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Kyoto in 7 Days — Deep Kansai + Mt. Koya Overnight

Temples + Uji + Nara + UNESCO Mt. Koya + Himeji Castle

Seven days unlocks Kansai end-to-end from Kyoto. Days 1-5 follow the 5-day itinerary (Kyoto + Uji + Nara). Day 6 is Mt. Koya — overnight stay at a working Buddhist monastery (shukubo) with shojin-ryori dinner, 6 AM prayer service, and the Okunoin cemetery walk among 1,000-year cedars. Day 7 ends at Himeji Castle — Japan's most spectacular original castle. The Kansai Thru Pass plus a 1-night Mt. Koya extension is the right vehicle.

A full week is enough to actually understand Kyoto. Three days for the major districts, three days for nearby regions, and one day for the offbeat neighborhoods most tourists miss. The back half of the trip is more about texture than checking landmarks — your photos get more diverse and you walk away with a three-dimensional sense of the city.

7-Day Total Budget at a Glance

Budget

$315

Per person, flights excl.

Recommended

Mid-Range

$695

Per person, flights excl.

Luxury

$1,615

Per person, flights excl.

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Day-by-Day Detailed Schedule

DAY 1

Higashiyama Temple Walk

Kiyomizu-dera · Sannenzaka · Yasaka · Gion

Activities

  1. 08:30 Kiyomizu-dera Temple 1.5-2 hours

    Founded 778 CE. The wooden main hall stands on 13m stilts over the hillside — entirely built without nails. The east balcony delivers Kyoto's signature view; on clear days you see all the way to Osaka

    Cost: $3.30 / ¥500 entry TIP: Arrive at 8:30 AM opening to skip the 30-60 min queue. The Otawa Waterfall at the base lets you drink from three streams for longevity, success, or love — pick one (greedy drinking is bad form).
  2. 10:30 Sannenzaka & Ninenzaka stone alleys 1-1.5 hours

    Edo-era stone-paved alleys connecting Kiyomizu to Yasaka Shrine. Lined with 100-year-old townhouses converted to small shops — wagashi, kimono fabrics, matcha cafés

    Cost: Free walk (snacks $3-7 / ¥500-1,000) TIP: Wagashi Otsuka for traditional sweets, Yasaka Koshindo for the colorful 'kukurizaru' prayer ornaments (kid-friendly photo). Step carefully — Edo-era stones aren't smooth.
  3. 12:00 Lunch — Hisago (oyakodon) 1 hour

    Founded 1930. The signature oyakodon (chicken-and-egg over rice) elevates Kyoto home-style cooking to legend status — golden runny egg over caramelized chicken in sweet-soy sauce

    Cost: $8-12 / ¥1,200-1,800 TIP: Lines form before 11:30 AM opening. Arrive at 11:15 to be in the first seating. Cash and IC card accepted; less than 20 seats.
  4. 13:30 Kodai-ji Temple 45 min - 1 hour

    Founded 1606 in memory of Toyotomi Hideyoshi by his widow Nene. The bamboo grove, moss garden, and tea houses are designed by tea master Kobori Enshu — one of the most refined gardens in Kyoto

    Cost: $4 / ¥600 entry TIP: Often missed by tourists rushing Kiyomizu to Yasaka. Worth the 10-min detour. The night illumination (March cherry blossom and November foliage) is the year's most refined.
  5. 15:00 Yasaka Shrine & Maruyama Park 30-45 min

    Free shrine at the Gion end of Shijo-dori. The shidare-zakura (weeping cherry) in Maruyama Park is over 400 years old and is the night-illumination centerpiece during cherry blossom

    Cost: Free TIP: Cherry blossom night light-up (early April) runs sunset to 9 PM and is one of Japan's most photographed spots. Even off-season, the shrine grounds and park form a 15-min walk-and-photo loop.
  6. 16:30 Gion Hanamikoji-dori & Shirakawa walk 1.5-2 hours

    Kyoto's geisha district. 400m of preserved Edo-era ochaya (tea houses) where geiko (geisha) and maiko (apprentices) entertain at night. The Shirakawa canal alley is the quieter, more photogenic variant

    Cost: Free walking TIP: 5-7 PM you might briefly see a geiko on the way to an evening appointment. Don't photograph without consent — the city issues ¥10,000 ($65) fines. Walk on the sidewalks, not the alley center.
  7. 19:00 Pontocho dinner 2-2.5 hours

    Narrow 500m alley along the Kamogawa with 100+ restaurants. May-September features kawadoko (riverside dining decks) extending over the water — a uniquely Kyoto seasonal experience

    Cost: $30-65 / ¥4,500-9,800 TIP: Reservations essential for kawadoko season. Menami (obanzai) and Kamo Hisa (duck) are the local picks. Walk-in fallback: the ramen and izakaya alleys 1 block west.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel or Kyoto Station Komeda Coffee

Kyoto Station · $5-10 / ¥800-1,500

A solid morning — the temple walk takes 4-5 hours. Komeda's morning set ($5 / ¥750, free with drink) is the Kyoto local breakfast. Hotel buffet works too if your hotel offers one.

