Kyoto is the counterweight to Tokyo. Where Tokyo overwhelms with scale and speed, Kyoto rewards patience and selectivity. The temples are extraordinary, the food scene is among Japan’s best, and the city has a rhythm that slows you down in the best way. The practical challenge is not getting here - the Shinkansen makes that trivial - but managing your time once you arrive. Temple fatigue is real, and the best days in Kyoto are the ones where you see less, not more.
Getting there
From Tokyo: The Shinkansen is the default and the best option. The Nozomi service covers Tokyo to Kyoto in about two hours fifteen minutes, with multiple departures per hour. The Hikari is slightly slower but covered by the JR Pass. The journey itself is part of the experience - watch for Mount Fuji on the right side about forty minutes out of Tokyo (clear days only, and they are rare).
From Kansai International (KIX): The Haruka Express runs directly from the airport to Kyoto Station in about seventy-five minutes. This is the smart choice if you are flying into the region and do not need time in Tokyo first. KIX is well-connected to international routes, particularly from Asia and Australia.
From Osaka: JR Special Rapid from Osaka Station to Kyoto Station in about thirty minutes. If you are based in Osaka, Kyoto is an easy day trip - though it deserves at least two nights.
Getting around
Kyoto is more spread out than Tokyo, and the bus network matters more than rail for reaching many of the major sights. The buses can be crowded during peak season (cherry blossom and autumn colour weeks especially), but they cover routes that the rail network does not.
The Metro has two lines that handle north-south and east-west movement through the city centre. JR lines connect the station area to western sights like Arashiyama. For the eastern temple district (Kiyomizu-dera, Gion, Fushimi Inari), buses or walking are the practical options.
Bicycle rental is excellent for Kyoto’s flatter central areas. The city lends itself to cycling in a way that Tokyo does not - quieter streets, shorter distances between sights, and a pace that suits two wheels. Several rental shops operate near Kyoto Station.
What to see
Fushimi Inari: The thousands of vermillion torii gates climbing the mountainside. Go early - by 7am if possible. The crowds later in the day are intense and the narrow paths make it difficult to appreciate the atmosphere. The full hike to the summit takes about two hours and most tourists turn back after the first section, so the upper paths are quieter.
Kinkaku-ji (Golden Pavilion): Stunning and genuinely worth the visit despite being one of Japan’s most photographed sights. The reflection on the pond on a still day is remarkable. Arrive at opening time for the best light and fewest people.
Nishiki Market: Kyoto’s kitchen. A narrow covered market with stalls selling pickles, tofu, matcha, knives, and street food. Better for grazing and browsing than a structured visit. Go hungry.
Arashiyama Bamboo Grove: Beautiful but brief - the grove itself takes only ten to fifteen minutes to walk through. Combine it with the wider Arashiyama area (Tenryu-ji temple, the river, monkey park) to justify the journey.
Practical notes
Temple fatigue is real. Three temples in a day is comfortable. Five is exhausting, and by the third you stop seeing the details. Build in time for wandering, eating, and sitting.
Gion etiquette: The geisha district deserves respect. Look, appreciate, but do not chase with cameras. The maiko and geiko going about their business are working, not performing for tourists.
Day trip to Nara: Forty-five minutes from Kyoto by train. The deer park, Todai-ji (the largest wooden building in the world and the enormous bronze Buddha inside), and Kasuga-taisha shrine make a full and worthwhile day. The deer are bold, friendly, and will eat anything in your hands. Buy the deer crackers from the official vendors.