oku japan tour reviews

Guided , Self-guided

Home » Oku Japan

Oku Japan is a UK owned company that focuses solely on self-guided and guided walking holidays in Japan. While the sales team is based in the UK, their primary office is in Kyoto and they have a sub-branch in Tsumago (along the Nakasendo Way) and Chikatsuyu (Kumano Kodo). Most of their trips are inn to inn hiking but some include self-driving tours and a multi-sport island trip.

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  • Trusted Walks

Review of Oku Japan

Oku Japan’s site does an excellent job keeping their multinational audience in mind. You can easily switch between six major currencies. Their information on Japan is succinct and includes further reading for those who want more. They provide all the important details for daily walks (including elevation) and they list sample accommodations. We would love to see some photos of these accommodations, but what’s most important is that they do an excellent job explaining the types of lodging one can expect and the etiquette that’s involved.

SPECIAL NOTE: Communal bathing (separated by gender) is common and luggage transfers are a little different for inn to inn hiking in Japan so read carefully and ask questions.

Things to like about Oku Japan

  • Consistent 5-star reviews on Responsible Travel
  • Trusted company used by larger companies like Responsible Travel and KimKim
  • Dinners and train tickets from Kyoto or Tokyo are included; some lunches included
  • Add some of their Experiences for a more authentic, deeper experience
  • Local support provided
  • Actively supports the rural communities in which they operate

Oku Japan’s competitor, Walk Japan , has similar itineraries and pricing but Oku Japan offers more self-guided options. For this reason Oku Japan earns our Local Choice for self-guided walking holidays in Japan. They earn our Trusted Walks because we hiked their Kumano Kodo tour in March 2024.

Route Types

  • Inn to inn hiking

Destinations include

Great choice for.

  • Anyone wanting walking holidays in Japan, especially self-guided options

Established in 2005

last reviewed May 29, 2024

Find our stories and photos of hiking with Oku Japan at Beyond the Trail: Food and Friendship on the Kumano Kodo .

  • Local Choice
  • Multi-Activity

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oku japan tour reviews

  • THE JOURNEY

Oku Japan’s ‘Winter Nakasendo Trail’ Offers a Unique Way to Discover the Country’s Hidden Gems

By foot or by snowshoe, enjoy a magical perspective on this winter escape

Winter Nakasendo Trail Asia

This winter, Kyoto-based tour operator  Oku Japan  is offering a unique way to go off the beaten path. The small group, guided  Winter Nakasendo Trail  tour invites visitors to walk or snowshoe village to village on the loveliest part of the famed Nakasendo Trail, which linked Kyoto and Tokyo during Japan’s feudal period.

It was the ‘road through the mountains’ followed by feudal lords and their retinues, samurai warriors, merchants, and travelers, along which there were 69 ‘post towns’, where people could stop and rest before continuing the next leg of their journeys. On this tour, guests spend five days walking along the loveliest parts of the trail, enjoying the peace and serenity of the winter landscapes. Depending on the depth of the snow, guests will use snowshoes to follow the route.

Traveling along quiet village roads and unpaved hill trails, this eight-day itinerary starts in Kyoto and visits Nakatsugawa, Magome, Tsumago, Kiso Fukushima, Narai, and Kiso Hirasawa, before wrapping up in Tokyo. Along the way, travelers will discover Edo-Period towns, charming villages, cedar forests, temples, museums, castles, and more, staying overnight in traditional country inns, enjoying fresh, regional cuisine, and soaking in natural thermal Onsen hot springs along the way.

Considered an ‘active’ walking tour, there are dedicated days of walking, ranging from one to three hours long, with some ascent and/or descent. Available December through March, currently there are spaces available on the Jan. 27 and Feb. 14, 2023  departures .

With a maximum of 13 people in any group, Oku Japan’s fluently bilingual guides ensure guests enjoy rich, meaningful experiences from start to finish. Oku’s itineraries steer clear of the classic tourism haunts and the on-the-bus/off-the-bus style of travel, with carefully crafted itineraries and interactions that encourage guests to get up close and personal with the places visit and people they meet along the way, putting tourist dollars to good use in remote, local communities.

