TripPick Japan Japan

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

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

Kyoto 7-Day Itinerary — Quick Answer

As of 2026
Trip length
7 days
Est. cost / person (mid, ex-flights)
$695
Budget–luxury
$315–$1,615

As of 2026, the recommended Kyoto 7-day route runs Day1 Higashiyama Temple Walk · Day2 Arashiyama & Golden Pavilion · Day3 Fushimi Inari & Nishiki Market · Day4 Uji — Matcha and the Phoenix Hall · Day5 Nara Day Trip — Deer and the Great Buddha · Day6 Mt. Koya UNESCO Overnight · Day7 Mt. Koya Morning + Himeji Castle Afternoon, grouping the must-see sights with minimal backtracking. Estimated cost per person (excluding flights) is around $695 on a mid-range budget. 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.

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.

Book Hotels & Flights for This Itinerary

Search Kyoto hotels and flights in one place. Trip.com offers competitive comparison rates.

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

Book Kyoto Tours & Tickets

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.

Looking for Different Trip Lengths?

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
📅 Published: