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Yokohama 5-Day + Tokyo Combo

3-day Yokohama core + 2-day Tokyo (Asakusa, Shibuya, Harajuku, Akihabara)

Yokohama 5-Day Itinerary — Quick Answer

As of 2026
Trip length
5 days
Est. cost / person (mid, ex-flights)
$905
Budget–luxury
$405–$2,050

As of 2026, the recommended Yokohama 5-day route runs Day1 Arrival + Minato Mirai 21 + Chinatown dinner · Day2 Sankeien Garden + Yamate Bluff + Hotel New Grand · Day3 Option A — Tokyo day-trip OR Option B — Kamakura + Enoshima + departure · Day4 Tokyo day-trip 1 — Asakusa + Akihabara + Shibuya + Shinjuku · Day5 Tokyo day-trip 2 + return to Yokohama for departure, grouping the must-see sights with minimal backtracking. Estimated cost per person (excluding flights) is around $905 on a mid-range budget. Five days adds Tokyo (the world's largest megacity, 9.7M central population, 30 minutes north of Yokohama by JR). Days 1-3 follow the Yokohama 3-day plan. Day 4: morning JR Tokaido or Shonan-Shinjuku Line to Tokyo — Asakusa Senso-ji + Akihabara + Ginza + Shibuya Crossing + Shibuya Sky + Harajuku Takeshita Street + Meiji Shrine + Shinjuku. Day 5: Tokyo Skytree + teamLab + Tsukiji or Toyosu Fish Market + return to Yokohama for departure (or fly direct from HND/NRT). The canonical Tokyo + Yokohama 5-7 day Kanto loop.

5-Day Total Budget at a Glance

Budget

$405

Per person, flights excl.

Recommended

Mid-Range

$905

Per person, flights excl.

Luxury

$2,050

Per person, flights excl.

Book Hotels & Flights for This Itinerary

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Day-by-Day Detailed Schedule

DAY 1

Arrival + Minato Mirai 21 + Chinatown dinner

Airport pickup + Landmark Tower Sky Garden + Cup Noodles Museum + Akarenga + Chinatown

Activities

  1. 13:00 Tokyo Haneda (HND) or Narita (NRT) → Yokohama Station 1-2 hours

    From Tokyo Haneda (HND, 30 km north): Keikyu Line direct to Yokohama Station 30 min ¥320 (the canonical option). From Tokyo Narita (NRT, 75 km northeast): Narita Express to Yokohama 90 min ¥4,370 (or cheaper via Tokyo Station + JR Tokaido transfer 2h ¥2,310). Most international travelers arrive at Haneda for the cheaper, faster Yokohama transfer. Buy a Suica or Pasmo IC card at any station for $5 deposit (refundable on departure) — works on every train + subway + bus + many vending machines.

    Cost: Haneda Keikyu $3 / Narita Express $30 / Suica card $5 deposit TIP: Visit Japan Web (vjw-lp.digital.go.jp) pre-arrival registration recommended — fill out customs + immigration declarations online before flying and generate QR codes to skip paper forms at HND or NRT. Use 7-Eleven (Seven Bank) or Japan Post ATMs after arrival to withdraw JPY — both accept foreign cards with no Japanese-side fees. Bring $200-400 in JPY cash (Yoshimuraya iekei ramen + standing-counter Chinatown shops + smaller sento are cash-only).
  2. 15:00 Hotel check-in (Minato Mirai or Bashamichi) 30-45 min

    Hotel check-in standard time is 15:00 across Yokohama. Minato Mirai (the modern waterfront, 5-min walk to JR Sakuragicho Station) is the first-visit pick — Royal Park Hotel inside Landmark Tower 52-67F ($310-500/night), InterContinental Yokohama Grand on the pier ($290-480), Yokohama Bay Hotel Tokyu ($150-220). Bashamichi (the 1859 colonial historic core) is the value-and-history pick — Hyatt Regency Yokohama ($260-400), Hotel Edit Yokohama boutique ($130-180), Daiwa Roynet Hotel Yokohama Koen ($90-130). Yokohama Station area (the transport hub) for travelers using Yokohama as a Tokyo base.

    Cost: Hotel pre-booked TIP: Most 4-5 star hotels (Royal Park, InterContinental, Hyatt Regency, Hotel New Grand) have accessible rooms — confirm at booking. Strollers work well in Minato Mirai (everything flat + elevator-accessible). Bring USD bills + Visa/Mastercard with no foreign transaction fee (Charles Schwab, Wise, Revolut, Chase Sapphire) for the cashless portion.
  3. 16:00 Landmark Tower Sky Garden 69F (273m, Japan's 2nd fastest elevator) 30-45 min

    Yokohama Landmark Tower (296 m, completed 1993, was Japan's tallest building until 2014). The 69th-floor Sky Garden observation deck at 273 m is reached by Japan's second-fastest elevator (750 m per minute, 40 seconds to the top). The view spans Yokohama Bay to the east, Cosmo World ferris wheel directly below, and — on clear winter mornings — Mt. Fuji on the western horizon. Glass-walled 360° deck with a south-side Sky Cafe ($8-12 drinks) where you can sit through the full sunset. Much less crowded than Tokyo Tower or Skytree.

