

    Check out and take the Nohi bus back to Kanazawa (1h15, ¥2,000). At Kanazawa Station, collect your stored luggage or continue directly toward Wakura Onsen.

    Cost: ¥2,000 one way TIP: The Nohi bus runs 4-5 times daily — check the 9:00/10:00/11:00 departures. Carry only a daypack. Collect big bags at Kanazawa Station, then take the JR line or a Kagaya shuttle to Wakura Onsen.
  3. 11:30 Kanazawa Station → Wakura Onsen (JR or Kagaya shuttle) 1h30

    From Kanazawa Station, the JR Noto line to Wakura Onsen takes 90 minutes (¥2,000), or use the free Kagaya ryokan shuttle (with reservation) — arriving at the Noto Peninsula gateway with Sea-of-Japan views.

    Cost: ¥2,000 one way TIP: Kagaya offers a free shuttle for guests, picking up at Kanazawa Station or Wakura-Onsen Station. Japan's #1 ryokan for 30+ years. It reopened normally after the January 2024 Noto quake — Wakura Onsen saw limited direct impact.
  4. 14:00 Kagaya ryokan check-in + open-air bath 3h

    Kagaya (founded 1906, 120 years), Japan's #1 ryokan for 30+ years — 700+ rooms, Sea-of-Japan views, and open-air baths. Two meals, ¥50,000-150,000 a night. A bucket-list special-occasion stay.

    Cost: Two meals included TIP: Japan's #1 ryokan for 30+ years — a once-in-a-lifetime experience with rooms, open-air baths, Kaga kaiseki, and Noto wagyu. Check-in 14:00-15:00 — the baths and garden are the highlight. Books out 6 months ahead.
  5. 17:30 Kagaya kaiseki dinner + Noto wagyu + seasonal fugu/crab 2h30

    A 12-15 course Kaga kaiseki — Noto wagyu, Sea-of-Japan sashimi, kanimeshi (Nov-Mar crab season), fugu (Nov-Mar), and wagashi, in your room or the dining room.

    Cost: Two meals included TIP: Kaga cuisine, Noto wagyu, and seasonal crab/fugu — a memorable feast. In-room dining is the classic choice (small surcharge); the dining room is also atmospheric. Nov-Mar crab/fugu season is the year's best.
  6. 20:30 Open-air bath at night + room rest 1h30

    An after-dinner open-air bath — Sea-of-Japan views, stargazing, classic ryokan calm. Back in the tatami room: yukata, Kaga hojicha, and wagashi.

    Cost: Two meals included TIP: Some open-air baths run 24 hours — night and dawn are the best times. Night stargazing over the sea, in mineral-rich water — a classic, rare ryokan experience.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Gassho-zukuri farmhouse breakfast

Shirakawa-go · Two meals included

Authentic old-house breakfast — mountain vegetables, miso, grilled fish.

Lunch

Kanazawa or Wakura-Onsen Station

Kanazawa / Wakura · ¥1,500-3,000

A JR bento or station eatery — good-value lunch.

Dinner

Kagaya ryokan kaiseki

Wakura Onsen · Two meals included

A 12-15 course Kaga kaiseki — Noto wagyu + seasonal fugu/crab.

Transit:

Shirakawa-go → Kanazawa Nohi bus 1h15 (¥2,000). Kanazawa → Wakura Onsen JR 90 min (¥2,000) or Kagaya shuttle.

DAY 4 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $407 Mid $593 Luxury $1,111
DAY 7

Fukui Dinosaur Museum + Kagaya → Kanazawa + departure

Kagaya breakfast - Kanazawa Station - Hokuriku Shinkansen to Fukui 30 min - Japan's #1 dinosaur museum - Komatsu departure

Activities

  1. 07:30 Kagaya breakfast + dawn open-air bath 2h

    A Kagaya breakfast plus a dawn open-air bath. A classic ryokan breakfast — Kaga mukozuke, miso soup, Noto milk, and mountain vegetables.

    Cost: Two meals included TIP: A full ryokan breakfast of 12-15 Kaga dishes. A dawn bath (6:00-7:00) then breakfast (8:00-9:00) is the classic rhythm.
  2. 10:00 Check-out + Wakura Onsen → Kanazawa → Fukui 2h

    Kagaya shuttle to Kanazawa Station, then the Hokuriku Shinkansen (Tsurugi) to Fukui Station — 30 minutes (¥3,500). The line extended Kanazawa → Fukui in 2024.