To learn more about this tour, along with Oku Japan’s complete line-up of year-round offerings of guided and self-guided* tours, please visit  www.okujapan.com .

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10 Questions With Oku Japan Tours

10 Questions With Oku Japan Tours Travel map

We at Pogogi are very pleased to have done an interview with Oku Japan .  Oku Japan operates guided, self-guided and custom tours around Japan. They are launching a new tour that involves Japanese Food! Please read on and enjoy this wonderful interview.

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1. Can you tell us about your new guided tour “Japan's Culinary Heritage” and how it all came together?

In Japan, food is the best way to engage with local lifestyles and to gain an in-depth experience of regional culture, the daily life of Japanese communities, and individual inhabitants. We truly believe there is much more to experience than the ordinary food encountered on most standard itineraries. We decided to use our knowledge and our local connections to offer travellers a unique culinary adventure as a way to know Japan and its people through some of the best-kept culinary traditions. This tour really relies on the local people we personally know!

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2. Which of your Guided packages do you anticipate to be the most popular in the next few years?

In general, we see a trend in the adventure travel industry towards shorter trips. People are seeking immersive experiences, and highly customized itineraries. While scheduled tours remain popular, more and more clients are looking for flexible dates so they can travel with friends, family or their special-interest groups. Our Nakasendo Trail tour is our best-selling product at the moment. We hope our culinary tour will match its popularity! We have scheduled departures, but we can offer private trips and can customize tour elements depending on clients’ requirements.

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3. Oku Japan’s tours include overnight stays in Japanese inns. Can you describe what makes staying at an inn in Japan so special?

Staying in a traditional Japanese inn is a highlight of any journey in Japan. Many inns are in charming historic buildings, and all focus on providing a personal service. The classic Japanese inn, the Ryokan, comes in many styles but all are united by flawless service and exquisitely-prepared food. Ryokan may be in modern or traditional wooden buildings, but rooms are always Japanese style, with Tatami (straw mat) floors and futons for sleeping laid out in the evening by the Ryokan staff. Minshuku are similar to Ryokan but family-run and with less formal service. Each Ryokan prides itself on its cuisine, featuring local ingredients freshly prepared each day. Meals usually consist of many different courses, with a great variety of dishes.

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4. What can you offer to Japanese Food lovers?

There are many good reasons to travel in Japan, but food has to be one of the most compelling. One of the highlights of our tours is to taste real, home-made Japanese food. Our guests need to be prepared for the freshest of produce! Fish, chicken, pork, rice, miso soup, tofu and vegetables are at the heart of many meals. We crafted our Japan’s Culinary Heritage tour in order to show travellers how food is the most intimate way to uncover Japanese culture. In Japan, food reflects the daily life of Japanese community, and our tour is the best introduction to the country travellers can get.

5. How is your Tour Company different from others?

Our main office is in Kyoto, with additional members of the team based in the UK. We also have a branch office – which is also a Minshuku inn – in the village of Chikatsuyu, along the Kumano Kodo Pilgrimage Trail. This means we have unparalleled connections with the local communities our tours explore, and we can provide a 24/7 local support to our guests. Being part of the community allows us to craft itineraries that take people to places they would not be able to visit if we weren’t there. In addition to our guided tours, we also offer self-guided walking tours and we were the first tour operator to offer self-guided walking tour on the Nakasendo trail. We are the first and only tour operator in the world to offer self-guided walking tours on the Shikoku 88 Temple Pilgrimage Trail. We are proud of our staff with deep knowledge and passionate about Japan. Our staff members’ expertise makes our tours and our clients’ experience exceptional. We also have top-quality English-speaking guides.

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6. Which tour packages offer the best off-the-beaten path travel?

