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Tokyo Layover Tour: Narita Aiport with Licensed Guide and Vehicle
Tokyo Layover Tour: Narita Aiport with Licensed Guide and Vehicle
Tokyo Layover Tour: Narita Aiport with Licensed Guide and Vehicle
Tokyo Layover Tour: Narita Aiport with Licensed Guide and Vehicle
Tokyo Layover Tour: Narita Aiport with Licensed Guide and Vehicle

Tokyo Stopover Tour with Licensed Guide & Vehicle: NRT Airport Dep

By Japan Guide Agency
Free cancellation available
Price is AU$1,666 per traveller* *Get a lower price by selecting multiple travellers
Features
  • Free cancellation available
  • 8h
  • Mobile voucher
  • Instant confirmation
  • Multiple languages
Overview

This is the ideal tour for travellers that have a stopover in Narita airport!
Due to the enormous size of Tokyo, one-day tour would focus on one area, and be able to cover about 3 to 4 sights. Tokyo is where you can experience both modern and traditional, and your experienced private English-speaking guide will help you efficiently enjoy a full day in this dynamic Japanese capital. Let us know what you would like to experience, and we will customise a tour that is best for you!
Note1: Please discuss with your guide which sites you would like to see on the tour.
Note
2: The National Government Licensed Guide Interpreter certification is issued by the Japanese government requires knowledge and understanding of Japanese culture and history

Activity location

  • Narita International Airport
    • 1-1 Furugome
    • 282-0004, Narita, Chiba, Japan

Meeting/Redemption Point

  • Narita International Airport
    • 1-1 Furugome
    • 282-0004, Narita, Chiba, Japan

Check availability


Van (UP to 7 PAX)
  • Activity duration is 8 hours8h8h
  • English

Van (UP to 7 PAX)

Price details
AU$2,231.57 x 1 TravellerAU$2,231.57

Total
Price is AU$2,231.57
Until Sun, 1 Dec
Mini van (UP to 4 PAX)
  • Activity duration is 8 hours8h8h
  • English

Mini van (UP to 4 PAX)

Price details
AU$1,666.00 x 1 TravellerAU$1,666.00

Total
Price is AU$1,666.00
Until Sun, 1 Dec

What's included, what's not

  • What's includedWhat's includedPrivate transport
  • What's includedWhat's includedFuel, Parking and Highway fees
  • What's includedWhat's includedPick up from Narita airport
  • What's includedWhat's includedLicensed Local Guide
  • What's excludedWhat's excludedLunch
  • What's excludedWhat's excludedOther personal expenses
  • What's excludedWhat's excludedEntrance fees
  • What's excludedWhat's excludedYou cannot combine tour groups

Know before you book

  • Specialised infant seats are available
  • Service animals allowed
  • Infants and small children can ride in a pram or stroller
  • Transport options are wheelchair accessible
  • Wheelchair accessible
  • Suitable for all physical fitness levels
  • If you are travelling with several large bags, you may need to book a larger vehicle.