    Cost: $7 / ¥1,000 adult; $5 / ¥800 student TIP: Clear-air winter weekday mornings (December-February, 09:00-11:00) are best for Mt. Fuji visibility (~50% chance vs near zero in summer humidity). The Royal Park Hotel occupies floors 52-67 of the same building — hotel guests can take the elevator straight down without re-buying tickets the next morning.
  4. 17:00 Cup Noodles Museum + My Cup Noodles Workshop 1.5-2 hours

    Founded 2011 by Nissin Foods. The headline experience is the My Cup Noodles Factory ($4 extra, 30 minutes) where you decorate your own cup, choose one of four soup bases (original, curry, seafood, chili tomato), pick four toppings from twelve options, and watch the factory machine vacuum-seal the lid — you carry it home as a real shelf-stable Cup Noodles. The ground-floor museum tells the story of Momofuku Ando (Nissin founder, who invented instant noodles in 1958 and Cup Noodles in 1971). The third-floor Noodles Bazaar serves eight types of Asian noodles in $4-6 mini-bowls.

    Cost: $4 entry + $4 Cup Noodles Factory; $3-6 Noodles Bazaar TIP: My Cup Noodles slots fill up by 10:30 on weekends + holidays. Book online at cupnoodles-museum.jp before arrival (slots open 1 month ahead). The decorated Cup Noodles can be brought through Japan customs and home — factory-sealed shelf-stable for 6 months. The food court has high chairs and is the best kid-friendly Minato Mirai lunch option.
  5. 19:00 Yokohama Chinatown dinner (Manchinro or Heichinrou) 2 hours

    Asia's largest Chinatown — 600+ restaurants in a 0.2 km² grid bounded by five painted gates. Heritage banquet picks: Manchinro Honten (1892, Cantonese + dim sum, $30-50 dinner; $20-30 lunch; afternoon tea $25 14:00-16:00 is the value entry; reservations essential weekends, +81-45-681-4004), Heichinrou (1884, Beijing-style + Peking duck, $45-65 whole duck with 24-hour pre-order). For $5-15 standing-counter street eats, Kanteibyo Street (the eastern side near the temple) has the highest density. The 1873 Kanteibyo Guandi Temple is free to enter ($5 fortune-stick set is the visitor-friendly cultural experience).

    Cost: Sit-down dinner $30-80; standing-counter $5-15 per person TIP: Saturday-Sunday peaks 11:30-14:00 and 18:00-20:00 with 30-90 minute queues at the famous shops. Cash and major cards both work at most restaurants; smaller standing-counter shops are cash-only. Avoid the touristy 'all-you-can-eat' buffets advertised in English — explicitly worse than the named heritage restaurants at similar prices. Chinatown empties by 22:00 weeknights.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

In-flight breakfast (connecting flight)

transit · $5-15

Most international travelers connect through Bangkok, Singapore, Seoul, or Hong Kong. Eat at the connecting airport or in-flight.

Lunch

Cup Noodles Museum Noodles Bazaar

Minato Mirai · $3-6

Eight types of Asian noodles in mini-bowls — the model is 'taste the noodle dishes that inspired Cup Noodles around the world.' Family-friendly + reliable + Wi-Fi + air-conditioned.

Dinner

Yokohama Chinatown — Manchinro or Heichinrou or Khema Surin standing counter

Chinatown · $15-80

Heritage banquet at Manchinro or Heichinrou for the full sit-down ($30-80), or $5-15 standing-counter shops on Kanteibyo Street for the casual canonical experience. Both are valid first-day Yokohama dinners.

Transit:

Airport-to-town: 30 min Keikyu Line from Haneda ($3); 90 min Narita Express from Narita ($30). In-town: walking + Suica/Pasmo IC card for Minato Mirai Line subway between Yokohama Station + Minato Mirai + Bashamichi + Chinatown ($2-3 per ride). Aka Kutsu Loop Bus day pass $4 covers all harbor attractions.

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

Budget $80 Mid $195 Luxury $490
DAY 2

Sankeien Garden + Yamate Bluff + Hotel New Grand

1906 Sankeien Garden (17 relocated historic buildings) + Yamashita Park + Yamate Bluff walking + Hotel New Grand doria + Cosmo World sunset

Activities

  1. 08:30 Hotel breakfast + bus to Sankeien Garden 1 hour

    Hotel breakfast + bus 8 / 58 / 99 from JR Yokohama Station East Exit to Sankeien Garden in Honmoku (25 min, ¥220 each way). No metro to Sankeien — bus only. The Sankeien Garden official site (sankeien.com) has a real-time bus schedule.

    Cost: Bus $1.50 each way TIP: Saturday-Sunday + holidays buses fill up — leave 30 min early. Hotel concierges have free bus maps. The Aka Kutsu Loop Bus does NOT go to Sankeien (different route).
  2. 09:30 Sankeien Garden (1906, 17 relocated historic buildings) 1.5-2.5 hours

    175,000 m² Japanese garden built 1902-1906 by silk magnate Hara Tomitaro (pen name Sankei). 17 culturally significant buildings relocated from across Japan as set pieces — the 1457 three-story pagoda from Tomyoji Temple in Kyoto (the oldest building, an Important Cultural Property), a 1623 daimyo's residence transplanted from Kyoto, a 1611 farmhouse from Hida-Takayama, and a tea pavilion (Choshukaku, 1623) designed by the grandson of Sen no Rikyu. Cherry blossoms peak first week of April; hydrangea mid-to-late June; autumn momiji mid-to-late November.

