From one point of view, it is a remarkable success story. In 2000 Japan had 4.7 million foreign tourists a year. The government of the former prime minister Shinzo Abe set an ambitious goal of 20 million foreign visitors a year by 2020, and achieved it five years ahead of schedule.

After a pandemic slump, the foreign tourists are back in force: the Japan Travel Bureau, a travel agency, estimates that there will be more than 33 million foreign visitors this year, an all-time record, fuelled partly by the weak yen, which makes Japan remarkably cheap for those spending foreign currency.

The speed and volume of the surge has brought prosperity to tourist businesses large and small, including the one run by Sherlock; as many as 30 visitors a day were paying 6,000 yen (£30) each for his walking tours. But the sheer number of visitors has overwhelmed many places.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    81
    edit-2
    16 days ago

    Tourism has a limit. Too much and you overwhelm the culture you are there to see. It’s happened a lot in the US Parks the last few years and I’m happy to see popular foreign locations broadcast this. Heritage sites are important and may need to restrict the number of visitors. Much as I hate this.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      -415 days ago

      Sure, and if there were discussions of reducing all tourists, that would be great. But it’s just racism. Meh.

  • Jeena
    link
    fedilink
    4716 days ago

    We started to visit the other parts like Hokaido or Kumamoto and it’s wonderful there, I can only recommend instead over full Kyoto, Tokyo and Osaka.

    • enkers
      link
      fedilink
      2616 days ago

      Yes! Or if you keep going down south, you can go through Hiroshima to Fukuoka, then you can take the ferry over to Busan. There are sooooo many cool historic sites all over the place.

  • @MrsDoyle
    link
    1316 days ago

    Oh dear. I was planning to visit Japan in the autumn. Guess I will give it a swerve. Maybe Korea then? I haven’t flown anywhere since the Before Times and have a hankering for foreign travel.

    • @LastWish
      link
      1116 days ago

      I live in korea and recently visited Japan. Both countries are wonderful to visit.

      Went to Tokyo and Kyoto, the touristy spots were very busy. As long as you’re polite and respect Japanese social “rules”, it’s fine. And there’s plenty of other places to visit if Kyoto is too contentious right now.

      Korea also has a lot to offer in Seoul and Busan. It’s a short few hours and reasonably priced high speed train between the two cities.

      Plenty of other countries in the region to visit as well.

    • @Potatos_are_not_friends
      link
      915 days ago

      I went earlier this year. It was gorgeous.

      The tourist areas were shit. There’s a LOT of tourists treating the city like a playground. Trash everywhere. Loud idiots on the train.

      If you go and assume a respectful personality, you’ll be fine. Just don’t be the 10% who fuck around.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      415 days ago

      Depends when and where. Avoid summer or winter vacation. If you’re doing Kyoto, visit temples very early in the day to avoid crowds. Or perhaps find slightly less famous places.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      314 days ago

      Go visit in winter, it’s spectacular. Go away from where tourists go, it’s an incredibly intimate country to visit.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      215 days ago

      I was just in Japan a couple weeks ago. Kyoto was incredibly crowded at the tourist spots, but it was the peak of cherry blossoms so I expected it to be crowded. I didn’t meet a single unfriendly person while we were there, it’s definitely worth it.