
Tokyo or Kyoto: Which Should You Visit First?
You genuinely do need both if you have 10+ days, but if you're forced to choose or sequence a shorter trip: Tokyo for scale, food variety, and modern Japan's energy; Kyoto for temples, traditional culture, and a noticeably calmer pace. Most first-timers do Tokyo first (it's the main international gateway) and Kyoto second, as a deliberate change of tempo rather than more of the same energy.
This is the question every first-time Japan itinerary eventually runs into, and most guides dodge it with 'you have to see both!' โ true, but not actually an answer if you're building a route or a budget. Here's an honest, direct comparison instead.
| Tokyo | Kyoto | |
|---|---|---|
| Vibe | Modern, dense, constantly moving | Traditional, calmer, temple-and-garden focused |
| Best for | Food variety, nightlife, pop culture, shopping | Temples, shrines, geisha-district atmosphere, gardens |
| Typical stay | 4โ5 nights minimum | 2โ3 days is enough for most first-timers |
| Cost level | Higher โ accommodation and dining both run pricier | Comparable to Osaka; entry fees to temples add up but are individually small |
| Day trips | Kamakura, Nikko, Hakone, Fuji Five Lakes | Nara (deer, Todai-ji), Osaka, Uji (matcha country) |
| Airport access | Two major international airports (Haneda, Narita) | No airport of its own โ accessed via Osaka's Kansai airport or by train from Tokyo |
If you only have 7โ10 days, do both rather than choosing โ they complement each other more than they compete, and the contrast in pace is part of what makes the trip memorable. If truly forced to pick one, choose Tokyo for a shorter, food-and-energy-focused trip, or Kyoto for a slower, culture-focused one.
The case for Tokyo first
Most travelers land in Tokyo anyway, since it's the primary international gateway (alongside Osaka's Kansai airport). Starting there lets you burn off jet lag in a city built for round-the-clock energy โ convenience stores and some restaurants never close, which genuinely helps when you're wide awake at 4am on day one.
The case for Kyoto last
Ending a trip in Kyoto gives it a deliberately quieter close โ after Tokyo and Osaka's pace, a couple of unhurried days among temples and gardens reads less like more sightseeing and more like an intentional wind-down before the flight home.
If food is the priority
Tokyo wins on sheer range โ it has more Michelin-starred restaurants than any city on Earth, alongside every casual category imaginable. Kyoto's food culture leans more traditional (kaiseki, tofu-based cuisine, matcha) and is excellent in its own register, just narrower.
If budget is the deciding factor
Kyoto generally runs a touch cheaper than Tokyo for accommodation, though the gap has narrowed as Kyoto's popularity (and its new tiered lodging tax, up to ยฅ10,000/night at the top end) has grown. Neither city is dramatically more affordable than the other at a comparable hotel tier.
Can you skip one entirely?
You can, but it's a genuine trade-off either way: skip Kyoto and you miss traditional Japan almost entirely; skip Tokyo and you miss the scale and food range that make Japan's cities so distinct from each other. With 10+ days, there's rarely a good reason to choose โ see our destinations section for how to sequence both plus Osaka.












