    Cost: $7 / ¥900 adult; $2 / ¥200 child TIP: Avoid Saturday-Sunday in cherry blossom (first week April) or autumn momiji peak (mid-to-late November) — 3-4 hour gate queues. Aim for Tuesday-Thursday weekday mornings (09:00-11:00). The Tea Pavilion (Choshukaku) offers $7 matcha + wagashi service 10:00-15:00 — a 30-minute cultural break in the middle of the visit. Sakura + momiji week Friday-Sunday evening illuminations until 21:00.
  3. 12:30 Hotel New Grand Le Normandie lunch (1927 historic — doria invented here) 1.5 hours

    Built 1927 facing Yamashita Park, Yokohama's most historic hotel and the building that invented Doria (rice gratin with bechamel, 1930), Spaghetti Napolitan (ketchup pasta, 1945), and Pudding à la mode (1948). Le Normandie restaurant continues to serve all three dishes. The set lunch with three appetizer choices + doria + dessert + coffee is $35 — the best value way to experience all three invention dishes.

    Cost: Set lunch $35; à la carte $15-30 TIP: Reservations recommended Sunday lunch (+81-45-681-1841). Smart casual minimum dress code. Both major cards and Suica/Pasmo work. The Bar Sea Guardian II (the hotel's 1927 art-deco bar) is the public bar where these dishes were invented — worth a 15-minute walk-through. Across the street from Yamashita Park.
  4. 14:30 Yamashita Park + Hikawa Maru 1930 ocean liner 1.5 hours

    Yokohama's signature waterfront park (1930, Japan's first reclaimed-land waterfront park — created using rubble from the 1923 Great Kanto Earthquake to fill in part of the harbor). The 700-meter promenade runs north-south facing the bay. The 'Hikawa Maru' ocean liner is permanently moored at the park's center — a 1930 passenger ship that crossed the Pacific 254 times between Yokohama and Seattle, carried Charlie Chaplin on his 1932 visit to Japan, and is now an Important Cultural Property maintained as a museum ($3 entry, 1 hour to tour all 4 decks).

    Cost: Park free; Hikawa Maru $3 / ¥300 TIP: Best 17:00-19:00 for sunset over the bay and the Hikawa Maru lit up in the evening. The Marine Tower (1961, 106 m) right beside the park reopened in 2022 after renovation with a glass-floor observation deck ($8) — optional add-on.
  5. 16:00 Yamate Bluff — Western residences + Foreign Cemetery (walking loop) 1.5-2 hours

    The hillside district immediately south of Chinatown that served as Yokohama's foreign residential quarter from 1860 until World War II. Seven preserved 19th-century Western residences (Yamate-juban-kan, Beriku-shujin-kan, Diplomat House) are free to enter and self-guided. The Foreign Cemetery at the eastern edge of the Bluff has roughly 4,200 graves of foreigners who lived and died in Yokohama between 1854 and the present. Italian Garden + Yamate Park give the best free panoramic harbor views from the south side.

    Cost: Free entry; $2 for cemetery interior on weekends TIP: Yamate walking guide map is free at JR Ishikawacho Station tourist office. Sundays — most historic houses run small docent tours in English (often 14:00 + 15:30, free). Italian Garden has the best free panoramic harbor view.
  6. 18:30 Cosmo World Ferris Wheel sunset + Minato Mirai night view 30-45 min

    112.5 m ferris wheel with the giant LED clock face (built 1989 for the Yokohama Exotic Showcase). The 15-minute rotation gives you a slow 360° pan over the Akarenga warehouses, Landmark Tower, and the harbor. Sunset rides (17:30-18:30 in summer, 16:30-17:30 in winter) are the canonical photo timing, with the LED color sequence shifting from blue through orange to violet across one rotation.

    Cost: $7 / ¥1,000 per ride TIP: Saturday-Sunday + holidays see 30-60 minute queues 18:00-20:00. Friday evenings or weekday afternoons have almost no wait. The free LED clock-and-light display can be viewed from the adjacent Kishamichi Promenade pedestrian bridge — same iconic photo angle, no ticket needed.
  7. 20:00 Bashamichi Taproom craft beer dinner 2 hours

    Yokohama's craft beer flagship inside the Akarenga Red Brick Warehouse No. 2 building. 20 rotating taps featuring Bashamichi Beer (the local brewery), Spring Valley Brewery (sister brand to Kirin, born in Yokohama in 1907), and rotating Japanese craft selections. Food menu leans Yokohama-style American-Japanese smokehouse — pulled-pork sandwich ($14), Yokohama-style beef brisket ($22), smoked salmon ($16). Harbor-side terrace has the canonical Akarenga + Landmark Tower + Cosmo World photo angle.

    Cost: $25-40 per person dinner with 1-2 drinks TIP: Friday-Saturday evenings 18:00-21:00 the harbor-side terrace fills up — book ahead via Tabelog or arrive 17:30 for a no-reservation seat. Cards accepted.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel breakfast

Hotel · $10-30

Hotel breakfast (boutique = Japanese + Western buffet, 5-star = live station). Day 2 starts at 08:30 — relaxed pace.

Lunch

Hotel New Grand Le Normandie set lunch $35

Yamashita Park · $25-50

Canonical Yokohama-yoshoku lunch — the building where Doria + Napolitan + Pudding à la mode were invented. Set lunch $35 covers all three with appetizer + dessert + coffee.

