Best Time to Visit Japan: Month by Month, With the Weeks to Avoid

THE ANSWER

Best time to visit Japan: spring and autumn are prime but priciest. See month-by-month weather, crowds and cost, the weeks to skip (Golden Week, Obon), and the cheapest time to go.

Best Time to Visit Japan: Month by Month, With the Weeks to Avoid

The best time to visit Japan is late March to May and October to November — mild weather, cherry blossoms in spring, red maples in autumn. Those are also the most crowded and most expensive months. For the cheapest flights and thin crowds, go January to early March, and avoid Golden Week (late April) and Obon (mid-August).

That is the short answer. It matches both Google's own AI Overview and the top-ranked r/JapanTravelTips "Japan by month" thread. The longer answer depends on what you are optimizing for: the weather and scenery you want, and the price you will pay for them. The month-by-month table below sorts it out. The sections after it cover the weeks to skip and the cherry-blossom timing, plus one angle no travel-brand page touches: when to go if you are staying for months, not days.

Best time to visit Japan, at a glance

Two seasons win on weather and scenery, two win on price. Here is the tradeoff in one view before the full month grid.

Season

Months

Weather

Crowds & price

Go for

Spring

Late Mar–May

Mild, 10–23°C

Peak — highest

Cherry blossoms and gardens.

Summer

Jun–Aug

Hot, humid, rainy then typhoon

Mixed; Obon spikes

Festivals, Hokkaido and the Alps.

Autumn

Oct–Nov

Mild, dry, clear

High — second peak

Red maples (koyo) and hiking.

Winter

Dec–Feb

Cold, dry, sunny on Pacific side

Low — cheapest

Onsen, snow, skiing, empty cities.

Spring and autumn are the classic answer for a reason: mild days and the scenery Japan is famous for. Winter is the value play and the dry season on the Pacific side: cold but bright, with flights and hotels at their yearly floor. Summer is the wildcard: hot and wet up front, then festival-packed and beautiful once you reach the highlands or Hokkaido. It is also the only season carrying a real weather risk, the typhoons.

Japan month by month: weather, crowds and cost

This is Japan's weather by month in one view: Tokyo climate normals, a four-level crowd rating, our editorial price index, and the sakura and koyo windows. Read the month-by-month climate down the rows, and the crowd and cost signals across them. The index sets the January low at 100, so 175 means about 1.75 times the cheapest month. Temperatures are Tokyo averages. Hokkaido runs about 5–7°C colder. Okinawa stays subtropical all year. Read the far north and far south as exceptions.

Month

Tokyo temp (low–high)

Weather

Crowds

Price index

What's on / watch

January

2–10°C / 36–50°F

Cold, dry, sunny

Low

100

Cheapest month. Onsen and powder snow. New Year (Dec 29–Jan 3) closes shops.

February

2–11°C / 36–52°F

Cold, dry

Low

105

Ski season. Sapporo Snow Festival, early Feb. Plum blossoms late month.

March

5–14°C / 41–57°F

Cool, warming

Moderate → high

130

Cherry blossoms open in the south late March. Prices climb fast.

April

10–19°C / 50–66°F

Mild, pleasant

Peak

175

Sakura peak in Tokyo and Kyoto (~Mar 25–Apr 5). Golden Week starts Apr 29.

May

15–23°C / 59–73°F

Warm, dry, green

High early, then moderate

150

Golden Week to ~May 5. Then a great, uncrowded window. Hokkaido sakura.

June

19–26°C / 66–79°F

Humid, rainy (tsuyu)

Low

110

Rainy season means value and space. Hydrangeas bloom. Hokkaido stays dry.

July

23–30°C / 73–86°F

Hot, humid, rain eases late

Moderate → high

125

Gion Matsuri and fireworks. School holidays fill the coast.

August

24–31°C / 75–88°F

Hot, humid, typhoon risk

Peak (Obon)

160

Summer festivals everywhere. Obon (~Aug 13–16) spikes travel.

September

21–28°C / 70–82°F

Warm, humid, typhoons

Moderate

120

Highest typhoon risk. Good value if you stay flexible.