Lunch

Hisago (oyakodon)

Higashiyama · $8-12 / ¥1,200-1,800

The signature oyakodon. Arrive at 11:15 to beat the queue; the shop opens at 11:30. Pair with kake-udon for a complete order.

Dinner

Pontocho — Menami or Kamo Hisa

Pontocho · $30-65 / ¥4,500-9,800

Menami for obanzai (Kyoto home-style cooking with sake flight); Kamo Hisa for duck specialist. May-September request a kawadoko terrace seat — the riverside deck is the uniquely-Kyoto setting.

Transit:

Hotel → Kiyomizu-dera: Bus 100 or 206 from Kyoto Station, 15 min, $1.50 / ¥230. Kiyomizu → Sannenzaka → Yasaka → Gion is all walking, 30 min total. Gion → Pontocho: 15 min walk along Shijo-dori or Hankyu 1 stop. The Kyoto City 1-Day Bus Pass ($4.70 / ¥700) breaks even after 3 rides — buy on Day 1.

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

Budget $35 Mid $80 Luxury $210
DAY 2

Arashiyama & Golden Pavilion

Bamboo grove · Tenryu-ji · Kinkaku-ji · Ryoan-ji

Activities

  1. 08:00 Move to Arashiyama 20 min

    JR Sagano Line from Kyoto Station to Saga-Arashiyama (15 min) or Hankyu Arashiyama Line from Karasuma (20 min). Arashiyama is Kyoto's mountain district to the west

    Cost: $1.50-2 / ¥240-300 one-way TIP: JR Sagano Line is faster from Kyoto Station; Hankyu drops closer to the bamboo grove. Both arrive by 8:30 AM, beating the tour bus rush at 10 AM.
  2. 08:30 Arashiyama bamboo grove 30-45 min

    500m of towering bamboo, Japan's canonical photograph. Best at sunrise or weekday mornings; tour buses dominate 10 AM-4 PM. The path is free, walkable any time

    Cost: Free TIP: Photo angle: walk to the middle of the path, look up — the bamboo arches above. Tripods are unofficially discouraged on weekends. Pair with the adjacent Nonomiya Shrine for the small torii photograph.
  3. 09:30 Tenryu-ji garden 1-1.5 hours

    Founded 1339, UNESCO World Heritage. The Sogen-chi pond garden is one of Japan's most refined — borrows the surrounding mountains as 'borrowed scenery' (shakkei)

    Cost: $4 / ¥600 garden TIP: The garden is the priority; the main hall is a 1900 reconstruction. The temple bookstore has the best kyo-yasai postcards. Free WiFi inside.
  4. 11:00 Togetsukyo Bridge & Katsura River walk 30-45 min

    The Moon-Crossing Bridge (named because the moon appears to cross it in autumn). The river walk extends 1-2 km along the south bank with mountains rising behind

    Cost: Free TIP: Cherry blossom (early April) and autumn foliage (mid-November) make the bridge view legendary. Boat rentals ($13 / ¥2,000 for 30 min) are available May-October.
  5. 12:00 Lunch — Arashiyama Yoshimura (soba) 1-1.5 hours

    Second-floor windows facing Togetsukyo Bridge. Hand-made soba with set tempura. The view is the experience; the food earns the rating on its own

    Cost: $10-15 / ¥1,500-2,200 TIP: Window seats book out by noon — arrive at 11:30 AM. Cold zaru soba is the order, hot kake soba in winter. Pair with light sake.
  6. 14:00 Move to Kinkaku-ji 45 min transit

    JR Sagano back to Kyoto Station, then Bus 101 or 205 to Kinkaku-ji. 45 min total. The Kyoto City 1-Day Bus Pass covers all of this

    Cost: $2 / ¥300 with bus pass TIP: Skip eating on the train. The bus stop is right at the temple gate. Buses fill up — wait for the next if the first is packed.
  7. 15:00 Kinkaku-ji (Golden Pavilion) 45 min - 1 hour

    Founded 1397, rebuilt 1955 after an arson attack. The entire upper two stories are coated in gold leaf, reflecting on the mirror pond. UNESCO World Heritage

    Cost: $3.30 / ¥500 entry TIP: Single-path one-way route. The mirror-pond shot is on the south side; afternoon light is best. Don't expect more than an hour — the path doesn't loop back.
  8. 16:30 Ryoan-ji rock garden 45 min - 1 hour

    Founded 1450. The most famous karesansui (dry rock garden) in Japan — 15 rocks arranged on white gravel, designed so you can never see all 15 from any single position