Dinner

Bashamichi Taproom craft beer + Yokohama-style smokehouse

Akarenga · $25-40

Local craft beer + Yokohama-style smoked meats with the canonical Akarenga harbor photo angle. The casual evening counterpart to the previous night's Chinatown banquet.

Transit:

Day 2 mixes bus + walking + Aka Kutsu Loop Bus. Sankeien Garden via bus 8/58/99 from Yokohama Station East Exit ($1.50 each way). Yamashita Park + Yamate Bluff walking. Cosmo World + Akarenga walking from Minato Mirai hotels.

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

Budget $75 Mid $175 Luxury $410
DAY 3

Option A — Tokyo day-trip OR Option B — Kamakura + Enoshima + departure

Choose: Tokyo (30 min by JR) for Asakusa/Shibuya/Harajuku, or Kamakura (25 min by JR Yokosuka) Great Buddha + Tsurugaoka Hachimangu + Enoshima

Activities

  1. 08:00 Option A — Train to Tokyo (30 min by JR) Half day to full day

    From Yokohama Station: JR Tokaido Line or Yokosuka Line to Tokyo Station 25 min ¥480; Shonan-Shinjuku Line to Shinjuku 30 min ¥570; Tokyu Toyoko Line to Shibuya 35 min ¥280 (the cheapest option, continues onto the Tokyo Metro Fukutoshin Line direct to Ikebukuro). Japan Rail Pass holders ride free on JR Tokaido and Yokosuka. Suica or Pasmo IC card works on all three. Day plan: Asakusa Senso-ji 09:00-10:30 + Akihabara 10:45-12:00 + Shibuya Crossing + Shibuya Sky 13:00-14:00 + Harajuku Takeshita Street 14:00-15:30 + Meiji Shrine 15:30-16:30 + return Yokohama 17:30-18:30.

    Cost: $5-10 round-trip train + $20-40 Tokyo attractions TIP: Suica/Pasmo IC card from Yokohama works on every Tokyo train + subway + bus. Tokyo's Asakusa + Shibuya + Harajuku are walkable within 2-3 km from each station; allow 5-10 min for each subway/JR transfer.
  2. 08:30 Option B — Train to Kamakura (25 min by JR Yokosuka Line) Full day

    From Yokohama Station: JR Yokosuka Line direct to Kamakura 25 min ¥350 (every 4-7 minutes). Or JR Shonan-Shinjuku Line via JR Ofuna transfer 30 min ¥350. Kamakura is Japan's 13th-century shogunate capital. Day plan: Tsurugaoka Hachimangu Shrine (1063, the political-religious heart of the Kamakura shogunate, 30 min from station) + Komachi-dori 360-meter pedestrian shopping street for snacks ($5-15) + Hasedera Temple (1264, the famous hydrangea + ocean views, $3 entry) + Great Buddha at Kotoku-in (1252, 11.4m bronze Buddha, $3 entry).

    Cost: $7 round-trip train + $5-15 attractions + $10-25 lunch TIP: Cherry blossom (first week April) + autumn momiji peaks (mid-to-late November) see 1-hour queues at Kotoku-in (Great Buddha) ticket gate; weekday mornings fine. Combine with Enoshima Island via Enoden tramway $5 each way (or $7 day pass) — 25 min from Kamakura Station to Enoshima for the Sea Candle observation tower + Pacific sunset beaches.
  3. 12:00 Enoshima Island via Enoden tramway (Option B continuation) 3-4 hours

    Enoshima is a 4 km² sacred island off the Shonan coast, 25 minutes from Kamakura by Enoden Tramway ($5 each way). Connected to mainland by 600-meter pedestrian bridge (10 min walk). Enoshima Shrine (founded 552 AD, dedicated to Benzaiten, goddess of music and arts) sits in three buildings climbing the island. Sea Candle (Enoshima Tenbo Tower, 60 m above sea level, $5 entry) at the top has 360° Pacific views including Mt. Fuji on clear winter days. Iwaya Caves ($5) at the western tip are atmospheric sea-cave Buddhist altars. Lots of $5-15 seafood restaurants — Shirasu (fresh-caught whitebait, raw, boiled, or on rice) is the Shonan local specialty.

    Cost: Enoden tramway $5 each way; Sea Candle $5; Iwaya $5; lunch $10-15 TIP: Buy the Enoshima Pass ($10) at any Enoden station to save 30-40% over walk-up tickets (covers Enoden + Sea Candle + Iwaya combo). Sunset at the Sea Candle (17:00-18:00 winter; 18:30-19:30 summer) is the canonical photo time.
  4. 17:00 Return to Yokohama + hotel check-out + departure preparation 1.5-2 hours

    From Tokyo: JR back to Yokohama 25-35 min ($3-5). From Kamakura: JR Yokosuka 25 min ($3.50). From Enoshima: Odakyu + JR transfer 50 min ($5). Most hotels store luggage free between check-out and your evening airport departure (3-6 hours). Repack for the international flight + pay any final hotel bills.

