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28 days in Japan. Suica?

smithtrevora
smithtrevora
over 8 years ago
1 answer

I plan on visiting various areas in Japan, and have booked an Air BNB in Tokyo to act sort of as a hub for my travels. I don't plan on staying there every night, but I figure it will be nice to leave all of my big stuff there.

Anyways, my trip is posted for April 30th, to May 28th. I was planning on flying into Tokyo, and then me and a friend were going to go to Sapporo for a few days, then I would come back to Tokyo, and start my trek to Nagoya, Hiroshima, Kyoto, and Osaka, as well as anywhere I can stop in between, and was planning on getting a 14 day pass. I had a few questions I had been looking for but could not find anything.

  1. When purchasing a JR pass, does the "date of activation" have to be 100% accurate, or is it a general time to start? A follow up to that, let's say I am going to have it by the 30th, does that mean the start time is at the 30th, or does that mean that I can hold on to it, and then the timer won't start until I use it for the first time?

  2. Along with the JR pass, I was thinking about getting a Suica pass to do my residential train work (on all non-JR lines). From what I understand the Suica pass will let me ride most any railways I need to get home. Is it worth it to get both, or should I just get tickets for local trains?

  3. Besides the JR pass, is there anything else I need to have before entering Japan? I have my passport, I am getting my tickets soon, and my Air BnB is booked. How does the immigration process work?

Any information would be helpful. I realize that some of these questions might be broad or unspecific, so please ask me a question if something sounds weird. I just want to make sure I am doing everything right, since this is my first time travelling outside the US.

Thanks,
Trevor

avatar
Daniel-san
19375 posts
over 8 years ago
Expert

Hello Trevor,

1.) The JR Pass has to be activated within 3 months after purchase. So it does not have to be 100% accurate.

2.) Suica is just an electronic way for paying for normal tickets but man is it convenient. You never have to buy a normal ticket again, figure out how much the fare is, queue op for using the machine etc. I would get one for the pure sake of convenience.

3.) It depends on what country you are from but you seem to be coming from the US. In that case you get a visa stamped upon arrival in your passport, so no need to do anything before then. I would bring some cash (yen) just in case and get a list of emergency numbers if something would happen. Other than that, you are good to go.

Hope this helps,
Daniel


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