October

15–22°C / 59–72°F

Mild, dry, clear

High

150

The sweet spot. Early koyo in Hokkaido and the Alps.

November

9–17°C / 48–63°F

Cool, dry, crisp

High (second peak)

165

Autumn foliage peak in Tokyo and Kyoto, mid-to-late Nov.

December

4–12°C / 39–54°F

Cold, dry, sunny

Low, then spikes

115

Winter illuminations. Cheap until the New Year rush (Dec 29–Jan 3).

A few patterns fall out of the numbers. Price tracks scenery almost exactly — the two most beautiful months, April and November, are the two priciest. The two cheapest, January and June, are the ones people flee from for weather they would barely notice on a city trip. And the widest gap between "great weather" and "low price" sits in late May and early October. Both are warm and dry. Both give you more room than the peaks on either side, at a lower price than both. Those two windows are the closest thing Japan has to a free lunch.

The weeks to actually avoid

Most timing guides stop at seasons. The bigger cost mistake is booking across one of Japan's three domestic travel peaks, when the country's own residents move all at once and prices jump regardless of weather.

Golden Week runs roughly April 29 to May 5, a cluster of four national holidays that turns into the year's biggest domestic travel wave. Shinkansen seats sell out weeks ahead and hotel rates climb. If you want early May, aim for the days after May 6, when prices fall off a cliff and the weather is still excellent.

Obon falls around August 13–16, when families return to hometowns to honor their ancestors. It is the summer twin of Golden Week: packed trains and higher fares. The days on either side of the core dates are calmer.

New Year (roughly December 29 to January 3) is quieter on the streets but hard on logistics. Many restaurants, shops and small businesses close for the holiday. Domestic transport books up as people travel home. Shrines are the exception, drawing huge crowds for hatsumode, the first visit of the year. Land after January 4 and January flips from awkward to the cheapest, calmest month of the year.

None of these three ruins a trip. But each one raises your costs and thins your options for no scenery payoff, so they are the first thing to plan around.

Cherry blossom season in Japan

Cherry blossom (sakura) season is the single most popular reason to visit, and the most misunderstood on timing. Tokyo and Kyoto typically hit full bloom around March 25 to April 5. Peak bloom lasts only about a week before the petals drop. Miss the window by ten days and you get bare branches.

The bloom moves south to north like a wave, a front the Japanese call the sakura-zensen. Fukuoka and the southwest open in late March. Tokyo and Kyoto follow from late March into early April, Tohoku in mid-to-late April, and Hokkaido in early May. That spread is the planner's escape hatch. If Tokyo has already peaked, Sendai or Sapporo may be days from opening.

Exact dates shift a week or two each year depending on how warm the winter was, so a fixed date on a calendar is a guess. The Japan Meteorological Corporation issues its first forecast each January and updates it through the spring; check the live prediction before locking flights. And go in knowing the honest tradeoff: sakura season brings peak season crowds and peak prices, the most expensive time to see the least reliable natural event on the calendar.

Autumn foliage (koyo): the underrated equal

Autumn foliage, or koyo, is the turning of the maples. It brings the same mild weather as spring, with slightly thinner crowds. And it drops the bloom-timing worry, because the color holds for weeks, not days. Many repeat visitors quietly rate it above spring.

Like the cherry front in reverse, the color starts in the north and mountains and moves south. Hokkaido and the Japanese Alps turn from late September into October; Tokyo, Kyoto and the lowlands peak from mid-to-late November into early December. Kyoto's temple gardens in the third and fourth weeks of November are the classic image, and the classic crowd. Book accommodation early. November is a genuine second high season.

Summer weather and the typhoon risk

Summer is the season people misjudge in both directions. The rainy season (tsuyu), driven by the East Asian monsoon, runs roughly early June to mid-or-late July across Honshu. It brings humid days and frequent showers, not the all-day downpour the word "monsoon" suggests. It is also one of the cheapest, least crowded windows of the year. That "rainy season is underrated" line shows up again and again in traveler threads about Asian trips. Okinawa's rains come earlier, in May, and Hokkaido skips tsuyu almost entirely, which is why it becomes the summer refuge.