We try to strike a balance between comfortable travel and reaching destinations which require a degree more effort to discover. Some of our destinations are not visited by any other tour company, and that's because they are not suited to mass-market tourism. Our favourite inns may not have internet access or even their own website, but they have the freshest food and personal service you can't reproduce on a large scale.

7. Which Guided packages is recommended for someone who have never experience Japan before?

It all depends on clients’ interests. We offer an array of guided tours that can cater to different tastes. We focus on soft adventure, often with a walking discovery of the country, but we also offer more cultural tours with less walking. For those less interested in walking, our cultural tour Shoguns and Samurai is an ideal introduction to the country. It includes key destinations that are on many visitors ‘must see’ list. In addition to the historic treasure house of Kyoto, Takayama is a city of great cultural accomplishments and Shirakawago is a UNESCO World Heritage site with Gassho-zukuri farmhouses and unique living traditions.

8. What do Foreigners visiting Japan need to know to ensure a pleasant and enjoyable experience?

While Japanese culture and customs can be confusing at first, as a visitor from overseas you are generally not expected to understand them. In fact, many Japanese take a pride in the belief that their culture is extremely complex and impossible for outsiders to comprehend. You will likely be forgiven for any minor cultural gaffs you make.

1. Language – try to learn at least a few phrases. Japanese is not really so difficult, and there are few sounds that are challenging for a native English speaker to pronounce. Your efforts will be rewarded even with just a few words, and the Japanese will never make fun of your mistakes.

2. Shoes – make sure to remove your street shoes before entering Ryokan, Minshuku, temples, shrines, and some restaurants – anywhere that has a raised floor. Remove slippers before walking on Tatami straw matting. Lastly, change out of your normal slippers into the special toilet slippers at the entrance to the toilet. Use these slippers only within the toilet area and be sure to change back into your regular slippers on exiting the toilet.

3. The Japanese consider over-familiarity inappropriate, so hearty backslaps or hugs are best avoided if you have just met someone.

4. Topics such as the Imperial Family and Japan’s role in World War II are best avoided as they are still sensitive subjects in Japan.

9. How does the experience of a tourist in Japan today differ from that of 30 years ago?

Japan is now a far easier destination for overseas visitors than three decades ago. English signs abound and this makes navigation around cities and around the country far easier. Japanese people still tend to be shy about their spoken English ability, but their tradition of hospitality means that a polite request for assistance is usually met with great kindness and concern. Of course, modern technology is a great help, too!

IMG_5779 R- Oku Japan.jpg

10. What is the food scene in Japan like in 2017?

The Japanese eat out on average several times a week and the sheer number of restaurants, eateries, canteens and hole-in-the-wall snack bars is incredible. These restaurants can be found in stations, in underground shopping areas, the top floors of department stores, and along shopping arcades. Socialising in Japan nearly always involves eating out, as Japanese people rarely invite each other to their homes. More and more people have started to care about food and well-being. This means considering not only the taste of the food, but its source and whether it is environmentally friendly and locally produced. The impact of chemicals is of greater concern now; organic farming or minimal use of chemicals on food are becoming more important criteria in the food scene, a trend which mirrors similar movements in the west.

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Walk Japan vs Oku Japan

Tour companies compared.

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4.3   Great  

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5   Excellent  

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Reviews & Ratings

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4.3   Great 6 reviews  

Oku Japan logo

5   Excellent 3 reviews  

Recent Reviews

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had a wonderful time

My son (age 18) and I walked a self-guided route on the Nakasendo earlier this month and had a wonderful time. Walk Japan's arrangements were faultless and the hikin...

Oku Japan logo logo

Everything was perfect

We walked the self-guided Nakasendo Trail in October coordinated through Oku Japan. Everything was perfect, maps were easy to follow, accommodation was amazing and t...

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About Walk Japan

Walk Japan is an independent organisation offering a different vision of how to create and manage tours in Japan; how to provide service to our customers; and how to carry out our business as a whole.

Our Purpose

To provide the best tours, ones that set the benchmark for quality, available in Japan.

