Roadrunner Ceramics Tokyo, Kyoto and Osaka

636 Days until departure
November 3, 2026 - November 13, 2026
TourCenter ID: Wilson-2596

Tokyo, Kyoto & Osaka

Tour Itinerary print itinerary

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Day 1 Overnight Flight to Japan
Day 2 Konnichiwa Tokyo
Meet your tour director and check into hotel
Day 3 Tokyo landmarks
Tokyo guided sightseeing tour
Sensō-ji temple visitMeiji Shrine visitHarajuku District visit
Details: Tokyo guided sightseeing tour
Jangling neon and tranquil temples, radical fashion choices and quietly practiced traditions. Japan's sprawling, chaotic capital combines cutting-edge technology with an age-old culture, generating a directed energy and graceful drive unique to Tokyo. See what all of the buzz is about with a local licensed guide. Start with a whiff of the miraculous at the Senso Temple, where sacred incense smoke is said to have curative powers. Built to commemorate Emperor Meiji and his empress, the Meiji Shrine is one of the most important Shinto shrines in the country. Yearly festivals bring various groups to its iris garden and Treasure House, including the "Seven-Five-Three Festival," in which young children arrive dressed in mini kimonos.
Details: Meiji Shrine visit
Meiji Shrine, dedicated to the deified spirits of Emperor Meiji and Empress Shoken. Emperor Meiji was the first emperor of modern Japan, born in 1852 and ascending to the throne in 1868 at the peak of the Meiji Restoration when the power was switched from the feudal Tokugawa government to the emperor. Learn the difference between Shinto and Buddism
Details: Akihabara Electric Town visit
Take a trip to the Akihabara district, a mecca for electronic goods and home to Japan's otaku (diehard fan) geek culture. Explore the thousands of shops dedicated to anime, manga and video games.
Details: Karaoke experience and dinner
Karaoke is a popular form of entertainment which originated in Japan. Immerse yourself in this environment, grab a mic, your favorite song and sing your heart out in a Tokyo karaoke venue.
Day 4 Tokyo--Lake Yamanaka
Travel to Lake Yamanaka via Mashiko and Oshino Hakkai
Mashiko Museum of Ceramic Art visit
Oshino Hakkai excursion
Day 5 Lake Yamanaka--Kyoto
Transfer to Tokyo
Details: Travel to Kyoto via Shinkansen Bullet Train
Jump on the fastest train in the world and zip to Kyoto. The Shinkansen "bullet" train, inaugurated in 1964 and continually improved ever since, can travel up to 200 miles per hour. The newest versions use aviation technology to decrease wind resistance and noise, ensuring a safe, comfortable -- and fast! -- ride.
Details: Arashiyama Bamboo Grove visit
The Arashiyama Bamboo Grove is one of Kyoto’s top sights and for good reason: standing amid these soaring stalks of bamboo is like being in another world.
Day 6 Kyoto
Kyoto guided sightseeing tour
Kinkaku-ji temple (Golden Pavilion) visitFushimi Inari Taisha visitSanjūsangen-dō temple visit
Details: Nara excursion
Nara can be an eye-opening experience. The enormous 50-foot bronze Buddha statue in Todai-ji was dedicated in AD 752 by having a priest symbolically "open his eyes" by scrambling up and painting them in (the original paintbrush remains at the temple); strings dangling off the brush allowed the dignitaries on the ground to hang on and participate in the action. The sense of "more is better" continues at Kasuga Shrine, where a thousand intricate bronze lanterns hang prettily off the building. Don't bother the wild deer roaming the adjacent Nara Park -- once considered messengers of the gods, they are still a nationally protected treasure.
Details: Todai-ji temple visit
Todai-ji is one of Japan's most famous and historically significant temples and a landmark of Nara. The massive building houses one of Japan's largest bronze statues of Buddha (Daibutsu). At 15 meters tall, the seated Buddha represents Vairocana and is flanked by two Bodhisattvas.
Details: Kasuga Grand Shrine visit
Nara’s most celebrated Shinto shrine.
Details: Kyoto guided sightseeing tour
With over 2,000 Buddhist temples and shrines still intact, Kyoto shines as one of the best preserved Imperial cities in Japan. Visit the famous Zen Buddhist Temple Kinkakuji, or Golden Temple, that gets its name from the pure leaf gold that covers the top two floors. Next, head to Inari, the main shrine of the god of business, and see the thousands of red torii, or Japanese gates, that snake their way up the hill to the inner shrine. The Sanjusangendo Temple offers visitors an unusual and unbelievable sight. Its main hall is filled with 1,000 life-size statues of soldiers of the Thousand Armed Kannon which stand to protect the main deity of the temple.
Details: Sanjūsangen-dō temple visit
It is the popular name for Rengeo-in, a temple in eastern Kyoto which is famous for its 1001 statues of Kannon, the goddess of mercy. The temple was founded in 1164 and rebuilt a century later after the original structure had been destroyed in a fire.
Day 7 Kyoto
Raku Museum visit
Cooking class with dinner
Details: Japanese Calligraphy class
Learn the fundamentals of Japanese calligraphy and practice the basics of this traditional art.
Day 8 Kyoto
Shigaraki Pottery Village excursion
Free time in Kyoto
Day 9 Kyoto--Osaka
Travel to Osaka
Osaka guided sightseeing tour
Osaka Castle visitUmeda Sky Building observatoryDotonbori DistrictKuromon Market
Details: Osaka guided sightseeing tour
Osaka's 16th-century castle dominates the city, both economically (it's the single most visited sight in Japan) and architecturally. Extensively renovated in 1997, the castle maintains the city's historic past even as space-age buildings move Osaka into the future. Come up for air at the Umeda Sky Building, where you'll climb 550 feet to the Floating Garden Observatory for a bird's eye view of Osaka.
Details: Okonomiyaki dinner
Make your very own Japanese meal! Fry your crispy and savory cabbage pancake; top it with mayonnaise, Okonomiyaki sauce, which is like Worcestershire sauce, and meat, shrimp or octopus. Then sprinkle it with fish flakes and aornori, or dried seaweed, to make this the most interesting pancake you’ll ever eat.
Day 10 Osaka
The Museum of Oriental Ceramics visit
Free time in Osaka
Details: Karaoke experience and dinner
Karaoke is a popular form of entertainment which originated in Japan. Immerse yourself in this environment, grab a mic, your favorite song and sing your heart out in a Tokyo karaoke venue.
Day 11 Flight home from Osaka

Tour Includes

  • Round-trip airfare
  • 9 overnight stays in hotels with private bathrooms
  • Breakfast daily
  • Dinner daily
  • Full-time services of a professional tour director
  • Guided sightseeing tours and city walks as per itinerary
  • Visits to select attractions as per itinerary
  • High-speed train to Kyoto
  • Tour Diary™
  • Local Guide and Local Bus Driver tips; see note regarding other important tips
  • Note: On arrival day only dinner is provided; on departure day, only breakfast is provided
  • Note: Tour cost does not include airline-imposed baggage fees, or fees for any required passport or visa. Optional excursions, optional pre-paid Tour Director and multi-day bus driver tipping, among other individual and group customizations will be listed as separate line items in the total trip cost, if included.

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