The JR Pass price has increased significantly since 2023, and many travelers are now asking: is it still worth buying? The answer depends entirely on your itinerary. We break down the math for the most popular routes — Tokyo to Kyoto, day trips to Nikko, and the Osaka–Hiroshima loop — so you can decide with real numbers, not guesswork.

What changed in 2023?

In October 2023, JR Group raised the price of the JR Pass for the first time in decades. The 7-day pass went from ¥50,000 to around ¥70,000 (prices vary depending on when you purchase and where). This was a roughly 40% increase — significant enough that the math no longer works out for shorter or more localized trips.

Current JR Pass prices (2026)

Prices fluctuate slightly with exchange rates, but as of 2026 the approximate costs are:

💡 Note: The JR Pass must be purchased before arriving in Japan (or at designated offices at major airports on arrival). You cannot buy it once you're already in Japan at a regular ticket window.

The math: Tokyo–Kyoto–Osaka loop (7 days)

This is the classic first-timer itinerary. Here's what individual tickets would cost:

The 7-day pass costs ~¥70,000. For just this loop, you'd only be using ¥28,230 worth of it — meaning the pass is NOT worth it for this itinerary alone.

When the pass IS worth it

The JR Pass starts making financial sense when you're doing a lot of shinkansen travel across multiple regions. It's worth considering if your itinerary includes:

Alternatives to the JR Pass

For many Tokyo–Kyoto–Osaka itineraries, you're better off with:

🇯🇵 Our take: The JR Pass used to be an easy yes. Now it requires actual math. We help our clients calculate this as part of our itinerary service — if you want us to run the numbers for your specific trip, just reach out.