
Osaka
Osaka is Japan's food capital and, honestly, its most fun big city — looser and louder than Tokyo, with none of the stiffness Kyoto's temples can bring out in visitors. One to two days covers the highlights (Dotonbori, Osaka Castle), but its real value is as a base: Kyoto is 15 minutes away by train, Nara about 45, Kobe about 20 — a genuinely efficient hub for the whole Kansai region.
Osaka doesn't have Tokyo's scale or Kyoto's temples, and it doesn't need either — its whole personality is built around food, humor, and a much more relaxed social register than either of its more famous neighbors. Locals joke that Osakans will greet each other with 'have you eaten yet?' instead of 'how are you,' and after a day in Dotonbori you'll understand why.
How many days in Osaka?
One to two days is enough to hit the city's own highlights. Its bigger value, though, is as a base for the whole Kansai region — from a central Osaka hotel, Kyoto, Nara, and Kobe are all comfortable day trips, which makes Osaka a genuinely smart place to headquarter for 4–5 nights even if you're spending most of your daytime hours elsewhere.

What's worth seeing
| Site | What it is | Time needed |
|---|---|---|
| Dotonbori | Neon canal-side street-food district, the city's beating heart | Half a day, or every evening |
| Osaka Castle | A rebuilt 16th-century castle with a museum inside and a park around it | 2–3 hours |
| Universal Studios Japan | Major theme park, including a dedicated Super Nintendo World area | Full day |
| Kuromon Ichiba Market | Covered food market — great for grazing your way through lunch | 1–2 hours |
Eat your way through Dotonbori
This is the district that gave Japan its love of over-the-top illuminated signs (the giant mechanical crab is the famous one), and it's built almost entirely around eating standing up, street by street. Takoyaki (grilled octopus balls) and okonomiyaki (a savory cabbage pancake) both originated in Osaka, and this is where to try them at their best.
Osaka is famous across Japan for 'kuidaore' — roughly, 'eat until you go broke' — and Dotonbori is where that reputation was earned. Skip the sit-down restaurant on night one and just graze stall to stall instead; it's cheaper and more fun.
Using Osaka as your Kansai base
| Day trip | Travel time from Osaka |
|---|---|
| Kyoto | ~15 minutes by Shinkansen or ~45 min by local train |
| Nara | ~45 minutes by train |
| Kobe | ~20 minutes by train |
| Himeji (for Himeji Castle) | ~35 minutes by Shinkansen |
Mistakes worth avoiding
- Standing on the left side of the escalator out of Tokyo habit — Osaka (uniquely in Japan) stands on the right.
- Skipping Osaka entirely in favor of extra Kyoto or Tokyo nights — it's cheaper, less touristy, and arguably has better food than both.
- Booking Universal Studios Japan tickets on arrival — popular days and the Super Nintendo World timed-entry passes sell out; book online in advance.
Where to stay in Osaka — hotels
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