Japan's Best Attractions
Shrines, crossings, and mountains — and what's actually worth the trip.
The must-sees: Kyoto's Fushimi Inari Shrine (thousands of vermilion torii gates, free, open 24/7); Tokyo's Senso-ji temple and Shibuya Crossing; Meiji Shrine's forest calm in the middle of the city; and a Mount Fuji viewpoint from the Fuji Five Lakes if the weather cooperates. Most shrines and temples charge nothing to a few dollars; arrive at opening (7–8am) to see Fushimi Inari or Senso-ji without a wall of tour groups in every photo.
Japan doesn't lack for 'must-see' attractions — it has thousands of temples, shrines, and viewpoints, which is exactly the problem. Here's the honest, curated version: what's genuinely worth rearranging your schedule for, what time of day actually matters, and the etiquette rules that will get you a real fine, not just a dirty look.













































