The 15-Day Drive That Crosses Three Japans, and the One Detail That Decides Whether It Works

By Samurai Cmapers · Pickup: Tokyo branch · Return: Tokyo branch · Last driven: January 2026 · Reviewed: March 2026

Quick stats
2890km trip distance
14 day roadtrip
Mid size Camper Van ( up to 3 people) / Mini Camper van (Up to 2 people) / Hiace Extra-large campervan ( Up to 7 people) recommended

There is a small thing nobody tells you about driving across Honshu from coast to coast: the country has two completely separate climates, and they’re divided by a mountain range. The Pacific side Tokyo, Kamakura, Izu, Shizuoka has dry winters, warm summers, the weather most foreign visitors associate with Japan. The Sea of Japan side Kanazawa, Fukui, Niigata has the heaviest snowfall of any inhabited region on Earth. Niigata’s coastal stations average over 200 snow days in a hard winter. Tokyo averages fewer than 10.

This 15-day route makes that contrast the trip’s main idea, instead of an inconvenience. You drive from one climate zone to the other, through the mountains that separate them, and back. The landscape, food, building styles, and even the rhythm of daily life shift visibly across the country. If you’re planning a Japan road trip and want to see why people argue ‘Japan’ is actually three or four different countries, this is the route.

Pickup and return at our Tokyo branch. The camper van cost guide for Japan has rough budget numbers if you’re still in the planning stage.

A coast-to-coast Honshu campervan route from Tokyo to the Sea of Japan and back works well in 14–16 days. The route crosses the Japan Alps via Matsumoto and Takayama. The most scenic versions return via Kanazawa and the Hokuriku coast rather than retracing the inland route.

The three zones, and why they actually matter

Zone 1 Pacific coast

Tokyo, Kamakura, Shonan, Izu, Suruga Bay, Shizuoka. Ocean air. Mount Fuji visible from sea level on clear days. Mild winter, humid summer. The Japan most foreign visitors recognise.

Zone 2 Central mountain interior

Fuji Five Lakes, Kofu, Yatsugatake, Matsumoto, Kamikochi access, Takayama. Elevation 500–1,600 m. Temperatures drop 10°C or more between Tokyo and Takayama on the same day in October. Snow is possible from mid-October onward. This is the hardest driving section of the route.

Zone 3 Sea of Japan side

Toyama Bay, Kanazawa, Fukui, Echizen. Heavy snowfall in winter the geography traps moisture coming off the Sea of Japan against the mountains. Food culture leans toward seafood and pickling. Architecture features heavy snow-shedding roof designs (the same engineering logic as Shirakawa-go’s gassho-zukuri houses).

 

The Sea of Japan side and the Pacific side have such different winters that Japanese weather forecasters treat them as separate regions. Niigata coastal stations can record 4–5 metres of cumulative winter snowfall. Tokyo, on the other side of the same mountain range, sometimes records zero.

Route at a glance

Tokyo → Kamakura → Shonan → Izu / Suruga Bay → Fuji Five Lakes → Kofu → Yatsugatake → Matsumoto → Kamikochi → Takayama → Toyama Bay → Kanazawa → Echizen Coast → Lake Biwa → Kiso Valley → Shizuoka → Tokyo

  • Duration: 15 days, circular from Tokyo
  • Best season: Late April to late June, or late September to early November. Avoid Sea of Japan side November–March unless you specifically want winter coast.
  • Recommended vehicle:
    • Mini Campervans:Ideal for Tokyo, Shonan, Kamakura, and narrow streets
    • Mid-Size Campervans:Best for mountain roads, Kofu, Yatsugatake, and Fuji Five Lakes
      Mini Campervans | Mid-Size Campervans
  •  
  • Hardest section: Matsumoto to Takayama (Day 7–8). Mountain roads, altitude, possible snow even in shoulder seasons.
 

Road trip map

Tokyo pickup, Tokyo Bay overnight

Day 1

Collect from the Tokyo branch. First-day setup as usual. Don’t try to do sightseeing that’s tomorrow.

Day 1 overnight: Odaiba Seaside Park Campground ¥3,000/nigh

Drive southwest. Kamakura is the first real day. The temples are walkable from each other; the Great Buddha (Kotoku-in) is the headline; Tsurugaoka Hachimangu is the political-historical centre this was Japan’s effective capital from 1185 to 1333. Park outside the temple districts and walk.