    Cost: Shinkansen ¥3,500 TIP: The Hokuriku Shinkansen reaches Fukui in 30 minutes (2024 extension) — home of Japan's #1 dinosaur museum. Great for families. Free for JR Hokuriku Pass holders.
  3. 12:30 Fukui Station + lunch — Fukui soba 1h

    Arrive at Fukui Station and lunch on Fukui soba (Echizen soba) for ¥1,000-2,000 — good value — with a stroll through the old streets.

    Cost: ¥1,000-2,000 TIP: Echizen soba is a Fukui signature — oroshi soba (with broth, nori, and grated radish). A value lunch in the dining area connected to Fukui Station.
  4. 14:00 Fukui Dinosaur Museum — Japan's #1 3h

    Japan's #1 dinosaur museum, rated among the world's top three — 1 million+ fossils, 50+ dinosaur skeletons, and 4D simulations. Admission ¥1,000. 30 minutes by car from Fukui Station, or a ¥600 direct bus.

    Cost: Admission ¥1,000 TIP: Japan's #1 dinosaur museum — great for families and kids, and a photo-spot favorite with 4D simulations and giant skeletons. Reserve ahead on weekends.
  5. 17:30 Fukui → Kanazawa → Komatsu Airport shuttle 2h30

    Hokuriku Shinkansen Fukui → Kanazawa (30 min, ¥3,500), then the Kanazawa Station shuttle to Komatsu Airport (40 min, ¥1,300).

    Cost: Shinkansen ¥3,500 + shuttle ¥1,300 TIP: Arrive at the airport 1h30 before check-in. A 17:30 departure from Fukui reaches Komatsu around 19:30. For a Tokyo-out itinerary, Fukui → Tokyo by Hokuriku Shinkansen is about 3h (¥17,500).
  6. 20:30 Komatsu Airport → departure 1h

    Check in, shop duty-free, and use the lounge. Head to the gate.

    Cost: Duty-free extra TIP: Komatsu is small, so an hour for departure is plenty.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Kagaya ryokan breakfast

Wakura Onsen · Two meals included

A full ryokan breakfast.

Lunch

Fukui Echizen soba

Fukui Station · ¥1,000-2,000

A Fukui signature — oroshi soba.

Dinner

In-flight or airport dining

Komatsu Airport · ¥1,000-2,000

Airport dining.

Transit:

Wakura Onsen → Kanazawa → Fukui by Hokuriku Shinkansen. Kanazawa Station → Komatsu Airport shuttle (¥1,300). The JR Hokuriku Pass (4 days, ¥7,000) or a 7-day JR Pass (¥50,000) pays off.

DAY 7 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $133 Mid $215 Luxury $393

Book Kanazawa Tours & Tickets

Packing Checklist

Kanazawa 7-Day Itinerary FAQ

Tokyo-in Shinkansen vs Komatsu direct — which is better value?
A Tokyo-in Shinkansen connection is popular, since Komatsu has limited direct flights. A Tokyo-in / Kanazawa-out loop (or reverse) bundles Tokyo + Kanazawa, and 7-day JR Pass holders ride the Shinkansen free. Komatsu direct saves time but has few flights — book 1-2 months ahead.
JR Hokuriku Pass vs 7-day JR Pass — which is better value?
The JR Hokuriku Pass (4 days, ¥7,000) pays off for a Kanazawa + Fukui + Toyama + Takayama loop, but the Tokyo Shinkansen is separate (¥14,000). The 7-day JR Pass (¥50,000) is better value if you also tie in Tokyo + Kyoto/Osaka. For just a Tokyo connection, the Hokuriku Pass + a separate Tokyo Shinkansen ticket (~¥21,000) is the value play.
Is the Fukui Dinosaur Museum worth it?
Yes — Japan's #1 dinosaur museum, rated among the world's top three, with 1 million+ fossils, 50+ skeletons, and 4D simulations. Admission is just ¥1,000, great for families and kids. Kanazawa → Fukui is 30 minutes by Hokuriku Shinkansen, then a ¥600 direct bus from Fukui Station.

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Why you can trust 7-day itinerary

Jimmy Kong TripPick founder · Travel content creator

Based in Chiang Mai for 8+ years, with 30+ countries visited across Southeast Asia, Japan, and Europe. Every detail in this guide is primary-source verified as of April 2026, with prices auto-refreshed via live exchange rate APIs. This isn't AI-generated boilerplate — it's written from the perspective of someone who has actually been there.

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