Best Things to Do in Kanto (2026 Guide)
Kanto is Japan's most populous region — the Tokyo metropolitan area and its surrounding prefectures (Kanagawa, Saitama, Chiba, Ibaraki, Tochigi, Gunma) containing some of Japan's greatest day trips from the capital: Kamakura, Nikko, Mount Fuji, and Yokohama. This guide covers the best things to do in Kanto beyond central Tokyo.
Find Things to Do →The unmissable in Kanto
These are the staple sights — don't leave Kanto without seeing them.
Mt. Fuji (Fuji-san)
Senso-ji Temple (Asakusa Temple)
Tokyo Imperial Palace
Destinations in Kanto
More attractions in Kanto
Shibuya
Shibuya Crossing
Tokyo Skytree
Tokyo Tower
Meiji Shrine (Meiji Jingu)
Tokyo Disneyland®
Tokyo DisneySea®
Shinjuku
Daibutsu (Great Buddha of Kamakura)
Hakone Ropeway
Lake Ashi (Ashi-no-ko)
Fuji Five Lakes (Fujigoko)
Harajuku
Ginza
Ghibli Museum
teamLab Planets TOKYO
Tsukiji Fish Market
Tokyo National Museum
Ueno Park (Ueno Koen)
Takeshita Street
Toyosu Fish Market
Kanto is the Tokyo region — but the best things to do in Kanto extend well beyond the megalopolis itself. From Tokyo, day trips reach some of Japan’s most remarkable sites: Kamakura (1 hour south by train), a coastal city that served as Japan’s political capital in the 12th-14th centuries, with the Great Buddha (Kotoku-in Daibutsu, a 13.35-metre bronze statue cast in 1252, now sitting outdoors after its shelter was destroyed by a tsunami in 1498) and 65 Buddhist temples and Shinto shrines in the surrounding hills. Nikko (2 hours north) houses the UNESCO World Heritage shrine complex of Toshogu, the extraordinarily ornate mausoleum of Shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu — the most lavish ensemble of Edo-period architecture in Japan, surrounded by cedar forest and waterfalls. Mount Fuji (2-3 hours from Tokyo, depending on approach) is Japan’s most iconic image and a sacred mountain that can be climbed in one long day July-September (the summit is at 3,776 metres, cold and crowded in season). Yokohama (30 minutes from Tokyo) has Japan’s largest Chinatown and the Sankeien garden.Best time to visitSpring (late March-April) for Tokyo’s cherry blossoms; Shinjuku Gyoen and Yoyogi Park are the best viewing spots. Autumn (November) for the maple foliage at Nikko and Kamakura — Nikko’s Irohazaka winding road in autumn colours is extraordinary. Mount Fuji’s official climbing season is July 1-September 10; outside this period, trails may be snow-covered and huts are closed. The Sapporo Snow Festival (February) is in Hokkaido, but Kanto’s winter is dry, clear, and excellent for Mount Fuji photography (the summit is clearest December-February when seen from afar).Getting aroundTokyo is the best-connected city in the world for public transport — 13 metro lines, JR lines, and private railways connect the city’s every neighbourhood. IC cards (Suica, Pasmo) are reloadable smart cards that work on all trains and buses — load one immediately on arrival. Day trips: Kamakura by JR Yokosuka Line from Tokyo Station (1 hour). Nikko by Tobu Limited Express from Asakusa (1h45). Mount Fuji: Shinkansen to Mishima or highway bus to Kawaguchiko (the best views of Fuji are from the Fuji Five Lakes area). Yokohama: 25 minutes by JR line from Tokyo.What to eat and drinkTokyo has more Michelin stars than any other city in the world (200+ Michelin-starred restaurants). At high end: omakase sushi at a 10-seat counter where the chef selects everything, kaiseki at Kanda or Ryugin, or ramen at one of the Michelin-starred ramen shops (Tokyo Ramen Street in Tokyo Station is a reliable starting point). At street level: fresh tuna from Tsukiji Outer Market (the inner market moved to Toyosu in 2018), yakitori in the alleys under Yurakucho railway tracks, tonkatsu (breaded pork cutlet) at Maisen in Harajuku, melon bread from a convenience store (Japan’s convenience stores are genuinely excellent food options). Yokohama’s Chinatown — 600 Chinese restaurants in 0.5 square kilometres — is the best Chinese food in Japan.Day trips from TokyoKamakura — 1 hour from Tokyo: Kotoku-in Great Buddha, Hase-dera Temple (the sea-view garden), Tsurugaoka Hachimangu Shrine, and the coastal Enoshima Island by the Shonan Monorail from Kamakura Station.Nikko — 2 hours from Tokyo: Toshogu Shrine (UNESCO — the ‘sleeping cat’ wood carving, Yomeimon Gate, Tokugawa Ieyasu’s mausoleum), Rinno-ji Temple, Kanmangafuchi Abyss (70 stone Jizo statues in a river gorge), and Kegon Falls (97 metres, Japan’s most famous waterfall).Hakone — 90 minutes from Tokyo: Mount Fuji views from Lake Ashi, the Open Air Museum (outdoor sculpture park), Owakudani volcanic valley (boiled eggs coloured black by sulfur — eating one supposedly extends your life by 7 years), and the Hakone Ropeway above the fumaroles.Mount Fuji — 2-3 hours from Tokyo: the Fuji Five Lakes area (Kawaguchiko) for views and hiking, the 5th Station (2,305m, road access year-round) for a taste of the mountain, and the full summit climb (July-September, book the Fuji Subaru Line in advance as vehicle access is now ticketed).FAQWhat are the best things to do in Kanto?The best things to do in Kanto include the Kamakura Great Buddha, Nikko’s Toshogu Shrine complex, a Mount Fuji sunrise hike (summer), Hakone’s Fuji views from Lake Ashi, Yokohama’s Chinatown, and teamLab Borderless digital art in Tokyo.How many days do I need in Kanto?Tokyo alone warrants four to five days. Each major day trip (Kamakura, Nikko, Hakone) adds a day. A week in the Kanto region covers Tokyo plus two or three day trips comfortably.Is Kanto safe for tourists?Yes, Kanto and Tokyo are among the safest regions in the world. Lost wallets are routinely returned. The main tourist issue is navigating the train system — Google Maps Japan is highly accurate for transit directions.What is the best time to visit Kanto?March-April for cherry blossoms. November for autumn foliage. July-September for Mount Fuji climbing. December-February for clear Fuji views from afar and quieter temples. May-June and October are excellent shoulder months.