Activity itinerary

Narita International Airport
  • 1h 30m
Depart from Narita airport(NRT) or a hotel near by the airport with your tour guide in a private vehicle to the world's most exciting city, Tokyo! Please choose 3 to 4 spots to visit from the list below.
Imperial Palace
  • 30m
This tour will allow you to explore Tokyo more efficiently in one day. Meet at your hotel, then move to anywhere you want.
Asakusa
  • 1h
Sensoji Temple and Nakamise Shopping street are the most popular destinations for first time tours!
Shibuya Crossing
  • 5m
The famous and busy Shibuya scramble crossing. Visit it to see the busiest parts of Tokyo!
Tsukiji Fish Market
  • 30m
Explore the old fish market in Tokyo!
Meiji Jingu Shrine
  • 5m
Meiji Shrine (明治神宮, Meiji Jingū) is a shrine dedicated to the deified spirits of Emperor Meiji and his consort, Empress Shoken. Located just beside the JR Yamanote Line's busy Harajuku Station, Meiji Shrine and the adjacent Yoyogi Park make up a large forested area within the densely built-up city. The spacious shrine grounds offer walking paths that are great for a relaxing stroll. The shrine was completed and dedicated to the Emperor Meiji and the Empress Shoken in 1920, eight years after the passing of the emperor and six years after the passing of the empress. The shrine was destroyed during the Second World War but was rebuilt shortly thereafter.
Shinjuku Gyoen National Garden
  • 5m
  • Admission ticket not included
Adults \500 (Group discount \400) Seniors (65 and over) \250 ※Valid ID required. Please purchase a ticket at a staffed counter. Students \250 ※Valid Student ID required. Please purchase a ticket at a staffed counter. Children (junior high school students /15 and under) FREE
Koishikawa Korakuen Garden
  • 5m
  • Admission ticket not included
Koishikawa Korakuen (小石川後楽園, Koishikawa Kōrakuen) is one of Tokyo's oldest and best Japanese gardens. It was built in the early Edo Period (1600-1867) at the Tokyo residence of the Mito branch of the ruling Tokugawa family. Like its namesake in Okayama, the garden was named Korakuen after a poem encouraging a ruler to enjoy pleasure only after achieving happiness for his people. Koishikawa is the district in which the garden is located in.
Hama Rikyu Gardens
  • 5m
  • Admission ticket not included
Hama Rikyu (浜離宮, Hama Rikyū), is a large, attractive landscape garden in central Tokyo. Located alongside Tokyo Bay, Hama Rikyu features seawater ponds which change level with the tides, and a teahouse on an island where visitors can rest and enjoy the scenery. The traditionally styled garden stands in stark contrast to the skyscrapers of the adjacent Shiodome district.
Tokyo National Museum
  • 5m
  • Admission ticket not included
The Tokyo National Museum (東京国立博物館, Tōkyō Kokuritsu Hakubutsukan) is the oldest and largest of Japan's top-level national museums, which also include the Kyoto National Museum, the Nara National Museum and the Kyushu National Museum. It was originally established in 1972 at Yushima Seido Shrine and moved to its current location in Ueno Park a few years later. The Tokyo National Museum features one of the largest and best collections of art and archaeological artefacts in Japan, made up of over 110,000 individual items including nearly a hundred national treasures. At any one time, about 4000 different items from the permanent museum collection are on display. In addition, visiting temporary exhibitions are also held regularly. Good English information and audio guides are available.
Akihabara
  • 5m
Akihabara (秋葉原), also called Akiba after a former local shrine, is a district in central Tokyo that is famous for its many electronics shops. In more recent years, Akihabara has gained recognition as the centre of Japan's otaku (diehard fan) culture, and many shops and establishments devoted to anime and manga are now dispersed among the electronic stores in the district. On Sundays, Chuo Dori, the high street through the district, is closed to car traffic from 13:00 to 18:00 (until 17:00 from October through March).
Rikugien Garden
  • 15m
  • Admission ticket not included
Rikugien (六義園) is often considered Tokyo's most beautiful Japanese landscape garden alongside Koishikawa Korakuen. Built around 1700 for the 5th Tokugawa Shogun, Rikugien literally means "six poems garden" and reproduces in miniature 88 scenes from famous poems. The garden is a good example of an Edo Period strolling garden and features a large central pond surrounded by manmade hills and forested areas, all connected by a network of trails.
Yoyogi Park
  • 15m
Yoyogi Park (代々木公園, Yoyogi Kōen) is one of Tokyo's largest city parks, featuring wide lawns, ponds and forested areas. It is a great place for jogging, picnicking and other outdoor activities. Although Yoyogi Park has relatively few cherry trees compared to other sites in Tokyo, it makes for a nice cherry blossom viewing spot in spring. Furthermore, it is known for its ginko tree forest, which turns intensely golden in autumn.