About Oku Japan

Oku Japan operates guided, self-guided and custom tours around Japan. Our main office is in Kyoto, and some of our sales staff are based in the UK. In spring 2015, Oku Japan opened a branch office in the village of Chikatsuyu, where we are proud to be part of the local community.

Our guides are professional, trained guides who are bilingual Japanese and English (as well as some who speak German or French) and have a deep knowledge of and passion for Japan's people, culture and history.

COMMENTS

  1. Our experience using Oku Japan for self-guided walking tours

    135 helpful votes. Our experience using Oku Japan for self-guided walking tours. 10 years ago. We did their Kumano Kodo and Nakasendo walks in late May 2014, back-to-back, as two self-guided tours. Each tour was about 36 miles of walking in 5 days. For the Kumano Kodo, the hiking effort was strenous, and moderate for the Nakasendo.

  2. Oku Japan Profile [2024]

    About the company. Oku Japan operates guided, self-guided and custom tours around Japan. Our main office is in Kyoto, and some of our sales staff are based in the UK. In spring 2015, Oku Japan opened a branch office in the village of Chikatsuyu, where we are proud to be part of the local community. Our guides are professional, trained guides ...

  3. Has anyone experienced Oku Japan's guided walking tours?

    9 years ago. Has anyone experienced one of Oku Japan's small group guided walking tours. I am looking at the Nakasendo Trail trip. I have been searching different travel companies (World Expeditions, G Adventures, etc.) and quite like this trip...I would feel better to read some reviews though. Thanks!

  4. Great tour with Oku Japan

    Review of Nakasendo Magome-juku. Reviewed August 2, 2015. Oku sorted our 3 night, 4 day walking trip out superbly. The walking was stunning, accommodation was basic but very nice and the Kaiseki dinners were stunning. Would be hard to organise this yourself, so we were really glad we did it through Oku.

  5. OKU Japan holidays & OKU Japan independent reviews

    Read OKU Japan independent reviews and make booking enquiries on responsible holidays. 19 holidays found Nikko and Yumoto Onsen walking tour, Japan ... Having cuisine at the core of a cultural tour of Japan certainly is a wonderful way to discover great cities such as Tokyo and Kyoto. As well as hidden rural villages and the extraordinary Awaji ...

  6. Oku Japan

    Oku Japan is a UK owned company that focuses solely on self-guided and guided walking holidays in Japan. While the sales team is based in the UK, their primary office is in Kyoto and they have a sub-branch in Tsumago (along the Nakasendo Way) and Chikatsuyu (Kumano Kodo). Most of their trips are inn to inn hiking but some include self-driving ...

  7. Rural Family Adventure: Treasur by Oku Japan

    Oku Japan operates guided, self-guided and custom tours around Japan. Our main office is in Kyoto, and some of our sales staff are based in the UK. In spring 2015, Oku Japan opened a branch office in the village of Chikatsuyu, where we are proud to be part of the local community.

  8. Oku Japan self guided tours

    Simply an amazing company. We did a self guided tour with Oku Japan of the Kumano Kodo in May 2014. Superior company. Don't hesitate using them - they are exceptional. Great trail notes, with options for shorter/longer hikes on many days. Super well organized. Simply but lovely accommodations. Amazing food.

  9. How to Discover Japan Without the Crowds: Oku Japan

    By Newsdesk Jun 1, 2023 12:33pm. Oku Japan Japan Tourism Tour Operators Walking Tours. Following a very busy cherry blossom season that saw hotels and guides in short supply, and demand already ...

  10. Nakasendo Way

    Nakasendo Magome-juku: Nakasendo Way - self guided - with Oku Japan - See 674 traveller reviews, 1,336 candid photos, and great deals for Nakatsugawa, Japan, at Tripadvisor.

  11. Oku Japan » Adventure.Travel

    We offer small-group guided and self-guided village-to-village hiking tours along Japan's network of historic trails, including cultural visits and city stays. Stay at family-run inns, dine on the best regional cuisine, and soak in wonderful local hot springs. With easy walking from 2-6 hours per day, and expert bilingual guides, Oku Japan ...