    Cost: $3.30 / ¥500 entry TIP: 10-min walk or 5-min bus from Kinkaku-ji. Sit on the wooden viewing platform for 15 min — the garden reveals itself gradually. The water-feature behind the main hall is overlooked but worth seeing.
  9. 19:00 Dinner — Kawaramachi or Sanjo izakaya 2 hours

    Return to central Kyoto for dinner. Kawaramachi and Sanjo arcades have 200+ restaurants from chain ramen to upscale kappo

    Cost: $20-50 / ¥3,000-7,500 TIP: Ippudo for tonkotsu ramen, Honke Owariya for soba, Wagyu-tei for the modern niku-sushi experience. Local izakaya hopping in Pontocho parallel alley is the walkable option.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Kyoto Station bakery or 7-Eleven onigiri

Kyoto Station · $3-7 / ¥500-1,000

Light and portable — Donq Bakery at Kyoto Station for danish or curry bread, or a Lawson onigiri pair. Day 2 is a walking marathon — eat solid but not heavy.

Lunch

Arashiyama Yoshimura (riverside soba)

Arashiyama · $10-15 / ¥1,500-2,200

Second-floor window seats with Togetsukyo Bridge views. Cold zaru soba with the tempura set is the order. The view is the experience.

Dinner

Kawaramachi izakaya or Ippudo ramen

Central Kyoto · $20-50 / ¥3,000-7,500

Ippudo Kyoto for reliable tonkotsu after a long day. For more atmosphere: a Pontocho alley izakaya. Wagyu-tei in Gion for the modern niku-sushi splurge.

Transit:

Hotel → Arashiyama: JR Sagano Line from Kyoto Station to Saga-Arashiyama (15 min). Arashiyama → Kinkaku-ji: JR Sagano back to Kyoto Station + Bus 101/205 (45 min total). Kinkaku-ji → Ryoan-ji: Bus 50 (5 min) or walk 15 min. Ryoan-ji → central Kyoto: Bus 50 to Karasuma (25 min). Day 2 transit costs $4-6 with the Kyoto City 1-Day Bus Pass.

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

Budget $32 Mid $75 Luxury $195
DAY 3

Fushimi Inari & Nishiki Market

Sunrise torii · Nishiki Market · Pontocho farewell

Activities

  1. 06:00 Fushimi Inari (sunrise) 1.5-2 hours

    10,000 vermillion torii gates winding up Mt. Inari. By 9 AM tour buses crush the lower path. Sunrise gives you the famous tunnels essentially alone

    Cost: Free TIP: Bus 5 or JR Nara Line 5 min from Kyoto Station ($1 / ¥150). Halfway point Yotsutsuji intersection at 30-45 min in delivers the photo and overlook. Full summit is 2.5 hr round trip. Sunrise is around 5:45 AM in summer, 7 AM in winter.
  2. 08:30 Return to central Kyoto, breakfast 30 min

    Back on the JR Nara Line to Kyoto Station or directly to Tofuku-ji (if including the foliage stop). Quick breakfast en route

    Cost: $3-7 / ¥500-1,000 TIP: If autumn season, divert to Tofuku-ji (10 min walk from Fushimi Inari) for the Tsuten-kyo bridge foliage view.
  3. 09:30 Nishiki Market grazing 1.5-2 hours

    Kyoto's Kitchen — 400m covered arcade with 130+ shops. Tako-tamago, grilled scallops, tofu donuts, yatsuhashi, sake tastings, matcha mochi

    Cost: $15-25 / ¥2,200-3,800 TIP: Closed Mondays — confirm before arriving. Walk the entire 400m before backtracking. Free samples at most stalls; cash preferred. Aritsugu (knife shop, founded 1560) is the destination buy.
  4. 11:30 Kyoto International Manga Museum 1.5-2 hours

    300,000+ manga volumes from across the world inside a renovated 1929 elementary school. Read freely on the wooden floors and outdoor grass. The most browsable museum in Kyoto

    Cost: $6 / ¥900 entry TIP: Skip if you're not into manga — the value is in the freedom to read, not the architecture. The garden has wagashi vendors during peak hours.
  5. 14:00 Nijo Castle 1.5-2 hours

    Built 1603 as the Tokugawa shogun's Kyoto residence. The 'nightingale floors' squeak intentionally to warn of intruders. UNESCO World Heritage. The Ninomaru Palace is a museum-grade preserved interior

    Cost: $5.30 / ¥800 entry TIP: Walk slowly on the nightingale floors to hear the bird-chirp squeaks. Pre-book the night illumination (early April cherry blossom) if dates align — books out 2 weeks ahead.
  6. 16:30 Higashi-Honganji & Nishi-Honganji 45 min - 1 hour

    The two Honganji temples are both Pure Land Buddhist sect headquarters, each with massive wooden main halls comparable to Todai-ji in Nara. Both are free entry. Close to Kyoto Station

