Japan · Kansai
Kyoto
Base downtown or near the station, spend a day each in Higashiyama (temples and Gion), Arashiyama (bamboo grove and river), and Fushimi/downtown (Fushimi Inari and Nishiki Market), then add a day trip to Nara.
Overview
Kyoto was Japan’s imperial capital for over a thousand years and is still the country’s clearest window into that history: seventeen component sites make up its UNESCO World Heritage listing, alongside thousands of temples, shrines and gardens that never made the list at all. It is a city built to be walked slowly, in contrast to Tokyo’s scale and speed.
If you only take one thing from this guide: go to Fushimi Inari and any Higashiyama temple before 8am. Kyoto’s most famous sights are stunning and, by mid-morning in high season, genuinely overwhelmed with tour groups; the same paths at opening are close to empty.
Best for
Culture and history travelers · Couples · Photography · Traditional food and ryokan stays · First-time Japan visitors pairing it with Tokyo
Daily itinerary
4 to 6 days
Kyoto largely escaped the bombing of the Second World War, so its temples, wooden machiya townhouses and geisha districts are substantially original rather than postwar reconstructions, giving it a depth Tokyo cannot match.
Best time to visit
Spring (late March to early April, cherry blossoms) and autumn (November, maple foliage) are the most beautiful and by far the most crowded and expensive. Late spring (May to June) and early autumn (September to early October) trade a little color for much thinner crowds.
- March to early April: Cherry blossom season; the single busiest and most expensive window of the year.
- May to June: Warm, green, good value before the rainy season arrives mid-June.
- July: Hot and humid, but Gion Matsuri, Kyoto’s biggest festival, runs through the month with huge processions on 17 July.
- September to October: Cooling down, thinner crowds, a strong shoulder-season pick.
- November: Peak autumn foliage; book accommodation months ahead.
Things worth knowing
- Gion Matsuri (July): Kyoto’s largest festival, with elaborate floats paraded through downtown on 17 July.
- Cherry blossom season (late March to early April) along the Philosopher’s Path and at Maruyama Park.
- Autumn illuminations at temples including Kiyomizu-dera and Kodai-ji in November.
Where to stay
Higashiyama
Kyoto’s best-preserved historic district: preserved lanes leading up to Kiyomizu-dera, Yasaka Shrine and Maruyama Park, adjoining the Gion geisha district.
Best for: First-time visitors · Culture · Photography
Extremely crowded from mid-morning in cherry blossom and autumn foliage season; visit at opening.
Gion
Kyoto’s most famous geisha (geiko and maiko) district, with preserved teahouse streets and, along Hanamikoji-dori, some of the city’s best traditional dining.
Best for: Evening walks · Traditional dining · Couples
Some residential lanes have been closed to tourists after complaints of harassment of geiko and maiko; respect posted restrictions and never chase or block them for photos.
Arashiyama
A riverside district in western Kyoto known for the bamboo grove, Tenryu-ji temple’s UNESCO-listed garden, and the Togetsukyo Bridge over the Katsura River.
Best for: Scenery · Photography · A half-day out from downtown
The bamboo grove itself is a short, very crowded walk; go at dawn for anything close to quiet.
Downtown (Kawaramachi / Nishiki / Pontocho)
The commercial core: Nishiki Market’s food stalls, the Pontocho riverside dining alley, and the main shopping streets, all walkable from each other.
Best for: Food · Shopping · No car · Nightlife
Pontocho’s riverside restaurants vary widely in quality and price; check before sitting down.
Fushimi
South of central Kyoto, home to Fushimi Inari Taisha’s thousands of torii gates and, further south, the sake-brewing district around Fushimi’s historic breweries.
Best for: Must-see sights · A half-day walk · Sake tasting
The full torii-gate hike up Mount Inari takes 2 to 3 hours round trip; the first section near the entrance is by far the busiest.