  12. Oku Japan

    Our self-guided and small-group guided tours are carefully crafted by a team of experts with a passion for Japan. Select a destination and get started on planning your Oku Japan adventure today. All destinations. A focus on getting away from the crowds & into the real Japan, thoughtfully created itineraries by those with a passion for Japan.

  13. Oku Japan's guests comments

    Guests give their comments about Oku Japan's tours.Read more reviews here: https://www.okujapan.com/about-us/testimonials/

  14. The Country's Hidden Gems Oku Japan

    This winter, Kyoto-based tour operator Oku Japan is offering a unique way to go off the beaten path. The small group, guided Winter Nakasendo Trail tour invites visitors to walk or snowshoe village to village on the loveliest part of the famed Nakasendo Trail, which linked Kyoto and Tokyo during Japan's feudal period.. It was the 'road through the mountains' followed by feudal lords and ...

  15. Self-guided Tours in Japan

    Japan Self-guided Tours. In 2010, Oku Japan pioneered self-guided walking tours in Japan's Kumano Kodo and Nakasendo regions. Since then we have continued to build on this strong foundation as leading experts in sustainable off-the-beaten-path self-guided tours in Japan, and now offer a range of tours featuring not only walking, but cycling ...

  16. Oku Japan self guided tours

    2. Re: Oku Japan self guided tours. Simply an amazing company. We did a self guided tour with Oku Japan of the Kumano Kodo in May 2014. Superior company. Don't hesitate using them - they are exceptional. Great trail notes, with options for shorter/longer hikes on many days. Super well organized.

  17. 10 Questions With Oku Japan Tours

    We at Pogogi are very pleased to have done an interview with Oku Japan . Oku Japan operates guided, self-guided and custom tours around Japan. They are launching a new tour that involves Japanese Food! Please read on and enjoy this wonderful interview. Advertisement. 1. Can you tell us about your new guided tour "Japan's Culinary Heritage ...

  18. Oku Japan Tours

    On Travelstride you can find 2 trips to Oku Japan and more than 20,000 trips worldwide ranging from budget to luxury and private guided to group tours and everything in between. Only on Stride can you find and compare expert-planned trips from 1,000+ tour operators, cruise lines and local experts. Read traveler and professional reviews so you ...

  19. Guided Tours in Japan

    Japan Guided Tours. Sign up as individual travelers and leave as lifelong friends on an Oku Japan small-group guided tour. With a maximum of 13 people in any group, our tours ensure you get the full attention of your local guide who themselves share a passion for Japan. Whether it's traditions, food, society or history, learn the ins and outs ...

  20. Oku Japan

    Oku Japan - Adventures off the beaten track, Tanabe, Wakayama. 24,517 likes · 3,461 talking about this. Let us show you off-the-beaten-track Japan.

  21. Japan's Culinary Heritage by Oku Japan

    Check Current Availability, prices, specials with. Oku Japan.The total tour cost includes the tour price (regular or promotional) and the compulsory local payment. The promotional price is subject to change. Check directly with the operator for the latest price offer. The tour operator requires you to pay only the tour price to purchase your ...

  22. Our experience using Oku Japan for self-guided walking tours

    135 helpful votes. Our experience using Oku Japan for self-guided walking tours. 10 years ago. We did their Kumano Kodo and Nakasendo walks in late May 2014, back-to-back, as two self-guided tours. Each tour was about 36 miles of walking in 5 days. For the Kumano Kodo, the hiking effort was strenous, and moderate for the Nakasendo.

  23. Walk Japan vs Oku Japan Compared

    About Oku Japan. Oku Japan operates guided, self-guided and custom tours around Japan. Our main office is in Kyoto, and some of our sales staff are based in the UK. In spring 2015, Oku Japan opened a branch office in the village of Chikatsuyu, where we are proud to be part of the local community. Our guides are professional, trained guides who ...