    Cost: Free TIP: Choose one if pressed — Higashi-Honganji is closer to Kyoto Station, Nishi-Honganji has the more elaborate Karamon gate. Both close by 5 PM.
  7. 18:00 Farewell dinner — Pontocho kawadoko or Gion kaiseki 2.5-3 hours

    May-September: Pontocho kawadoko (riverside deck dining) is the seasonal must. Year-round: Gion Karyo for accessible kaiseki, or modern niku-sushi at Wagyu-tei

    Cost: $50-200 / ¥7,500-30,000 TIP: Kawadoko reservations 1-2 weeks ahead in summer. Gion Karyo lunch kaiseki is half the dinner price if you flip schedule. Cash and major cards accepted at higher-end restaurants.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Quick stop near Inari Station

Fushimi Inari · $3-7 / ¥500-1,000

After the sunrise hike, a 7-Eleven onigiri or a quick udon at the JR Inari station-area shops. Save the big breakfast — you'll be grazing at Nishiki.

Lunch

Nishiki Market street snacks (graze)

Nishiki · $15-25 / ¥2,200-3,800

Pick 5-6 stalls. Konnamonja for soy donut, Nishiki Daiyasu for grilled scallop, Mochi Tsukiya for fresh mochi, Aritsugu for tasting wagyu sashimi, a sake tasting set ($5).

Dinner

Pontocho kawadoko (May-Sep) or Gion Karyo kaiseki

Pontocho or Gion · $50-200 / ¥7,500-30,000

Kawadoko for the seasonal Kyoto-only experience. Gion Karyo or Giro Giro Hitoshina for kaiseki — book 1-2 weeks ahead. Cash backup for traditional spots.

Transit:

Hotel → Fushimi Inari: JR Nara Line from Kyoto Station to Inari (5 min, $1 / ¥150). Inari → Nishiki: Same line back to Kyoto Station + Karasuma Line to Shijo (15 min). Nishiki → Nijo: 15 min walk or Karasuma Line + Tozai Line (10 min). Nijo → central Kyoto: Tozai Line. Day 3 transit ~$4 / ¥600 total.

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

Budget $30 Mid $75 Luxury $245
DAY 4

Uji — Matcha and the Phoenix Hall

Nakamura Tokichi · Byodo-in · Asahi-yaki

Activities

  1. 09:00 Kyoto → Uji (JR Nara Line) 17 min

    17 min direct from Kyoto Station to JR Uji. The matcha capital of Japan since the Kamakura period (1185-1333)

    Cost: $1.60 / ¥240 one-way TIP: Leave hotel by 8:30 AM to arrive at Uji by 9:30. Nakamura Tokichi opens at 10 AM and queues start forming immediately.
  2. 09:30 Nakamura Tokichi Honten 1.5-2 hours

    Founded 1854. The matcha parfait here — layered matcha ice cream, matcha jelly, shiratama mochi, red bean — is the canonical matcha dessert experience. The Edo-period building is itself a museum

    Cost: $10-15 / ¥1,500-2,200 TIP: Weekday morning has the shortest wait (45-60 min vs weekend 2+ hours). Order matcha parfait + a matcha-affogato pair. Matcha tea-leaf purchases qualify for tax-free over $37 / ¥5,500.
  3. 11:30 Byodo-in Phoenix Hall 1.5-2 hours

    Founded 1052. The building on Japan's ¥10 coin. UNESCO World Heritage. The Hoo-do (Phoenix Hall) reflects on its pond — one of the most photographed structures in Japan

    Cost: $4 / ¥600 grounds + $3.30 / ¥500 hall entry TIP: Buy hall entry on arrival — limited daily entries by timed slot. The treasure museum has Amida Buddha sculptures designated National Treasures.
  4. 13:30 Uji River walk & Asahi-yaki pottery kiln 1-1.5 hours

    The Uji River with two old wooden bridges (Uji-bashi and Asagiri-bashi) frames a 1km walk between two of Japan's oldest tea-growing fields. Asahi-yaki has been making tea pottery since 1599

    Cost: Free walk; pottery $20-200 / ¥3,000-30,000 TIP: The Asahi-yaki retail shop is on the east bank. Traditional Uji-yaki teaware pairs with the matcha you bought at Nakamura Tokichi — meaningful souvenir set.
  5. 15:00 Mimuroto-ji Temple (seasonal) 1-1.5 hours

    Japan's premier hydrangea temple, with 10,000 bushes from June-July. Otherwise a quieter Buddhist temple in the hills above Uji

    Cost: $6.70 / ¥1,000 in hydrangea season; $5.30 / ¥800 otherwise TIP: Mid-June to early July is hydrangea peak — worth the special trip. Otherwise skip in favor of more Uji walking. Bus from Uji Station, 15 min.
  6. 17:00 Return to Kyoto 17 min

