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2 Weeks in Japan With Kids: An Overview

JAL Airlines 787 taxing. A white plane viewed from the side. Toshi Aoki - JP Spotters, CC BY-SA 3.0 , via Wikimedia Commons

We leave today for 2 weeks in Japan. I can hardly believe this is really going to happen. I’ve talked SO much about this trip. I planned it 2, or maybe even 3 years in a row now. And today I stand on the edge of actually getting to take it, leaving in just a few hours for this adventure with my family. The excitement of travel is always there, but this is different–this trip feels like catching a unicorn at this point.

Today’s post is to share the itinerary and some of my general travel philosophy. Along with that I’d love to solicit any quick tips from readers who’ve spent time in these areas of the country as well.

Overview: 4 Locations: Kyoto, Hiroshima, Ishigaki, Tokyo

We’re a family of 4, with an 8 and 4 year old now and we’re getting a stronger feel for our kids and what they’re up for. We’ve done 2 week vacations in the past without issue and so we decided to really go for a long trip (for us) here to Japan with a lot of moving pieces.

The actual booking of the longhaul flights is probably the least interesting part of this trip–not only because we’ve covered Japan booking tips already on previous podcasts, but because the entire process of doing it has changed so much. Pent up demand and changing program costs have made it near impossible to find 4 award seats for a family to/from Japan right now. If anyone reading it still thinking about going this summer I would search daily, be flexible on either cabin, dates or destinations and hope for some luck for this summer.

For next summer Alaska/AA still represent good values but they’re so far back in line at seeing the award seats that you’ll want to use something else like BA or Asia miles (before they devalue) or else you run the risk of missing out on the few award seats that are being released.

That said, our trip is going to focus on 4 major locations

Here’s an overview of the above from gcmap:

KIX-HIJ by train, All domestic flights on ANA or ANA Wings.

This ends up being over 2,000 miles of flying domestically. We’re doing all of the domestic legs on ANA/ANA Wings (booked either with United or ANA miles) and the international flights to/from LAX on JAL.

I’m a bit excited to fly an ANA narrowbody. Photo by
BriYYZ from Toronto, Canada, CC BY-SA 2.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Miles for Domestic Travel Saved This Trip

The domestic flights we’re taking in Japan really do represent an exceptional value in miles. Each was 8,800 UA miles + $3. These flights in some cases are hard to even buy with cash, or exceptionally expensive. The HIJ-OKA-ISG flight was difficult to price online, but if we had to pay for these flights I dont’ think this trip would have taken the form it did.

The flexibility of booking with US partner airlines is another example where miles are exceptional. I was previously booked ITM (Osaka)-OKA-ISG, meaning we’d need to take a train back from Hiroshima to Osaka and catch a flight. With 2 kids that felt like a lot of friction. So I kept monitoring things. It seems like about 3 months out JAL started releasing their Okinawa island flights–so I cancelled the ITM-OKA-ISG flight and booked with Alaska miles, HIJ-HND-ISG.

Little by little this route kept improving.

But then about a month out I noticed that ANA loaded award space for the HIJ-OKA-ISG flight we’re ultimately booked on. So I cancelled the Alaska JAL booking and moved to this more direct routing (with less flying time).

The big takeaway? Like everything right now keep improving your position–book something that’s acceptable, but don’t stop looking! The protections that were put in place years ago that allow us to cancel without penalty have been a great multi-use tool.

What to Bring? Packing Light

We’re going for 14 days but we’ll never be more than 2 days without washer/dryer access. Our hotel in Kyoto, our Airbnb and even our hotel in Tokyo have washer/dryer access. That means we’ll pack light, very light. One checked suitcase and a single carry-on are all I want to bring. My kids seem to be able to carry their own luggage–until they suddenly can’t and then announce that and drop the bag.

The other reason is: there’s just no need to bring more than that. I am 100% confident I can buy anything I might need in Japan, and if I can’t–well then I probably don’t need it anyway.

One exciting part of this trip for me is that we won’t need a carseat! I can take boosters only because of the age of my kids. This is living!

I’ll update with how the trip shakes out. There are so many moving pieces for us here–hotels, transit, rental cars. I’m a little worried I missed a detail, or got a day/time mixed up. But then again, that’s part of the adventure of travel!

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