    Cost: Final transit $3-7 TIP: Spend remaining JPY at convenience stores (last-minute snacks for the flight) — JPY exchange rates back home are 4-8% worse than ATMs in Japan, so spending or refunding the Suica/Pasmo deposit at the airport makes sense.
  5. 19:00 Final dinner + airport departure 3-4 hours

    Final dinner — light meal at Yokohama Station area ($10-25) or save for airport dining. International evening departures from Haneda typically run 21:00-23:30 (Korean Air ICN 23:30, Singapore Airlines 22:50, AirAsia BKK 21:00). Yokohama → Haneda via Keikyu Line 30 min ¥320. Arrive HND 2.5 hours before flight (check-in 45 min + security 30 min + duty-free + Suica refund 30 min).

    Cost: Light dinner $10-25 + airport transfer $3 + flight TIP: Refund Suica/Pasmo IC card $5 deposit at any JR ticket office at the airport before departure (it's $5 you can collect back). Spend remaining JPY cash at airport duty-free or convenience stores — most home airports don't accept JPY exchange-back at reasonable rates.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel breakfast (early)

Hotel · $10-25

07:30 day-trip start means early hotel breakfast. Most hotels accommodate early breakfast for day-trip departures.

Lunch

Tokyo (Asakusa or Shibuya) or Kamakura (Komachi-dori) or Enoshima (Shirasu seafood)

Day-trip destination · $10-25

Tokyo: Asakusa snacks $5-15 or Shibuya sushi $15-30. Kamakura: Komachi-dori 360m snack street ($5-15). Enoshima: Shirasu (fresh whitebait) seafood $10-15.

Dinner

Light Yokohama Station meal or Haneda airport dining

Yokohama Station / HND airport · $10-25

Light meal before airport — Yokohama Station ramen shop, Sogo department store basement food court ($10-20), or save for HND dining ($15-25). Spend remaining JPY before customs.

Transit:

Day 3: Tokyo day-trip via JR ($3-5 each way 25-30 min); Kamakura day-trip via JR Yokosuka ($3.50 each way 25 min). In-Yokohama: walking + Suica/Pasmo. Yokohama → Haneda Keikyu Line $3 30 min for departure.

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

Budget $60 Mid $130 Luxury $290
DAY 4

Tokyo day-trip 1 — Asakusa + Akihabara + Shibuya + Shinjuku

JR to Tokyo + Asakusa Senso-ji + Akihabara + Shibuya Crossing + Shibuya Sky + Harajuku + Shinjuku

Activities

  1. 07:30 Hotel breakfast + JR to Tokyo Station 30-45 min

    Hotel breakfast + JR Tokaido or Yokosuka Line from Yokohama Station to Tokyo Station 25 min ¥480. Or Shonan-Shinjuku to Shinjuku 30 min ¥570. Suica or Pasmo IC card from your Yokohama hotel works on every Tokyo train + subway + bus.

    Cost: $3-5 round-trip TIP: Japan Rail Pass holders ride free. Tokyo trains run every 3-5 min during rush hour; allow extra time at Tokyo Station for the long platform-to-exit walk (5-10 min).
  2. 09:00 Asakusa Senso-ji Temple + Nakamise shopping street 1.5 hours

    Tokyo's oldest Buddhist temple (founded 645 AD). The Kaminari-mon thunder gate at the entrance is one of Tokyo's most photographed landmarks; the 250-meter Nakamise shopping street between the gate and the main temple has 80+ stalls selling traditional sweets (ningyo-yaki, age-manju, melonpan), souvenirs, and yukata kimonos. The main temple hall (rebuilt 1958 after WWII bombing) houses a statue of Kannon believed to have been pulled from the Sumida River in 628 AD by two fishermen.

    Cost: Free (donations welcome) TIP: Arrive 09:00 for the smallest crowds — by 11:00 the Nakamise street is shoulder-to-shoulder. Bring small ¥100-500 coins for donations and street snacks. The Tokyo Skytree (634 m, the world's tallest free-standing tower) is a 15-minute walk east — combine if time allows ($25 entry).
  3. 11:30 Akihabara — Electric Town + anime/manga 1.5-2 hours

    Tokyo's electronics + anime + manga district. Yodobashi Akiba (the largest electronics retailer in Asia, 9 floors, 7 days a week 09:30-22:00) is the canonical first stop. Maid cafes ($15-30 entry + drinks) are the experience option — choose Maidreamin or @home cafe for the foreigner-friendly versions. Mandarake (8 floors of secondhand manga, anime figures, doujinshi) is the otaku canonical. AKB48 Theater (only 8th floor of Don Quijote Akihabara) for the J-pop fan stop.

    Cost: Free to walk; $10-50 for souvenirs TIP: Yodobashi is open 09:30-22:00. The duty-free counter on the basement floor handles tourist tax-free purchases (¥5,000+ per person per day, passport required). Maid cafes require explicit consent + no photography of the maids without paying for a Polaroid ($5-10).
  4. 14:00 Shibuya Crossing + Shibuya Sky 229m observation 1.5 hours

    Shibuya Crossing is the world's busiest pedestrian crossing — up to 3,000 people cross at once during peak hours. The Shibuya Sky observation deck on the 47th floor of the Shibuya Scramble Square tower (229 m, opened 2019) gives the canonical bird's-eye view of the crossing + Mt. Fuji on clear days + 360° Tokyo skyline + open-air rooftop. Free Shibuya Crossing photography from Mag's Park (the small open-air park on the 8th floor of Magnet by Shibuya109, free).

