I looked into the JR Pass before my trip, but I didn’t end up getting one.
After actually traveling around Japan, mas naging clear when it makes sense—and when it doesn’t.
When JR Pass Makes Sense
If your trip looks like:
- Tokyo → Osaka → Kyoto → Hiroshima (multiple long-distance rides)
- back-to-back city transfers in a short time
Then the JR Pass can save you money.
It’s useful when you’re constantly moving between cities.
When Individual Tickets Are Better
In my case, I stayed longer in fewer places:
- Osaka
- Sapporo
And only did a day trip to Kyoto and Nara.
So instead of unlimited travel, I only needed:
- one long-distance flight (Osaka ↔ Sapporo)
- local trains
- one day trip
Mas practical to just buy tickets as needed.
What I Realized
The JR Pass sounds convenient—but it’s not always the cheaper option.
You really have to match it with your route.
If your itinerary is not train-heavy, you’ll end up not maximizing it.
Simple Rule
If you’re moving cities every 1–2 days → consider JR Pass
If you’re staying longer in each city → just buy individual tickets
That’s basically it.