    JR Nara Line back. 17 min, comfortable arrival by 5:45 PM for a relaxed dinner

    Cost: $1.60 / ¥240 one-way TIP: Same line back. Avoid 5-6 PM rush hour by leaving 6:30 PM+ if possible. Uji Station has a few coin lockers if you need to drop heavy bags.
  7. 19:00 Kyoto dinner — Gion or Higashiyama izakaya 2 hours

    Casual local izakaya for a relaxed evening. Pontocho alley has the densest concentration of small restaurants

    Cost: $30-65 / ¥4,500-9,800 TIP: After the day trip, a Pontocho riverside walk + small izakaya is the recovery move. Menami or a back-alley standing bar both work.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Kyoto Station Donq Bakery or hotel breakfast

Kyoto Station · $5-10 / ¥800-1,500

Solid breakfast — you'll wait for Nakamura Tokichi without lunch. Hotel buffet is the safe call. Donq's curry bread + iced coffee is the local Kyoto morning combo.

Lunch

Nakamura Tokichi (matcha parfait + lunch set)

Uji · $15-25 / ¥2,200-3,800

Order the matcha parfait + soba lunch set. The matcha-cha-soba is a green tea-infused noodle unique to Uji. Save room for the matcha jelly.

Dinner

Pontocho or Gion izakaya

Central Kyoto · $30-65 / ¥4,500-9,800

Menami for obanzai, Kamo Hisa for duck, or a Pontocho back-alley standing izakaya. The recovery dinner — after a day trip, atmosphere over fancy.

Transit:

Kyoto Station → JR Uji: 17 min on the JR Nara Line ($1.60 / ¥240 one-way). Kansai Thru Pass covers JR Nara Line. Inside Uji, walking is the move — Nakamura Tokichi, Byodo-in, Uji River, Asahi-yaki are all walkable in a 2km loop. Bus to Mimuroto-ji is 15 min from Uji Station (¥240 / $1.60).

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

Budget $28 Mid $70 Luxury $165
DAY 5

Nara Day Trip — Deer and the Great Buddha

Nara Park · Todai-ji · Kasuga Taisha

Activities

  1. 08:30 Kyoto → Nara (JR Yamatoji Line or Kintetsu) 35-45 min

    JR Yamatoji rapid (45 min, $5.50 / ¥820) or Kintetsu Limited Express (35 min, $5 / ¥760). Kintetsu drops closer to the park

    Cost: $5-5.50 / ¥760-820 TIP: Buy the Kintetsu Limited Express seat reservation ($2 / ¥280 extra) — guaranteed seat. JR has more frequency but standing on a weekday morning is common.
  2. 09:30 Nara Park deer feeding 1-1.5 hours

    1,200 free-roaming Sika deer that have learned to bow when you offer crackers. Genuinely surreal cultural moment. Buy deer crackers from licensed vendors inside the park

    Cost: Park free; crackers $1.30 / ¥200 per stack TIP: Hide the crackers in your bag until you're ready to feed — deer mob you if they see the stack. The deer in the inner forest are calmer than the aggressive crowd near Todai-ji entrance.
  3. 11:00 Todai-ji Temple & Great Buddha 1-1.5 hours

    The 16m bronze Great Buddha (Daibutsu) inside Daibutsuden — the largest wooden building in the world when it was built. The Buddha was cast in 752 CE

    Cost: $4 / ¥600 TIP: The 'nostril hole' pillar inside the hall — squeezing through it is said to bring enlightenment. Kids fit easily; adults sometimes don't. Worth attempting.
  4. 12:30 Lunch — Edogawa (kakinoha-zushi) 1-1.5 hours

    Nara's specialty is kakinoha-zushi — pressed sushi wrapped in persimmon leaves. Edogawa is the best-known kakinoha-zushi house

    Cost: $15-25 / ¥2,200-3,800 TIP: Kakinoha-zushi originated as travel food (the persimmon leaf preserves the fish). Try the mackerel + salmon set. Naramachi is a 15-min walk from Todai-ji.
  5. 14:30 Kasuga Taisha Shrine + lantern path 1-1.5 hours

    Founded 768 CE. 3,000 bronze and stone lanterns line the path — twice a year (early Feb & mid-Aug) all lanterns are lit at once

    Cost: Outer grounds free; inner shrine $5 / ¥500 TIP: The forest walk from Todai-ji to Kasuga Taisha (10 min) is genuinely peaceful. The lantern photo spot is just inside the inner gate.
  6. 16:00 Naramachi old merchant district 1-1.5 hours

    Edo-era merchant houses converted to small shops and cafés. Quieter than the temple zone, more textural