Once the rains lift in mid-to-late July, the heat sets in. August highs near 31°C (88°F) and high humidity turn midday sightseeing into sweaty work. The payoff is matsuri — summer festivals and fireworks fill the calendar — plus cool escapes in the Japanese Alps (Kamikochi) and the lavender fields of Hokkaido. The catch is typhoons. They peak from August into September and can ground flights or halt trains for a day or two, mostly in the south and west. Travel then with buffer days and insurance that covers weather delays. Whichever month you land in, sort your data before you fly — our Japan eSIM guide covers which plan actually holds up on the shinkansen and out in the mountains.

Best time to visit Japan for a long stay or remote work

Every guide above optimizes for a two-week holiday. If you are staying one to three months to work remotely, the math inverts — and no travel-brand page frames it this way.

When you are at a desk on weekday days, the "avoid rain and heat for sightseeing" logic mostly falls away. What matters instead is monthly rent and comfortable evenings and weekends. That flips the two cheapest, least-loved windows into the smart ones:

  • January to early March is the cheapest stretch for flights and short-term rentals, and the Pacific-coast winter is bright and dry, easy to work straight through. You get empty cafés and cheap onsen weekends, with snow country a short train ride away. The cost is cold and short daylight.
  • June (tsuyu) hands you lower monthly rents and thin crowds. If you are indoors working through the wettest hours anyway, the humidity is a smaller tax than it is on a sightseeing trip — and the country greens up beautifully.

The premium windows, April and November, are the ones to skip for a long stay. You pay peak short-term-rental rates for weather you will mostly ignore on a working week. Late May and early October are the balanced compromise: good weather and mid-range prices, with no festival crush.

On the paperwork: US, UK, Canadian and Australian passport holders get a 90-day visa waiver on arrival. That covers a standard long stay for tourism. See our Japan visa guide for US citizens for the details. To stay longer or work on-site legally, look at the newer Japan digital nomad visa. It is a six-month, income-gated route with real limits. For the wider picture on regions and budgets, start from our Japan travel hub.

Some flight and hotel links on this site are affiliate links. If you book through one, we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. It does not change which months we call the cheapest. Temperatures are climate averages and prices are seasonal patterns as of July 2026. Confirm live fares and the current sakura forecast before you book.

Common questions

Частые вопросы

When is cherry blossom season in Japan?
Cherry blossoms (sakura) typically peak in Tokyo and Kyoto from around March 25 to April 5, with full bloom lasting roughly one week. The bloom front moves south to north: Fukuoka in late March, Tokyo late March to early April, Tohoku mid-to-late April, and Hokkaido in early May. Exact dates shift a week or two each year with the winter's warmth; the Japan Meteorological Corporation publishes its first forecast each January, so confirm the live prediction before booking.
What is the cheapest time to visit Japan?
The cheapest time to visit Japan is January to early March, excluding the New Year holiday (December 29–January 3). Flights and hotels drop to their yearly low, the Pacific-coast weather is cold but dry and sunny, and cities are uncrowded. June, the rainy season, is the second-cheapest window: you trade humidity and showers for lower prices and thin crowds.
What is the worst time to visit Japan?
For crowds and cost, the worst times are Golden Week (roughly April 29–May 5) and Obon (around August 13–16), when domestic travel peaks, trains and hotels sell out, and prices spike. For weather, late July through August is hot and humid (highs near 31°C / 88°F), and late August into September carries the highest typhoon risk. None of these ruins a trip, but each is worth planning around.
How many days do you need in Japan?
For a first trip, 10 to 14 days covers the classic Tokyo–Hakone–Kyoto–Osaka route with time for day trips, without rushing. Seven days works if you focus on one or two regions, for example Tokyo plus Kyoto by shinkansen. Under five days, stay in a single city. For a longer working stay, Japan's 90-day visa waiver (US, UK, Canada, Australia) lets tourists stay up to three months.
When is the rainy season in Japan?
Japan's rainy season (tsuyu), driven by the East Asian monsoon, runs roughly early June to mid-or-late July across most of Honshu, including Tokyo, Kyoto and Osaka. It is humid with frequent showers rather than all-day rain. Okinawa starts earlier, in early May, and Hokkaido has essentially no rainy season, which makes it the summer escape.
When is typhoon season in Japan?
Typhoon season peaks from August to September and can run into October, hitting Okinawa, Kyushu and Shikoku hardest. A typhoon usually means one or two disrupted days rather than a ruined trip, but it can ground flights and stop trains. If you travel in September, keep your itinerary flexible and buy travel insurance that covers weather delays.

