The JR
Pass is a discounted railway ticket that allows for almost unlimited travel on
trains (including the bullet train) in Japan for a set number of time, usually one or two weeks. It is only
available to buy in advance outside Japan (either online or via travel agent)
and it is for foreign tourists to Japan.
It is
not for people who live/work in Japan. It is not available to buy
in Japan.
A 7-day pass is about 29,000 yen and considering the return trip from Tokyo - Kyoto is 26,000 this pass can offer absolutely huge discounts. This is probably also why foreigners coming to Japan for work are so desperately blind to the fact it's unavailable to them. It's hard to accept that you have to pay regular Japanese prices and be bankrupted each train you take.
Anyway, since this is such
a recurrent issue with so many people I thought I'd post about it
again in case someone has missed it.
The
hugely misleading headline of this article from April 2016 led many to believe that you can now buy the JR Pass in Japan.
But if
they had actually read the article, they would have seen that what it actually says
is “Japan Railways Group (JR Group) plans to make
the value-for-money passes available to visitors....”. The key words in
the sentence being plans and visitors.
So if
you’re coming to Japan on JET or with another English teaching company/just to
work in general/live here and do nothing, no you still can’t get the pass.
And
if you have people coming to visit, for now they still have to buy online in
advance, and with my inside knowledge of Japanese bureaucracy it’s likely to remain
that way for the foreseeable future.
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