Where to sleep
The Ritz-Carlton, Kyoto
luxury · Kamogawa riverside, downtown
Best for: Couples · A central luxury base · Views of Higashiyama
- Riverside site favored by Japanese nobility since the 17th century
- Views over the Kamogawa River to the Higashiyama mountains
- Walkable to Gion, Pontocho and downtown
- One of the most expensive hotels in Kyoto
- Formal, corporate luxury feel compared with a ryokan stay
- Books out well ahead in cherry blossom and autumn seasons
Hoshinoya Kyoto
unique · Arashiyama
Best for: Couples · A ryokan escape · River views
- Reached only by a private boat up the Katsura River, a genuine arrival experience
- Every room overlooks the Arashiyama gorge
- Recreates the feel of a Kyoto aristocratic riverside retreat
- Set apart from downtown Kyoto, adding travel time to most sights
- Very expensive
- Boat-only access can be inconvenient with heavy luggage
Tawaraya
unique · Downtown Kyoto
Best for: A historic ryokan experience · Traditional hospitality · A once-in-a-trip splurge
- Over 300 years of continuous operation as a ryokan
- Widely regarded as one of the finest traditional inns in Japan
- Central downtown location
- No online booking; reservations are typically made by phone or through a travel agent
- Very limited room count and extremely high demand
- Traditional tatami-and-futon rooms are not for travelers who want a Western-style bed
Mitsui Garden Hotel Kyoto Sanjo
boutique · Sanjo, downtown
Best for: Couples · A central mid-range base · Onsen-style baths
- Guest-only public and private baths, unusual for a mid-range hotel
- Central Sanjo-dori location near Pontocho and Nishiki Market
- Design built around eight small courtyard gardens
- Standard rooms are compact
- Public bath can be busy at peak evening hours
- Restaurant options are limited on-site
Piece Hostel Kyoto
value · Near Kyoto Station
Best for: Budget travelers · Solo travelers · Meeting other travelers
- Free evening events (cinema nights, cooking classes, happy hour) that make socializing easy
- Modern, clean dorms with memory-foam mattresses
- Short walk to Kyoto Station
- Shared bathrooms and showers
- Dorm noise and light typical of hostel stays
- Less privacy than any of the hotel options above
Essential experiences
Fushimi Inari Taisha
The head shrine of Inari, approached through thousands of vermilion torii gates climbing Mount Inari; open 24 hours and free to enter.
Historic Monuments of Ancient Kyoto (UNESCO)
A UNESCO listing of seventeen component sites across Kyoto, Uji and Otsu, including 13 Buddhist temples, three Shinto shrines and one castle, inscribed in 1994.
Kinkaku-ji (Golden Pavilion)
A gold leaf-covered Zen pavilion reflected in its garden pond, part of the Historic Monuments of Ancient Kyoto UNESCO listing.
Nijo Castle
The 1603 residence of shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu, with "nightingale floors" designed to creak as a security measure, and formal gardens; UNESCO-listed since 1994.
Arashiyama Bamboo Grove and Tenryu-ji
A towering bamboo path beside Tenryu-ji, a Zen temple whose garden is another component of the UNESCO Kyoto listing, on the bank of the Katsura River.
Kiyomizu-dera
A wooden temple built without nails on a hillside stage over Higashiyama, part of the UNESCO listing, with sweeping views back over the city.
Nishiki Market
Known as "Kyoto’s Kitchen," a nearly 400-meter covered market street with over 100 shops and stalls selling seafood, pickles, sweets and kitchenware, dating to around 1310.
Food & drink
- Kaiseki: Kyoto’s multi-course haute cuisine, built around seasonal, local ingredients and refined presentation; the city is considered its spiritual home.
- Yudofu (hot tofu): Simmered tofu associated with the temple district of Nanzen-ji, a Buddhist-vegetarian legacy dish.
- Kyo-yasai (Kyoto vegetables): Heirloom local vegetable varieties (kamo eggplant, shishigatani pumpkin and others) used across Kyoto cooking.
- Yatsuhashi: A cinnamon-scented rice-flour sweet, Kyoto’s signature souvenir confection, sold both baked and soft/raw.