Day 2 overnight: Shonan Coast RV Park ¥4,200/night

Kamakura and Shonan

Day 2

Izu edge and Suruga Bay

Day 3

Move along the Pacific coast toward Numazu and the Suruga Bay area. On a clear day, the view of Mount Fuji from across Suruga Bay is one of the best you’ll get at sea level the mountain rises directly from the coastal plain, with no foothills in between.

Suruga Bay is also Japan’s deepest bay (2,500 m at the deepest point), which is why the sea life here is unusual deep-sea species like sakura ebi and aka-ebi are caught nowhere else commercially. The seafood markets at Numazu and Yui are worth a long lunch.

Day 3 overnight: Suruga Bay Campground ¥3,900/night

The first climate shift. Drive inland and you’ll feel the temperature drop within an hour. The Fuji Five Lakes sit at 800–900 metres elevation, surrounded by forest. Nights are cool even in summer.

Use the Mount Fuji tour guide for specific viewpoint and parking notes. Don’t plan around photography Mount Fuji is visible on only about a third of days in summer.

Day 4 overnight: Kawaguchiko Lakeside Campground ¥3,800/night

Inland to Fuji Five Lakes

Day 4

Kofu, Yatsugatake highlands

Day 5

Kofu

Continue inland through Yamanashi Prefecture. Kofu is the prefectural capital and a wine region Yamanashi grapes (Koshu variety, in particular) have been cultivated here since the 8th century. The Koshu wine industry is small but interesting.

Yatsugatake is the highland section. Volcanic peaks, mountain basins, agricultural villages at altitude. The climate change continues by evening you’ll want layers you didn’t need at the coast.

Day 5 overnight: Yatsugatake RV Park / Kofu Area Campground ¥4,200/night

The Japan Alps base. Matsumoto Castle is one of five original castles in Japan (never destroyed and rebuilt). The black exterior gives it the local name ‘Crow Castle.’ One hour for the castle itself, more if you want to walk the moat and the old castle town.

Use Matsumoto as a logistics stop. Restock, do laundry, check weather forecasts for the mountain section ahead. The next two days are the hardest driving on the route.

Day 6 overnight: Matsumoto RV Park ¥4,300/night

Matsumoto

Day 6

Kamikochi access and Hirayu

Day 7

Kamikochi is closed to private vehicles year-round. Park at Sawando or Hirayu and take the shuttle bus about 30 minutes. The valley itself is the Japan Alps’ most famous walking area, sitting at 1,500 m surrounded by 3,000 m peaks.

The Hirayu Onsen area, on the western side, has some of the better onsen options on the route. Worth an evening soak.

In cherry blossom season (late March to early April) and autumn foliage week (late October to early November), Hakone campgrounds book out 6–8 weeks ahead. If you’re travelling those weeks, plan accordingly or stage from Odawara instead.
Day 7 overnight: Hirayu Onsen Campground ¥4,500/night

This is the day the route earns its name. You drive from the alpine interior, through Takayama, down toward Toyama Bay. The landscape shifts from inland mountain culture to Sea of Japan coast within about three hours of driving. Food culture changes. Architecture changes. The light, oddly, changes too the Sea of Japan side has a different sky.

If you’ve never driven from one side of Japan to the other in a single day, you’ll feel the country actually contains more than one country.

Takayama itself deserves a few hours old streets, morning market, Hida beef. Don’t skip it just because you’re in a hurry to reach the coast. Then continue north toward Toyama. Plan to arrive in daylight.

Day 8 overnight: Toyama Bay Camper Park ¥4,200/night

Takayama to Toyama Bay: the route's hinge

Day 8

Toyama Bay

Day 9

Toyama Bay’s signature catches are firefly squid (hotaru-ika, in season March–May) and white shrimp (shiroebi, only commercially harvested in Toyama Bay). If you’re here in firefly squid season, the bioluminescent shoals at night are genuinely strange. Toyama also has its own ramen variant Toyama black ramen, made with a heavy soy base.

Where to eat: 

  • Firefly squid (hotaru-ika) and white shrimp (shiroebi).
  • Try Toyama Sushi-ya Shiroebi Kaisendon specialty

Day 9 overnight: Toyama City RV Park / Himi Campground ¥4,100/night

Kanazawa is one of Japan’s most complete traditional cities it escaped both Tokyo’s modernisation push and the WWII bombings. Kenroku-en garden is the headline, but the Higashi Chaya district (preserved geisha quarter), the Omicho fish market, and the Nagamachi samurai district are all walkable from the centre.

This is a walking city. Park at a peripheral lot and don’t try to drive the centre. Kanazawa’s old streets were laid out before cars, and they still feel like it.