Takeshita Street
  • 30m
Harajuku (原宿) refers to the area around Tokyo's Harajuku Station, which is between Shinjuku and Shibuya on the Yamanote Line. It is the centre of Japan's most extreme teenage cultures and fashion styles, but also offers shopping for adults and some historic sights. The focal point of Harajuku's teenage culture is Takeshita Dori (Takeshita Street) and its side streets, which are lined by many trendy shops, fashion boutiques, used clothes stores, crepe stands and fast food outlets geared towards the fashion and trend conscious teens.
Roppongi Hills, Shop & Restaurant
  • 5m
Roppongi Hills is one of the best examples of a city within the city. Opened in 2003 in the heart of Tokyo's Roppongi district, the building complex features offices, apartments, shops, restaurants, a hotel, art museum, observation deck and more. The office floors are home to leading companies from the IT and financial sectors, and Roppongi Hills has become a symbol of the Japanese IT industry. At the centre of Roppongi Hills stands the 238 metre Mori Tower, one of the tallest buildings in the city. While most of the building is occupied by office space, the first few floors have restaurants and shops and the top few floors house an observation deck and modern art museum that are open to the public.
Senso-ji Temple
  • 5m
Sensoji (浅草寺, Sensōji, also known as Asakusa Kannon Temple) is a Buddhist temple located in Asakusa. It is one of Tokyo's most colourful and popular temples. The legend says that in the year 628, two brothers fished a statue of Kannon, the goddess of mercy, out of the Sumida River, and even though they put the statue back into the river, it always returned to them. Consequently, Sensoji was built nearby for the goddess of Kannon. The temple was completed in 645, making it Tokyo's oldest temple.
Shibamata
  • 5m
Shibamata (柴又) is a area on the eastern end of Tokyo, not far from the Edogawa River which is the natural border between Tokyo and Chiba Prefecture. The town retains its old-school charm from yesteryear and is a perfect break away from modern Tokyo. One of the main attractions to see is the Shibamata Taishakuten Temple not far from the station.
Nezu
  • 5m
Having miraculously avoided major damage during world wars and natural disasters, Yanaka and Nezu—two of the areas that make up shitamachi, Tokyo's old city centre—retain their last-century charm. You'll find historical sites such as Yanaka Cemetery and Nezu Shrine tucked away among shitamachi's narrow back alleys, traditional wooden houses, izakaya pubs, atmospheric coffee shops and retro stores selling old-style sweets and snacks. Here you can slip back in time to a slower-paced, more genteel Tokyo.
Shinjuku Golden Gai
  • 5m
Golden Gai is said to have started around 1950 when the black market that had arisen in front of Shinjuku Station moved and, in this new area, a number of eating and drinking establishments set up shop. Although Shinjuku has undergone considerable modernization since then, Golden Gai seems to have remained largely unchanged. The alley is narrow and cramped with countless signs advertising the various establishments that line the way. Many of the buildings themselves are made of wood, remnants hanging on from the Showa Era. Most measure only around thirteen square metres (one hundred forty-two square feet). It's a dim, boisterous place filled with the aromatic smoke of grilling meats. Yet despite the nearly endless number of slick new restaurants available in Shinjuku, this little alley continues to draw the attention of foreign tourists. Golden Gai is a popular “un-touristy” tourist spot.
Odaiba District
  • 5m
Odaiba (お台場) is a popular shopping and entertainment district on a man made island in Tokyo Bay. It originated as a set of small man made fort islands (daiba literally means "fort"), which were built towards the end of the Edo Period (1603-1868) to protect Tokyo against possible attacks from the sea and specifically in response to the gunboat diplomacy of Commodore Perry. More than a century later, the small islands were joined into larger islands by massive landfills, and Tokyo began a spectacular development project aimed to turn the islands into a futuristic residential and business district during the extravagant 1980s. But development was critically slowed after the burst of the "bubble economy" in the early 1990s, leaving Odaiba nearly vacant.
Narita International Airport
  • 1h 30m
Return to Narita airport(NRT) or nearby hotel in the comfort of a private vehicle with your guide. Note: The remaining time is for the round tour and time spent sightseeing or explorations.

Location

Activity location

  • LOB_ACTIVITIESLOB_ACTIVITIESNarita International Airport
    • 1-1 Furugome
    • 282-0004, Narita, Chiba, Japan

Meeting/Redemption Point

  • PEOPLEPEOPLENarita International Airport
    • 1-1 Furugome
    • 282-0004, Narita, Chiba, Japan

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