    Cost: Shibuya Crossing free; Shibuya Sky $20 / ¥2,500 TIP: Shibuya Sky requires advance ticket purchase via the official site (shibuya-scramble-square.com) — peak slots 17:00-19:00 sell out 1 week ahead. The 47F rooftop has the canonical 'corner-of-the-building' photo with Mt. Fuji + Tokyo skyline. The Hachiko statue at Shibuya Station (the loyal Akita dog from 1924) is the standard meeting-point photo.
  5. 16:00 Harajuku Takeshita Street + Meiji Shrine 2 hours

    Harajuku Takeshita Street is the 350-meter pedestrian-only fashion street — kawaii fashion, cosplay-influenced boutiques, crepe shops ($5-8), and rainbow cotton candy. The contrast at the other end is Meiji Shrine (1920), dedicated to Emperor Meiji and Empress Shoken, set inside a 70-hectare evergreen forest planted by 100,000 trees donated from across Japan. The walk from the Harajuku Station to the main shrine hall takes 10 minutes through tree-lined gravel paths.

    Cost: Free entry to both TIP: Harajuku Sunday afternoons see the cosplay crowd at Harajuku Bridge (Jingu-bashi) — costumed visitors are happy to be photographed (small tip $1-3 appreciated). Meiji Shrine is free; the inner garden is $5 / ¥500. Coin offerings (¥5 coin) are traditional at the main shrine altar.
  6. 18:30 Shinjuku Omoide Yokocho yakitori dinner + Shinjuku night walk 2-2.5 hours

    Omoide Yokocho ('Memory Lane') is the postwar-era 60-stall yakitori alley west of Shinjuku Station — 1.5-meter-wide streets, 6-seat counter shops, grilled chicken skewers ($2-4 each), sake/beer/highball ($3-6), and an atmosphere essentially unchanged since the 1940s. The canonical Shinjuku evening for first-time Tokyo visitors. Followed by a walk through the Kabukicho red-light district (look but don't enter the 'bottakuri' tourist-trap bars), Godzilla Head (the rooftop sculpture at Hotel Gracery Shinjuku), and the Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building (45F free observation, 09:30-22:30).

    Cost: $20-40 dinner + $0 free observation TIP: Omoide Yokocho counter shops are 4-8 seats each and fill up by 19:30. Arrive 18:00 for an easier seat. Cash only at most yakitori stalls. Avoid the bar touts on Kabukicho main street — they offer 'free entry' that turns into $200+ bar bills (a documented tourist scam). The Metropolitan Government free observation gives a Mt. Fuji + Tokyo skyline view at no charge.
  7. 21:30 JR back to Yokohama (30 min, $3-5) 30 min

    Last trains from Tokyo to Yokohama run until ~24:00 on most lines. JR Tokaido or Shonan-Shinjuku Line to Yokohama 25-30 min ¥480-570. Suica/Pasmo tap in + tap out — no paper tickets needed.

    Cost: $3-5 round-trip TIP: Trains get crowded 22:00-23:30 — stand at the back of the platform for less-crowded carriages.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel breakfast (early)

Yokohama hotel · $10-25

Early hotel breakfast (07:00-07:30) for the 07:30 train to Tokyo.

Lunch

Asakusa snack streets or Shibuya sushi

Tokyo (Asakusa or Shibuya) · $10-30

Asakusa Nakamise street snacks $5-15, or Shibuya sushi-go-round at Genki Sushi ($15-25), or Shibuya Center Gai standing ramen ($8-12).

Dinner

Omoide Yokocho yakitori alley

Shinjuku · $20-40

Postwar-era 60-stall yakitori alley west of Shinjuku Station — grilled chicken skewers $2-4 each, sake/beer/highball $3-6. The canonical Shinjuku evening.

Transit:

Day 4: JR back-and-forth Yokohama ↔ Tokyo $3-5 each way 25-30 min. Inside Tokyo: JR Yamanote Line loop (Tokyo → Akihabara → Shibuya → Harajuku → Shinjuku) covers everything in 35-40 min total + walking. Suica/Pasmo IC card.

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

Budget $80 Mid $175 Luxury $380
DAY 5

Tokyo day-trip 2 + return to Yokohama for departure

Skytree + teamLab + Tsukiji or Toyosu fish market + Imperial Palace + airport

Activities

  1. 07:00 Early train to Tsukiji or Toyosu Fish Market 2-2.5 hours

    Tsukiji Outer Market (the original since 1935; the inner wholesale market moved to Toyosu in 2018 but the outer market remains the canonical street-food destination) opens 05:00 — 100+ stalls selling fresh sushi, tamagoyaki ($2-3), seafood skewers, and sake. Best 06:00-08:30 before the day-tour crowds. Alternatively, Toyosu Fish Market (the 2018 wholesale market replacing Tsukiji's inner market) has the tuna auction viewing observation deck — register online 1 month ahead at toyosu-market.or.jp for the 05:30 auction observation slot (free).

    Cost: Tsukiji $15-30 for breakfast tour; Toyosu free (observation only) TIP: Tsukiji is more accessible for first-time travelers (outer market, no advance registration). Toyosu is the canonical for serious tuna-auction enthusiasts (advance registration required). Both work with Yokohama → JR Yamanote → Tsukiji-Shijo Station ~50 min, $4-5.
  2. 10:00 teamLab Borderless (Azabudai Hills, 2024 reopened) 3-4 hours

    Immersive digital art museum at Azabudai Hills (relocated from the original 2018 Odaiba location in 2024). 50+ interactive digital art installations across 10,000 m² — the canonical Tokyo modern-art experience. Mirrored floors, infinite-room corridors, butterfly forests, and digital-projected calligraphy rooms. 3 hours' minimum to see all rooms; 4 hours for a thorough visit.