Day 10 overnight: Kanazawa Castle RV Park ¥4,500/night

Kanazawa

Day 10

Fukui and the Echizen coast

Day 11
Continue southwest along the Sea of Japan. The Echizen coast is quieter than the Hokuriku tourist circuit rugged coastline, traditional fishing villages, and Echizen crab in winter (in season November to March). If you’re here in winter, the crab is reason enough for the whole route. The Sea of Japan coastline often feels more local and less tourist-shaped than the Pacific side. Worth a slower pace. Day 11 overnight: Fukui Coastal Campground ¥4,200/night

Inland to Lake Biwa

Day 12

Turn inland toward Lake Biwa, Japan’s largest freshwater lake. This starts the return across central Honshu. Lake Biwa is a useful staging point quiet campgrounds, restocking options, and the option to add a Kyoto edge day if you want one.

Don’t drive a campervan through central Kyoto. The Japan driving guide has notes on city parking.

Day 12 overnight: Lake Biwa Riverside Campground ¥4,000/night

Kiso Valley and Nakasendo post towns

Day 13

Drive into the Kiso Valley for the historic inland return. Tsumago and Magome are the two best-preserved post towns on the old Nakasendo highway the inland alternative to the Tokaido. They’re connected by a 9 km walking path through the mountains that’s been a tourist route since at least the 1970s. Most people walk one direction and take the bus back.

Tsumago does not allow cars on its main street during daytime. Park at the designated lots outside the preservation zone and walk.

Day 13 overnight: Kiso Valley RV Park ¥4,300/night

Return to Shizuoka, Pacific side again

Day 14

Drive back toward the Pacific. The climate loop closes you’re back in the dry, mild zone you started in. If the weather is clear, you’ll get final Mount Fuji views from the Shizuoka-side roads.

Use this day to wind down. Clean the vehicle. Restock for the final day.

Day 14 overnight: Shizuoka Lakeview Campground ¥4,100/night

Return to Tokyo

Day 15

Final drive. The Tomei expressway from Shizuoka back to Tokyo is straightforward but plan for traffic the approach into Tokyo on a Sunday afternoon can add an hour.

Return to our Tokyo branch with buffer time for inspection.

Journey Japan Your Way, Stop Anywhere

Pickup and return at our Tokyo branch. Mid-size models handle the mountain section better than the larger rigs. Browse the fleet, or contact us for route-specific advice.

By Samurai Cmapers · Pickup: Tokyo branch · Return: Tokyo branch · Last driven: January 2026 · Reviewed: March 2026

Have Questions?

Coast-to-Coast Japan Road Trip Questions Answered

Read our FAQ sections, we have collected the most asked questions.
Is Kanazawa worth visiting in winter?

Yes, but plan for snow. Kanazawa is beautiful under snow Kenroku-en in particular has a winter aesthetic that’s part of why the garden is famous. But mountain roads toward Takayama or Shirakawa-go can require chains or close entirely. Check road conditions before driving inland.

Yes, but only as a separate transit day from Toyama or Matsumoto. The Alpine Route uses public transport you cannot drive across it. Plan an extra day and an early start.

Fifteen days fits it well. Fourteen can work if you keep the pace tight, and 16 gives you more breathing room for weather, mountain driving, and longer stops in places like Kanazawa or Takayama. Anything much shorter starts to turn the route into a checklist.

Season matters most. Late April to late June, and late September to early November, are the safest windows for a comfortable run across Honshu, especially once you hit the mountain section between Matsumoto and Takayama. In winter, the Sea of Japan side gets heavy snow, and the same roads can need chains or close outright.

A mid-size campervan is the better all-round choice if you want the mountain section to feel manageable. A mini campervan is easier in Tokyo, Kamakura, and other narrow streets, but it gives up some comfort on the longer drives. If your group is small and you care more about city access than space, the mini can make sense.

You can’t drive private vehicles into Kamikochi. Park at Sawando or Hirayu, then use the shuttle bus for the valley. That’s a normal part of the trip, not a problem with the route.

You can, but not as a drive across the Alpine Route. Tateyama Kurobe uses public transport, so it has to be treated as a separate transit day from Toyama or Matsumoto. If you want it included, budget an extra day and start early.

It is, if you’re ready for snow and shorter days. Kanazawa handles winter travel better than the mountain roads leading into it, but the real issue is getting there safely from the Takayama side. If the forecast looks rough, keep your route flexible and don’t force the pass.

 
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