- Matcha sweets: Uji, just south of Kyoto, is one of Japan’s premier matcha-growing regions; matcha desserts are everywhere downtown.
Kaiseki restaurants and the best small counters require reservations, often weeks ahead for well-known names; casual noodle shops and market stalls are walk-in.
Where to eat
Nishiki Market food stalls
street-foodA working market street where visitors can sample pickles, skewers, tofu sweets and seafood from stall to stall.
Last researched 2026-07-15
Kikunoi
fine-diningA kaiseki restaurant with over a century of history in Higashiyama, led by a third-generation chef; among Kyoto’s most internationally recognized kaiseki houses.
Last researched 2026-07-15
Omen (Ginkaku-ji Honten)
institutionA long-running udon restaurant near Ginkaku-ji, serving thick house-made noodles with a seasonal-vegetable dipping sauce since 1967.
Last researched 2026-07-15
Sunrises
Fushimi Inari torii path
Arriving at or before sunrise is the only realistic way to photograph the torii tunnels empty; the shrine and paths are open 24 hours.
Year-round
Kiyomizu-dera at opening
Arriving right at opening gives soft early light over the wooden stage and the temple grounds before tour groups arrive.
Spring and autumn for color
Sunsets
Kiyomizu-dera stage, Higashiyama
The elevated wooden stage looks west over Kyoto as the light fades, especially striking during spring and autumn illuminations.
Spring and autumn evening illumination periods · Evening illumination hours differ from daytime hours and run only on specific dates; check before going.
Togetsukyo Bridge, Arashiyama
The bridge over the Katsura River with the wooded Arashiyama hills behind catches good evening light, especially in autumn foliage season.
Year-round, best in autumn
Yasaka Shrine and Maruyama Park, Gion
The lantern-lit shrine grounds and adjoining park make a good early-evening walk into Gion as the light drops.
Year-round
Day trips
Nara
Japan’s earlier capital, with Todai-ji temple’s Great Buddha hall, the Nara Palace Site, and Nara Park’s free-roaming deer; part of the "Historic Monuments of Ancient Nara" UNESCO listing.
About 45 minutes each way by train · Full day
Osaka
Japan’s food capital and a livelier contrast to Kyoto, with Osaka Castle, the Dotonbori canal-side dining strip, and street food like takoyaki and okonomiyaki.
About 30 to 45 minutes each way by train · Full day
Uji
A small riverside town between Kyoto and Nara, historically one of Japan’s premier matcha-growing regions and home to Byodo-in temple, another UNESCO Kyoto component.
About 20 to 30 minutes each way by train · Half day
Daily itinerary
Five days in Kyoto: temples, bamboo and one day trip
One day each for Higashiyama/Gion, Arashiyama, and Fushimi/downtown, one day trip to Nara, and a slower final day for Kinkaku-ji and Nijo Castle.
- 1
Higashiyama and Gion
moderateKiyomizu-dera at opening, then the preserved lanes of Sannenzaka and Ninenzaka.A casual noodle or tofu lunch in Higashiyama.Yasaka Shrine and Maruyama Park.The Kiyomizu-dera stage view or Yasaka Shrine at dusk.Dinner in Gion or Pontocho.An evening walk through Gion’s lantern-lit lanes.Fully walkable within Higashiyama and Gion; bus or taxi from Kyoto Station.Estimate: Add Kodai-ji temple if time allows.
- 2
Arashiyama
moderateThe bamboo grove at or near opening, then Tenryu-ji temple garden.Udon or a riverside cafe in Arashiyama.Togetsukyo Bridge and a walk along the Katsura River.Togetsukyo Bridge in the late-afternoon light.Return downtown for dinner.Quiet night after a full day of walking.Train or bus from downtown; the district itself is walkable.Estimate: Add the Sagano scenic railway or a river boat ride for a slower pace.