    Cost: $25 / ¥3,800 adult; $10 / ¥1,500 child TIP: Advance ticketing essential via teamlab.art (sells out 2-3 days ahead on weekends). Wear pants (mirror floors). Bring a battery pack — photo opportunities are constant. Combine with Azabudai Hills shopping or Roppongi Hills observation deck nearby.
  3. 14:00 Tokyo Skytree (634m, world's tallest free-standing tower) 2 hours

    Tokyo Skytree (2012, 634 m) — the world's tallest free-standing tower and the canonical Tokyo skyline observation. Tembo Deck at 350 m ($25 / ¥3,000) is the standard ticket; Tembo Galleria at 450 m ($15 additional) is the higher upper deck with the canonical spiraling-ramp glass walkway. The view spans the entire Kanto plain including Mt. Fuji on clear winter days. Solamachi shopping mall at the base has 300+ shops and a Sumida Aquarium.

    Cost: $25 Tembo Deck; $40 combo with Tembo Galleria TIP: Book online 1-2 weeks ahead at the official site (tokyo-skytree.jp) for the date + time slot of your choice. Sunset slots (17:00-19:00) sell out fastest. Skytree is in Asakusa-east — combine with morning Asakusa Senso-ji (Day 4 morning) for efficient routing.
  4. 16:30 Imperial Palace East Gardens + Marunouchi walk 1.5 hours

    The Imperial Palace (Tokyo's geographic and ceremonial center) — only the East Gardens are open to the public (free, 09:00-16:30 closed Mondays + Fridays). The 5-meter moat + stone walls + Edo Castle ruins are the canonical Edo-period Tokyo photo. The walk continues through Marunouchi (Tokyo's premier business district, with the canonical Marunouchi naka-dori avenue lined with luxury boutiques and restaurants) toward Tokyo Station.

    Cost: Free TIP: Imperial Palace East Gardens is closed Mondays + Fridays (don't plan Day 5 here on those days). The Marunouchi Building (Maru Bldg) 35F has a free observation lobby with Imperial Palace views — under-the-radar for travelers tired of paying for observation decks.
  5. 18:00 Return to Yokohama + hotel check-out + final dinner + airport 3-4 hours

    JR Tokaido or Shonan-Shinjuku Line from Tokyo Station back to Yokohama 25-30 min. Hotel check-out + repack for international evening departure. Final dinner — Yokohama Station area or Haneda airport dining ($15-30). Yokohama → Haneda via Keikyu Line 30 min ¥320. Arrive HND 2.5 hours before flight.

    Cost: Train + dinner + Suica refund + flight TIP: Spend remaining JPY cash + Suica/Pasmo refund $5 deposit before international departure (do at JR ticket office in Haneda airport).

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Tsukiji or Toyosu fish market breakfast

Tokyo (Tsukiji) · $15-30

Tsukiji Outer Market: fresh sushi $8-15, tamagoyaki $2-3, seafood skewers $3-8, sake $4-6 — the canonical Tokyo breakfast experience.

Lunch

Azabudai Hills food court (after teamLab)

Azabudai Hills · $15-25

Azabudai Hills has 30+ restaurants and a food court — Asian, Western, Japanese, vegan options. Quick post-teamLab lunch before Skytree.

Dinner

Yokohama Station area or Haneda airport dining

Yokohama / HND · $15-30

Yokohama Station Sogo basement food court $12-20, or save for Haneda airport dining $15-30 (better selection than most international airports).

Transit:

Day 5: Yokohama → Tokyo Tsukiji ~50 min ($4); Tsukiji → Azabudai ~20 min ($3); Azabudai → Skytree ~30 min ($3); Skytree → Imperial Palace ~25 min ($3); Imperial Palace → Yokohama ~35 min ($4); Yokohama → HND Keikyu 30 min ($3).