    Cost: Free walking TIP: The Kojiri-Naramachi area has the most preserved buildings. Café Etranger (in a 100-year-old converted house) is the local favorite stop.
  7. 17:30 Return to Kyoto 35 min

    Kintetsu back to Kyoto. 35 min, home by 6:30 PM for a relaxed final-evening dinner

    Cost: $5 / ¥760 (free with Kansai Thru Pass) TIP: Same line back. Avoid Kintetsu rush (5-6 PM) by leaving 6 PM+ if possible.
  8. 19:30 Farewell dinner — kaiseki or wagyu 2-2.5 hours

    The trip-closing dinner. Gion Karyo for kaiseki, Wagyu-tei for niku-sushi splurge, or a Pontocho kawadoko if dates align (May-September)

    Cost: $50-200 / ¥7,500-30,000 TIP: Reservations 1-2 weeks ahead. Cash and major cards accepted at higher-end restaurants. Kawadoko terrace is the seasonal Kyoto-only experience.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel or Kyoto Station

Kyoto Station · $5-10 / ¥800-1,500

A solid breakfast — Nara involves 4-6 km of walking. Hotel buffet or a Kyoto Station eki-naka coffee + sandwich set.

Lunch

Edogawa (Naramachi) — kakinoha-zushi

Naramachi, Nara · $15-25 / ¥2,200-3,800

The mackerel + salmon set for a proper kakinoha survey. Try the sansai (mountain vegetable) side dish — local to Nara.

Dinner

Kyoto kaiseki or kawadoko farewell

Gion or Pontocho · $50-200 / ¥7,500-30,000

Gion Karyo for accessible kaiseki, Wagyu-tei for the modern wagyu splurge, or Pontocho kawadoko (May-September) for the seasonal Kyoto-only setting.

Transit:

Kintetsu Nara Line from Kyoto Station 35 min ($5 / ¥760). Kansai Thru Pass covers Kintetsu. Inside Nara, walking is the move — the park, Todai-ji, Kasuga Taisha, and Naramachi are all walkable in a loop. The Kintetsu drops closer to the park than JR.

DAY 5 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $42 Mid $100 Luxury $260
DAY 6

Mt. Koya UNESCO Overnight

Nankai express · Shukubo · Okunoin night walk

Activities

  1. 09:00 Kyoto → Mt. Koya (Nankai Limited Express) 2 hours

    Two-hour journey: JR Loop to Osaka, transfer to Nankai-Namba, Nankai express to Gokurakubashi, cable car to Mt. Koya top. The cable-car climb is steep and dramatic

    Cost: $30 / ¥4,500 round-trip Nankai express TIP: Pack overnight kit only — leave heavy luggage at Kyoto Station coin lockers. Shukubo include yukata, towels, and basic toiletries. Reserve seats on the Nankai Koya limited express ($3 / ¥520 extra) for guaranteed seating.
  2. 11:30 Mt. Koya temple complex arrival 1 hour

    800m altitude UNESCO Buddhist temple complex. Center of Shingon Buddhism since 819 CE. Check into your shukubo (working monastery overnight accommodation)

    Cost: Included in shukubo stay TIP: Eko-in and Sekishoin are the English-friendly shukubo choices. Check-in usually at 2 PM but luggage drop-off accepted earlier. The temple monks who run the lodging give a quick orientation.
  3. 12:30 Lunch — Shojin-ryori on Mt. Koya 1 hour

    Vegan Buddhist temple cuisine. No meat, fish, onion, garlic, leek — yet the lunch is rich and refined. Most shukubo include shojin-ryori in the package

    Cost: $20-40 / ¥3,000-6,000 if dining out TIP: If your shukubo doesn't include lunch, walk to Tsukumo or Kamiya for street-level shojin-ryori. The simpler lunch sets (¥1,800-2,500 / $12-17) are an accessible entry to the cuisine.
  4. 14:00 Kongobu-ji & Garan temple cluster 2 hours

    The headquarters temple of Shingon Buddhism plus the Garan (central sacred precinct) with the 49m Konpon Daito pagoda. Walkable in 1.5 hours

    Cost: $3.30-7 / ¥500-1,000 (various temple entries) TIP: The Banryutei rock garden at Kongobu-ji is Japan's largest karesansui. Free with the Kongobu-ji entry. The Garan's daily monk procession at 4 PM is a quiet but meaningful ritual.
  5. 16:30 Okunoin cemetery walk 1.5-2 hours

    200,000 stone monuments and 1,000-year-old cedars on the 2-km path to Kobo Daishi's mausoleum. The deepest religious site in Japan

    Cost: Free TIP: The afternoon light filtering through cedars is unforgettable. The mausoleum closes at 5 PM — return before dark. Sake company tombstones and corporate memorials along the path are the unexpected modern detail.
  6. 18:30 Shukubo dinner — full shojin-ryori 1.5 hours

