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Nara, Japan
Nara

Kansai

Nara

Kansai's easiest big day trip: aim for Kintetsu Nara, walk up to the free-roaming deer and the Great Buddha at Todai-ji, then loop Kasuga Taisha and Naramachi before a late train back.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 7 Jun 2026

Best length

Day trip; one night for early starts

From Kyoto

Kintetsu express ~45 min, about ยฅ760 (ยฃ4)

From Osaka

Kintetsu Namba ~40 min, about ยฅ680 (ยฃ3.60)

Aim for

Kintetsu Nara station, not JR Nara

In short

Nara at a glance

Nara is Japan's first permanent capital and the easiest big day trip in Kansai: aim for Kintetsu Nara station, walk straight up to Nara Park for the free-roaming deer and the Great Buddha at Todai-ji, then loop in Kasuga Taisha and Naramachi before catching a late-afternoon train back. Most people do it as a day from Kyoto or Osaka; an overnight only pays off if you want the park empty at dawn.

The short version

  • Book the Kintetsu line, not JR: Kintetsu Nara station is a 5-minute walk from the park, while JR Nara leaves you a 20-minute slog or a bus away.
  • The deer are the free part; Todai-ji's Great Buddha hall costs about ยฅ800 (roughly ยฃ4.20) and is the one paid ticket worth the queue.
  • A full day covers Todai-ji, the deer, Kasuga Taisha's lantern paths and a Naramachi lunch without rushing.
  • Buy deer crackers (shika senbei) from a licensed vendor at about ยฅ200; bow first and the deer often bow back, then mob you, so hold them low.
  • Stay overnight only to walk the park before the day-trippers arrive or to catch Kasuga Taisha's lantern festivals in February or August.

Nara was Japanโ€™s first permanent capital, and for a city of its size it carries an outsized concentration of the countryโ€™s oldest temples โ€” most of them within a single walkable park. The pull is twofold: Todai-jiโ€™s Great Buddha, a 15-metre bronze figure inside one of the largest wooden halls on earth, and the roughly 1,200 sika deer that wander the park freely, bow for crackers, and mug visitors who left a map sticking out of a pocket. It is genuinely easy to do well, which is why itโ€™s the standard day trip from Kyoto and Osaka rather than a base in its own right.

The one decision that shapes your day is the train. Aim for Kintetsu Nara station, not JR Nara: the Kintetsu terminus sits in the centre, five minutes from the deer, while JR Nara leaves you a twenty-minute walk or a bus away on the wrong side of town. The exception is a JR Pass, which makes the JR line free and worth the extra legwork. Once youโ€™re off the train itโ€™s a walking trip โ€” flat from the station to the deer, then a gentle climb to Todai-ji and the lantern-lined approach to Kasuga Taisha.

A full day covers the Great Buddha, the deer, Kasuga Taisha and a slow lunch through Naramachiโ€™s wooden lanes without feeling rushed. Staying overnight only earns its keep in two cases: you want the park to yourself at dawn before the coaches arrive, or youโ€™re timing a visit to Kasuga Taishaโ€™s lantern festivals in February or August. Below, the structured planning โ€” what to book, whatโ€™s free, how to get in, and a realistic budget in pounds โ€” picks up from here.

Keep a first trip focused: book the big timed sights, then leave room for neighbourhoods and food.

Top things to do in Nara

Tลdai-ji

No advance booking needed โ€” pay the ยฅ800 (about ยฃ4.20) Daibutsuden fee at the door and walk straight in, which makes Tลdai-ji an easy half-day from Kyoto or Osaka. Go for the building as much as the bronze: the Great Buddha Hall is one of the world's largest wooden structures, and the 15-metre Buddha inside is the point. Allow about an hour for the hall itself, longer if you climb to Nigatsu-dล for the view over Nara.

About 45 minutes tโ€ฆ ยฃ4.20

Nara Park

Nara Park is free, fenced by nothing and open around the clock, so the only thing you buy is a ยฅ200 bundle of deer crackers (shika senbei, about 90p) to feed the roughly 1,400 wild sika deer that roam it โ€” a record number, and still rising. The bowing trick is real โ€” show a cracker, bow, and most deer dip their heads back before they take it โ€” but so are the bite, butt and head-tug warnings on the signs, especially in the Octoberโ€“November rut. Come between 7 and 9am before the Kyoto and Osaka coaches arrive, allow two to three hours, and pair it with paid entry to Tลdai-ji and its Great Buddha next door.

