I would like to bring a different approach and give an idea of how low one can go in terms of cost. Note that this is not meant to be a comfortable way of travelling, simply a very cheap one. Prices are estimates in USD. Naturally, all this applies mostly only to major cities like Tokyo, Osaka or Nagoya.
Sleeping
(Check out this question for more info):
Food:
Transit:
Entertainment:
(If you are a university student like me, take your student card, it is accepted in many places for a substantial discount.)
In conclusion, in the worst of worst scenarios and with amazing planning, you could technically get by with as low as $5-10/day or less than $100 for two weeks. Needless to say, that would suck (a lot), you would be eating lots of only white rice and sleeping in some sketchy spots, but it should be doable for the more adventurously inclined.
A much more reasonable yet still low amount is around $50-100/day ($700-1400 for two weeks), with that, you should be able to have a fun vacation and not be bothered too much by the restrictions.
My friend and I stayed one month in Japan and we spent an average of $150/day with no privations whatsoever. Of course, we were not staying in fancy ryokan every night, but it was very enjoyable and I eat a lot.
You simply have to make decisions accordingly.
While (as I commented above) this is highly subjective, let me give you some general calculation:
Your 3000 EUR are roughly 390’000 Yen.
The very very decent version
I chose the Mitsui Ginza Hotel for location and took the smallest single room there for 15’500 per day (16’500 on Sundays) for overall 218’000 Yen.
If have breakfast in a Sarbucks you spend about 1000 Yen, so another 14’000 Yen is gone. Let’s take 1’500 Yen for lunch, so 21’000 Yen for the week and good quality 8’000 Yen for dinner in average which makes 112’000 Yen. All in all this will make 365’000 Yen. This will leave you with 25’000 Yen for subways and souvenirs etc.
The issue here is that you might run into taking taxis (no trains late at night) which are somewhat expensive and other stuff, so you might run into a shortage in the end. Careful planning is important on this budget. Also taxes etc might be a very tight fit for this but if you manage your costs properly and balance a bit for some days you can have a very decent high-class stay in Japan for 3k Eur.
The budget version
Cheaper version would be a cheaper hotel like the Sakura hotel chain for about 6’000 a night coming to 86’000 for the 14 nights.Breakfast at a convenience store for 500 Yen (7’000), a budget lunch for another 1’000 (14’000) and a much more reasonable dinner for 5’000 (70’000) will get you there with 177’000 Yen spent.
You can check some average prices in restaurants here and Convenience stores to get an overview.
Note: There is no weekly pass for Tokyo Metros. The minimum is 1 month and costs 17’300 Yen – which does not make sense for you.
3000€ living expenses for two weeks, let alone one week, is definitely too much unless you really want to live in luxury. Decent, low-end hotel prices start at about 5000yen per night, 7000 should get you something perfectly OK – that is about 760€ for two weeks, not including possible bargain rates for long-term stays. And transportation and food isn’t that expensive either. I’d say that for two weeks a total budget of 3000€ including the flight is more than adequate, and 2500€ doable.
Credit:stackoverflow.com‘
4 Mar, 2024
5 Mar, 2024