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

Budget $110 Mid $230 Luxury $480

Book Yokohama Tours & Tickets

Packing Checklist

Yokohama 5-Day Itinerary FAQ

Is 3 days enough for Yokohama?
Yes for most travelers — even 1 day (as a Tokyo day-trip) covers the core essentials. Day 1: arrival + Landmark Tower Sky Garden + Cup Noodles Museum + Akarenga + Chinatown dinner. Day 2: Sankeien Garden + Yamashita Park + Yamate Bluff + Hotel New Grand doria + Cosmo World sunset. Day 3: Tokyo day-trip OR Kamakura/Enoshima day-trip OR a slow Yokohama wrap-up. Three nights only if you want a deep Chinatown food immersion, multiple Sankeien returns, and several day trips out — most travelers find that two nights + Tokyo day trips fits better.
How do I get from Tokyo to Yokohama?
Multiple options, all 25-35 minutes. JR Tokaido Line or JR Yokosuka Line from Tokyo Station: 25 min, ¥480, every 4-7 min (the canonical option). JR Shonan-Shinjuku Line from Shinjuku: 30 min, ¥570 (direct without Tokyo Station transfer). Tokyu Toyoko Line from Shibuya: 35 min, ¥280 (the cheapest; continues onto the Tokyo Metro Fukutoshin Line direct to Ikebukuro). Japan Rail Pass holders ride free on JR Tokaido and Yokosuka. From Tokyo Haneda Airport: Keikyu Line direct to Yokohama Station 30 min ¥320.
What's transport like inside Yokohama?
Excellent. Suica or Pasmo IC card works on every train + subway + bus + many vending machines — buy at any Yokohama or Tokyo station for $5 refundable deposit. Minato Mirai is walkable end-to-end in 25 minutes; connects to Chinatown via Yamashita Park (20 min). Minato Mirai Line subway runs Yokohama Station → Bashamichi → Minato Mirai → Motomachi-Chukagai (Chinatown) every 4-5 min, $2-3 a ride. Aka Kutsu Round Course Loop Bus ($1.40 ride, $4 day pass) connects all major harbor attractions on a 50-minute loop.
Is Yokohama safe?
Extremely safe — Japan ranks among the world's safest tourist countries (violent crime rates a fraction of US, UK, and most European cities). Yokohama specifically has no significant tourist-targeted crime. Petty theft is rare; lost wallets and phones are routinely returned at police boxes. Solo female travelers consistently report Yokohama as comfortable day or night. The Chinatown after-22:00 emptiness is quiet rather than threatening. Emergency: 110 (police), 119 (ambulance / fire). English-speaking emergency response via Japan Helpline (0570-000-911).
Best time to visit Yokohama?
Late March to early May (spring with cherry blossom first week April peak) and late October to early December (autumn with momiji mid-to-late November peak) are prime windows. Winter (December-February) is cool and dry — best Mt. Fuji visibility from Landmark Tower Sky Garden. Summer (June-August) is hot, humid, and rainy — outdoor walking sticky but Minato Mirai's air-conditioned malls work fine. Avoid Golden Week (April 29-May 5) and New Year week (Dec 30-Jan 3) for hotel-rate surges.
How does Japanese cash + Suica work?
Japan uses Japanese Yen (JPY) — 1 USD ≈ 148 JPY (April 2026). Cards (Visa, Mastercard, JCB) work at all major hotels, Minato Mirai shops, chain restaurants, and department stores. Cash-only: Yoshimuraya iekei ramen, standing-counter Chinatown shops, smaller sento, Sankeien tea pavilion. Bring USD from home and use 7-Eleven (Seven Bank) or Japan Post ATMs to withdraw JPY — both accept foreign cards with no Japanese-side fees. Suica or Pasmo IC card works on every train + subway + bus + most chain convenience stores + many vending machines.
What's the total 3-day budget?
Excluding international flights: budget $215 (3-star business hotel + standing-counter Chinatown + 2 attractions per day + train + day-trip), mid-range $500 (4-star Bashamichi hotel + heritage Chinatown lunch + Hotel New Grand set lunch + Cup Noodles + harbor cruise + Tokyo or Kamakura day-trip), luxury $1,190+ (Royal Park inside Landmark Tower or InterContinental Yokohama Grand + Manchinro heritage dinner + private Tokyo or Kamakura excursion). International flights add $700-1,500 from East Asia, $1,000-2,500 from North America/Europe/Australia. As a Tokyo day-trip (no Yokohama hotel): $40-80 per day.
Is the Yokohama + Tokyo combo worth it?
Yes — Tokyo and Yokohama complement each other perfectly. Tokyo is the world's largest megacity (9.7M central, 38M metro) with 5x the cultural sites, restaurants, museums, and shopping density of Yokohama. Yokohama is the port-city counterpart with deep Chinatown food, the 1906 Sankeien Garden, and the iconic Minato Mirai skyline. 30 minutes by JR between them; Suica/Pasmo IC card works on every train + subway + bus in both cities. The canonical Tokyo + Yokohama 5-day loop: 3 days Yokohama + 2 days Tokyo, or vice versa.
Should I base in Tokyo or Yokohama for the combo?
Either works — base wherever the better hotel deal is. Tokyo central hotels (Shinjuku, Shibuya, Roppongi) are 10-15% more expensive than equivalent Yokohama hotels (Minato Mirai, Bashamichi). Yokohama 5-star options (Royal Park inside Landmark Tower, InterContinental Yokohama Grand, Hotel New Grand) are typically $50-150/night cheaper than Tokyo equivalents (Park Hyatt, Aman, Mandarin Oriental). 30 minutes by JR each way means 1-hour daily commute for Tokyo day-trips from Yokohama — manageable. For first-time Japan: Tokyo as base + Yokohama as day-trip on day 3-4 makes sense. For travelers wanting deeper Yokohama (Sankeien + Yamate + Chinatown): Yokohama as base + Tokyo day-trips makes sense.
Add Hakone or Kamakura for a 5+ day trip?
Hakone is the canonical 1-night onsen + Mt. Fuji add-on. From Yokohama: JR Tokaido to Odawara 30 min ¥970 + Hakone Tozan Line + cable car or bus into Hakone-Yumoto / Gora / Lake Ashi (90 min total from Yokohama, $25+ one-way). The Hakone Free Pass ($25 from Odawara for 2 days) covers Hakone Tozan + Hakone Ropeway + Hakone Sightseeing Cruise + most buses. Add 1 night at a ryokan ($200-500/night). Kamakura is a half-day day-trip from Yokohama (25 min by JR Yokosuka, the Great Buddha + Tsurugaoka Hachimangu + Enoshima Island).

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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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