Solo Travel

Solo Travel in Japan: Everything I Wish I'd Known

A practical first-timer guide to solo travel in Japan, from trains and hotels to eating alone with confidence.

Leila Karimi
1 min read
Solo Travel in Japan: Everything I Wish I'd Known

Japan is one of the easiest places to travel alone, but easy does not mean obvious. The train system is precise, restaurants are efficient, and the etiquette is subtle enough to make first-timers second-guess themselves.

Book accommodation near stations, keep a small coin purse, and treat convenience stores as travel infrastructure. They solve breakfast, snacks, umbrellas, and late-night meals better than most guidebooks admit.

Eating alone is normal. Counter seats, ramen shops, standing sushi bars, and department-store food halls make solo meals feel like part of the culture rather than a compromise.

The best first route is simple: Tokyo, Kyoto, Osaka, and one smaller stop such as Kanazawa, Nara, or Hiroshima. Leave space for getting lost in train stations. It will happen, and it will be fine.

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Written by

Leila Karimi