    10+ course Buddhist vegetarian dinner in your private tatami room. Wagashi, goma-dofu, vegetable tempura, koyadofu (freeze-dried tofu), pickled vegetables, mochi

    Cost: Included in shukubo stay TIP: Dietary restrictions communicated at booking are handled — shukubo do this for centuries. Sake is permitted (separately ordered, $5-10 / ¥800-1,500). Photograph the table before eating; the visual is half the experience.
  7. 20:30 Okunoin night walk (optional) 1.5 hours

    The cemetery walk at night with the lanterns lit is a uniquely Mt. Koya experience. Guided night walks ($16 / ¥2,500) run nightly with English-speaking monks

    Cost: $16 / ¥2,500 (guided) or free (self-walk) TIP: Reserve via Eko-in's website 1-2 weeks ahead. The guided walk explains the monks' beliefs and the cemetery's meaning. Self-walk works too if you're comfortable in cedar darkness with lanterns.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Kyoto Station before Nankai departure

Kyoto Station · $5-10 / ¥800-1,500

Substantial — the Nankai journey is 2 hours and there's no food car. Hotel buffet or eki-naka donburi. Don't skip; lunch in Mt. Koya is included in your shukubo or a 3-hour wait.

Lunch

Mt. Koya shojin-ryori at shukubo or street level

Mt. Koya · $12-40 / ¥1,800-6,000

If included in your shukubo: enjoy. If not: Tsukumo for the casual shojin-ryori lunch set ($12 / ¥1,800). The temple noodle shop along the main road also serves a vegetable udon.

Dinner

Shukubo full shojin-ryori

Your shukubo · Included in stay

10-12 course Buddhist vegetarian meal in your private tatami room. Photograph before eating. Pair with optional sake (¥800-1,500 / $5-10). The deepest meal experience in Japan.

Transit:

Kyoto → Mt. Koya: JR Loop Line to Osaka (30 min), transfer to Nankai-Namba Station (10 min walk), Nankai Limited Express to Gokurakubashi (90 min), cable car up to Mt. Koya (5 min). 2 hours total, $30 / ¥4,500 round-trip. Kansai Thru Pass covers part but not the Mt. Koya cable car or Nankai express seat fee.

DAY 6 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $80 Mid $165 Luxury $245
DAY 7

Mt. Koya Morning + Himeji Castle Afternoon

6 AM prayer · Mt. Koya return · Himeji Castle

Activities

  1. 06:00 Shukubo morning prayer service 30-40 min

    Daily monk-led prayer service in the temple main hall. 30-40 min ceremony with chanting, incense, and bell ringing. The most direct way to experience Japanese Buddhism

    Cost: Included in shukubo stay TIP: Optional but recommended — this is what shukubo are for. Dress in the provided yukata. Silent participation; sit on cushions provided.
  2. 07:00 Shukubo breakfast (shojin-ryori) 45 min

    Light Buddhist breakfast — rice porridge, pickled vegetables, miso soup, koyadofu. The post-prayer meal carries spiritual weight

    Cost: Included in shukubo stay TIP: Don't rush the meal — eating in silence is the etiquette. The post-meal tea is shared between guests.
  3. 09:00 Return from Mt. Koya 2 hours

    Cable car down + Nankai express to Osaka + JR Loop to Shin-Osaka. Plan to be at Shin-Osaka by 11:30 AM

    Cost: Included in Day 6 round-trip ticket TIP: Drop heavy luggage at Shin-Osaka Station coin lockers if heading to Himeji. The Shinkansen Hikari or JR Special Rapid both go to Himeji from Shin-Osaka.
  4. 12:00 Shin-Osaka → Himeji (Shinkansen or JR Special Rapid) 25-50 min

    Shinkansen Hikari 25 min ($21 / ¥3,140 one-way) or JR Special Rapid 50 min ($9 / ¥1,400). Time vs cost trade-off

    Cost: $9-21 one-way TIP: JR Special Rapid is the better value unless you're tight on time. Both go directly from Shin-Osaka to Himeji Station.
  5. 13:00 Himeji Castle (Shirasagi-jo) 2-2.5 hours

    Japan's most spectacular original castle. Built 1609, never destroyed in war. Six floors of original wooden structure. Nicknamed 'White Heron' for its white plaster walls. UNESCO World Heritage

    Cost: $7 / ¥1,000 (combo with Koko-en garden $10 / ¥1,500) TIP: The climb to the top floor involves steep wooden stairs — slip-on shoes required. The combo ticket with Koko-en is the right buy.
  6. 15:30 Koko-en Garden 45 min - 1 hour

    Nine connected Edo-period gardens next to the castle. Built 1992 on a feudal lord's residence foundations — feels older than it is

    Cost: $3 / ¥310 (or combo with castle) TIP: The pond garden and tea garden are the highlights. Matcha service at the tea house ($5 / ¥700) is the rest-stop move.
  7. 17:00 Himeji late lunch / early dinner 1 hour

    Himeji's regional specialty is anago-don (sea eel rice bowl). Hamamoto for the local pick, 5-min walk from the station toward the castle

    Cost: $15-25 / ¥2,200-3,800 TIP: Anago-don is the regional Himeji specialty — grilled sea eel with sweet-soy glaze over rice. Hamamoto's lunch set is $12 / ¥1,800. Avoid chain restaurants right at the station.
  8. 18:30 Return to Kyoto for trip-closing dinner 1 hour

    Shinkansen Hikari back to Kyoto via Shin-Osaka. 50 min one-way. Final relaxed evening in Kyoto

    Cost: $28 / ¥4,200 Shinkansen TIP: If you're heading to KIX the next morning, transfer at Shin-Osaka to a JR Haruka airport express. Otherwise back to Kyoto.
  9. 20:00 Final dinner — Kyoto kaiseki or kawadoko 2 hours

    Trip-closing dinner. Gion Karyo for kaiseki, Wagyu-tei for niku-sushi, Hyotei summer asagayu lunch if time aligns, or a Pontocho kawadoko for the seasonal Kyoto-only setting

    Cost: $50-200 / ¥7,500-30,000 TIP: Reservations 1-2 weeks ahead. Cash and major cards accepted. Late dinner means you'll be sleeping by 11 PM — perfect for an early flight the next morning.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Shukubo morning shojin-ryori

Mt. Koya · Included in stay

Light Buddhist breakfast — rice porridge, miso soup, koyadofu, pickled vegetables. The post-prayer meal carries spiritual weight.

Lunch

Himeji anago-don (Hamamoto)

Himeji · $15-25 / ¥2,200-3,800

Anago-don is the local specialty — grilled sea eel over rice with sweet-soy glaze. Hamamoto's lunch set comes with miso soup and pickles for $12 / ¥1,800. 5-min walk from Himeji Station.

Dinner

Kyoto kaiseki farewell

Gion or Pontocho · $50-200 / ¥7,500-30,000

Gion Karyo for kaiseki, Wagyu-tei for niku-sushi splurge, or Pontocho kawadoko (May-September) for the riverside seasonal setting. The trip closer.

Transit:

Mt. Koya → Kyoto: Cable car + Nankai express + JR Loop, 2 hours, $15 / ¥2,250 return on Day 6 ticket. Shin-Osaka → Himeji: Shinkansen Hikari 25 min ($21 / ¥3,140 one-way) or JR Special Rapid 50 min ($9 / ¥1,400). Himeji → Kyoto: Shinkansen Hikari via Shin-Osaka 50 min ($28 / ¥4,200). Total Day 7 transit: $43-60.

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

Budget $65 Mid $130 Luxury $295

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Packing Checklist

Kyoto 7-Day Itinerary FAQ

Is the Mt. Koya overnight worth it?
If you want the deepest Japanese spiritual experience, yes. The 6 AM prayer service, the Okunoin cemetery walk among 1,000-year cedars, and the shojin-ryori dinner combined deliver a Japan that's almost invisible from Kyoto. If you've already done Buddhist retreats elsewhere or aren't into religion at all, it's a long detour for landscape.
Do I need a JR Pass for this 7-day route?
Borderline. The 7-day JR Pass at $340 covers all JR rides plus the Tokaido Shinkansen, but Mt. Koya is on Nankai (private rail, not covered) and the Kintetsu Nara line is also private. Kansai Thru Pass ($53 / ¥7,800 for 3 days) + per-ticket Shinkansen is usually cheaper for this exact route. JR Pass makes sense only if you're including a Tokyo segment.
Should I bring kids on this 7-day route?
Mt. Koya isn't ideal for under-10s — they get bored in monastery silence and the cemetery walk feels long. The other 6 days work for kids 8+; Nara deer feeding is universally beloved. For younger families, swap Day 6 (Mt. Koya) for a Day 6 of Osaka USJ.
What if there's rain on Day 6 (Mt. Koya)?
Mt. Koya is even more atmospheric in rain — the cedar mist over the cemetery is one of the most photographed Japan conditions. The cable car runs in all weather. Bring a waterproof jacket and your day stays on track. Heavy typhoons (rare in deeper winter or summer) can suspend service — check the Nankai schedule the morning of.
What's the total cost of 7 days?
Excluding flights and hotel: budget $315 ($45/day), mid-range $695 ($99/day), luxury $1,615 ($231/day). Add hotels: 5 Kyoto nights mid-range $500-800, 1 shukubo night $80-180, plus Day 7's late-evening Kyoto night usually returns to existing hotel. Total trip with mid-range hotel: $1,200-1,500 per person excluding flights.

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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.

8+ years analyzing travel data 30+ countries visited Live exchange rate verified
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