Two to three hoursโ€ฆ
No tickets required Read the guide

Where to stay first

The areas that make a first visit easier โ€” not an exhaustive directory.

Around Kintetsu Nara station

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The obvious base if you do stay over: a 5-minute walk to the park, the most hotels and the quickest train back to Kyoto or Osaka. Not atmospheric, but it saves you time on a tight schedule.

Best for: Convenience, late trains, first-timers

Browse hotels 5 min walk to park

Naramachi

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The old merchant quarter of wooden townhouses, small craft shops and machiya guesthouses. The reason to sleep in Nara at all: you get the lanes to yourself in the evening once the day-trippers have gone.

Best for: Atmosphere, slow evenings, couples

Browse hotels 10-15 min walk to park

Near JR Nara station

ยฃ value

Cheaper business hotels and one well-known onsen hotel, but you're 20 minutes' walk or a bus from the park. Fine if you're arriving by JR Pass and leaving early; otherwise the Kintetsu side is better placed.

Best for: JR Pass holders, budget stays

Browse hotels 20 min walk to park

Airport to city centre

Nara airport transfer options
OptionTimeCostBook ahead?
Kintetsu express from Kyoto ~45 min about ยฅ760 (ยฃ4) Arrives central Kintetsu Nara; pay on tap
Kintetsu limited express from Kyoto ~35 min about ยฅ1,250 (ยฃ6.60) Reserved seat, faster but pricier
Kintetsu rapid express from Osaka-Namba ~40 min about ยฅ680 (ยฃ3.60) Best Osaka option; central arrival
JR Yamatoji rapid from Osaka or JR Nara line from Kyoto ~45-50 min about ยฅ720-ยฅ810; free with JR Pass Only worth it with a JR Pass
Pre-book a door-to-door transfer

When to go

Sweet spot: Late October to early December for the maple colour around Isuien and Kasuga Taisha, and late March to April for cherry blossom in the park. These are the views worth flying for, but they're also the busiest weeks, so go on a weekday and start early.

Summer is hot, humid and busy; the deer seek shade and the midday park is sweaty. Winter is quiet and cheap, with the bonus of the Kasuga Taisha lantern festival in early February (also held in mid-August). Spring and autumn are the peak for both crowds and scenery.

What it costs

There are no direct UK flights to Nara; you fly to Kansai (KIX) for Osaka or to Tokyo and transfer. UK-Japan returns are typically ยฃ600-ยฃ900 booked ahead, more in spring and autumn peak. Nara itself is a train ride on top, not a separate flight.

Daily budget per person

Sample trip: A day trip to Nara from Kyoto costs very little on top of your base: roughly ยฃ8-ยฃ14 return on the Kintetsu line, about ยฃ4 for the Great Buddha, a couple of pounds of deer crackers, and ยฃ8-ยฃ15 for a Naramachi lunch. Call it ยฃ25-ยฃ40 for the day before souvenirs.

Nara is one of the cheaper days in a Kansai trip because the deer park and most shrine approaches are free. The temptation is to pay into every hall; you really only need Todai-ji's Great Buddha unless gardens or treasure halls are your thing.

Book the essentials

Where to stay

Browse staysvia Booking.com

Tours & tickets

Book tours & ticketsvia GetYourGuide

Airport transfers

Pre-book a transfervia Welcome Pickups

Stay connected

Get an eSIMvia Airalo

Trains & rail passes

Book railvia Trainline

Also in Japan

See the full Japan guide

Nara FAQs

Is Nara worth an overnight or just a day trip?
For most people a day trip from Kyoto or Osaka is enough; the main sights fit comfortably into one day. Stay over only if you want the deer park to yourself before the coaches arrive, or to catch the lantern festivals at Kasuga Taisha.
Should I take the JR or Kintetsu train to Nara?
Take Kintetsu unless you have a JR Pass. Kintetsu Nara station sits in the city centre, about 5 minutes from the park, while JR Nara is a 20-minute walk or a bus ride further west. With a JR Pass the JR line is free, which tips the balance.
Are the Nara deer safe to feed?
Generally yes, but they're wild animals that have learned humans carry crackers. Buy shika senbei from a licensed vendor, hold them out of reach until you're ready, feed quickly, and keep loose paper, maps and food in your bag โ€” they will headbutt and nibble for more.

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