- 3
Fushimi Inari and downtown
fullFushimi Inari Taisha at or before sunrise for the quiet torii paths.Lunch near Fushimi or back downtown.Nishiki Market grazing, then downtown shopping streets.Dinner in Pontocho or downtown.A casual bar or riverside walk along the Kamogawa.Train to Fushimi Inari station; short ride back downtown.Estimate: Only walk partway up Mount Inari if short on time; the lower gates are the most photographed anyway.
- 4
Day trip: Nara
fullEarly train to Nara; Todai-ji and the Great Buddha hall.Local lunch in Nara.Nara Park and the deer, then Kasuga Taisha shrine.Dinner back in Kyoto after the return train.Rest after a full travel day.Round trip by train, about 45 minutes each way.Estimate: Swap for Osaka if food and nightlife matter more than temples.
- 5
Kinkaku-ji, Nijo Castle and departure
relaxedKinkaku-ji (Golden Pavilion) at opening.Lunch near Nijo Castle.Nijo Castle and its gardens; a last downtown souvenir stop for yatsuhashi.Departure via Kyoto Station.Bus or taxi between Kinkaku-ji and Nijo Castle; both are away from the eastern side of the city.Estimate: Extend to 6 days and add Uji for matcha if time allows.
Getting around
- Kyoto Station is the main hub, reached by shinkansen (about 2 hours 15 minutes from Tokyo) or from Kansai International Airport (about 75 to 90 minutes via the Haruka limited express).
- Osaka’s Itami Airport is a shorter transfer than Kansai International for domestic connections.
- Buses cover most temple and shrine sights and are the main way to get around; a day bus pass or IC card (Suica/Icoca) is worthwhile.
- The subway and JR lines cover downtown, Fushimi and Arashiyama directly; buses fill in the rest.
- Taxis are a practical option for reaching Arashiyama or Fushimi Inari early, before bus queues form.
Things worth knowing
- · Visiting Fushimi Inari or the Arashiyama bamboo grove mid-morning instead of at opening.
- · Underestimating bus crowding and travel time between districts during cherry blossom and autumn foliage weeks.
- · Wandering into private Gion lanes that are now closed to tourists; posted signs mark these clearly.
Budget
| Low | Expected | Comfortable | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Accommodation style / per night | ¥8,000 | ¥22,000 | ¥55,000 |
| Food style / per day | ¥3,000 | ¥6,500 | ¥14,000 |
| Local transport / per day | ¥600 | ¥1,200 | ¥3,500 |
| Estimate / per day | ¥500 | ¥1,800 | ¥4,500 |
Estimate · JPY · 2026-07-15. Accommodation is per room per night (two sharing). Cherry blossom (late March to early April) and peak autumn foliage (November) weeks run well above "expected" figures; a ryokan stay like Tawaraya or Hoshinoya sits above the "comfortable" band entirely.
Things worth knowing
Frequently asked questions
How many days do you need in Kyoto?
Four to six days covers Higashiyama, Arashiyama and the Fushimi/downtown area properly with one day trip; three days is workable if you accept a faster pace.
What is the best area to stay in Kyoto for the first time?
Downtown, near Kawaramachi or Sanjo, for walkable access to Gion, Pontocho and Nishiki Market, or near Kyoto Station for easy day-trip and shinkansen access.
When is the best time to visit Kyoto?
Late March to early April for cherry blossoms or November for autumn foliage are the most beautiful but busiest and priciest; May-June and September-early October are calmer, still comfortable alternatives.
Do you need a car in Kyoto?
No. Buses, trains and walking cover the city; a car adds parking difficulty without any real benefit inside Kyoto itself.
What is the best day trip from Kyoto?
Nara for the Great Buddha and the deer park is the classic choice at about 45 minutes each way; Osaka is the better pick for food and nightlife, and Uji suits a shorter matcha-focused half day.
Sources (3)
- Historic Monuments of Ancient Kyoto is a UNESCO World Heritage site inscribed in 1994 · unesco · 2026-07-15
- Fushimi Inari Taisha overview, hours and admission · official · 2026-07-15
- Historic Monuments of Ancient Nara is a UNESCO World Heritage site inscribed in 1998 · unesco · 2026-07-15