Is Japan crowded in spring?

Yes — spring, especially late March to mid-April, is the most crowded season of the year, driven by cherry-blossom tourism and Golden Week at the end. Popular sights in Tokyo and Kyoto are busy and prices peak. For similar weather with more room, choose late May or the October–November autumn window, and travel midweek where you can.

Sources

  • Google AI Overview and organic results for "best time to visit Japan" (US, July 2026). This includes the top-ranked r/JapanTravelTips "Best Time to Visit Advice: Japan by Month" thread. Traveler trip reports in r/JapanTravelTips and r/travel (2024–2026) repeat one pattern across Asian trips. The cool season is crowded. The rainy season is underrated. And shoulder season gives the best balance.
  • Tokyo temperature normals and the tsuyu (rainy season) and typhoon windows follow published Japan Meteorological Agency climate data. Cherry-blossom timing follows the Japan Meteorological Corporation's yearly sakura-zensen forecast.
  • Seasonal event dates (Golden Week, Obon, New Year, major matsuri) and regional bloom fronts cross-checked against the Japan National Tourism Organization. Prices are seasonal patterns and our editorial index, not quoted fares. Confirm live before booking.

By the Editorial Team.

People also ask

When is cherry blossom season in Japan?

Cherry blossoms (sakura) typically peak in Tokyo and Kyoto from around March 25 to April 5, with full bloom lasting roughly one week. The bloom front moves south to north: Fukuoka in late March, Tokyo late March to early April, Tohoku mid-to-late April, and Hokkaido in early May. Exact dates shift a week or two each year with the winter's warmth; the Japan Meteorological Corporation publishes its first forecast each January, so confirm the live prediction before booking.

What is the cheapest time to visit Japan?

The cheapest time to visit Japan is January to early March, excluding the New Year holiday (December 29–January 3). Flights and hotels drop to their yearly low, the Pacific-coast weather is cold but dry and sunny, and cities are uncrowded. June, the rainy season, is the second-cheapest window: you trade humidity and showers for lower prices and thin crowds.

What is the worst time to visit Japan?

For crowds and cost, the worst times are Golden Week (roughly April 29–May 5) and Obon (around August 13–16), when domestic travel peaks, trains and hotels sell out, and prices spike. For weather, late July through August is hot and humid (highs near 31°C / 88°F), and late August into September carries the highest typhoon risk. None of these ruins a trip, but each is worth planning around.

How many days do you need in Japan?

For a first trip, 10 to 14 days covers the classic Tokyo–Hakone–Kyoto–Osaka route with time for day trips, without rushing. Seven days works if you focus on one or two regions, for example Tokyo plus Kyoto by shinkansen. Under five days, stay in a single city. For a longer working stay, Japan's 90-day visa waiver (US, UK, Canada, Australia) lets tourists stay up to three months.

When is the rainy season in Japan?

Japan's rainy season (tsuyu), driven by the East Asian monsoon, runs roughly early June to mid-or-late July across most of Honshu, including Tokyo, Kyoto and Osaka. It is humid with frequent showers rather than all-day rain. Okinawa starts earlier, in early May, and Hokkaido has essentially no rainy season, which makes it the summer escape.

When is typhoon season in Japan?

Typhoon season peaks from August to September and can run into October, hitting Okinawa, Kyushu and Shikoku hardest. A typhoon usually means one or two disrupted days rather than a ruined trip, but it can ground flights and stop trains. If you travel in September, keep your itinerary flexible and buy travel insurance that covers weather delays.

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