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Osaka, Japan
Osaka

Kansai

Osaka

Japan's food and nightlife capital makes the natural Kansai base: sleep in Namba for Dotonbori or Umeda for the rail links, ride the train in from Kansai Airport, and day-trip out to Kyoto, Nara and Kobe.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 7 Jun 2026

Best length

2-3 nights (more as a Kansai base)

Airport

Kansai International (KIX), ~50km southwest on an artificial island

Airport to centre

Nankai Airport Express to Namba ~45 min ยฅ970; JR Haruka to Tennoji/Osaka

Best base

Namba (Minami) for food and nightlife; Umeda (Kita) for rail and quiet

In short

Osaka at a glance

Osaka is Japan's food and nightlife capital and the natural base for the Kansai region: stay in Namba (Minami) for the Dotonbori energy or Umeda (Kita) for the cleanest rail links, ride the Nankai or JR train in from Kansai Airport rather than a taxi, treat the city itself as a two-day stop, and use it for day trips to Kyoto, Nara and Kobe.

The short version

  • Stay in Namba/Minami if you want Dotonbori, Kuromon Market and izakayas on your doorstep; light sleepers should choose Umeda/Kita instead.
  • Come in from Kansai Airport on the Nankai Airport Express (ยฅ970, ~45 min) to Namba, or the JR Haruka if you're heading to Kyoto first.
  • Osaka is a two-day city: one day for the castle, Umeda Sky and the Minami food streets, one for Universal Studios Japan if you have kids or fans.
  • Book Universal Studios Japan and Super Nintendo World ahead; everything else in central Osaka you can largely turn up to.
  • Base in Osaka and day-trip to Kyoto (~30 min), Nara (~35 min) and Kobe rather than packing and re-packing across the region.

Osaka is the place you come to eat, drink and stay out late, and the city plays to that. The action splits cleanly into two halves: Minami in the south, around Namba, Dotonbori and Kuromon Market, where the neon and the takoyaki stalls are; and Kita in the north, around Osaka and Umeda stations, where the rail links and the calmer hotels are. Pick Minami if you want the energy on your doorstep and donโ€™t mind noise until the small hours, and Kita if youโ€™d rather sleep and run smooth day trips. The Midosuji subway line ties the two together in minutes, so neither choice strands you.

Two nights is enough for Osaka itself. One day handles Osaka Castleโ€™s park and moats, the Umeda Sky observatory at sunset for about ยฅ2,000, and an evening grazing your way down Dotonbori โ€” a ยฅ500 plate of takoyaki and an ยฅ800 bowl of ramen is the meal you came for, not a compromise. A second day goes to Universal Studios Japan if you have children or Mario fans in tow, which is the one Osaka outing that genuinely needs a dated ticket and, on busy dates, an Express Pass to avoid 90-minute queues. Everything else in the centre you can largely turn up to.

Where Osaka really earns its keep is as a Kansai base. Kyoto is about 30 minutes away, Nara around 35, and Kobe and Himeji within easy reach, so you can sleep in one well-connected hotel and day-trip outwards rather than packing and re-packing across the region. Coming in from Kansai Airport, the Nankai Airport Express to Namba is the cheapest sensible route at roughly ยฅ970 and 45 minutes; take the JR Haruka instead if youโ€™re heading straight to Kyoto or staying up in Kita. The structured planning below โ€” neighbourhoods, airport options, costs in pounds and the best months to come โ€” picks up from here.

Plan your Osaka trip

Keep a first trip focused: book the big timed sights, then leave room for neighbourhoods and food.

Top things to do in Osaka

Universal Studios Japan

Buy your dated 1-Day Studio Pass online before you fly โ€” prices change by the day and sell-outs happen on weekends and Japanese holidays. Getting into Super Nintendo World needs a separate Area Timed Entry slot: either grab a free one in the app the moment you're through the gates (they often run out by mid-morning) or pay for an Express Pass version that guarantees entry. Treat it as a full day, arrive 30โ€“45 minutes before the posted opening, and decide on the Express Pass based on the date, not the brochure.

A full day ยฃ47

Dotonbori

Dotonbori is free โ€” there is no gate and no ticket to walk the strip, so don't pay for "entry". Come at dusk: arrive around 17:00โ€“17:30 in daylight, then watch the neon switch on so you catch the Glico running-man sign from Ebisubashi bridge at its best. The two things actually worth money are the 20-minute Tombori River Cruise (ยฅ2,000, about ยฃ10.50) and a guided food crawl if you want takoyaki, okonomiyaki and kushikatsu explained rather than guessed at.

1.5โ€“2 hours ยฃ10.50

Osaka Castle

The grounds and moats are free and arguably the best part โ€” you only pay to go up the keep (the tenshukaku), which is a 1931 concrete reconstruction housing an eight-floor history museum and a viewing deck. Adult entry is ยฅ1,200 (about ยฃ5.60), doubled from ยฅ600 in April 2025; junior-high age and under are free. There's a lift to the 5th floor, then stairs up the last three to the 50m observation deck. Allow 30โ€“45 minutes inside the keep and an hour or more wandering the park; nearest station is Tanimachi Yonchome.

30โ€“45 min ยฃ5.60

Where to stay first

The areas that make a first visit easier โ€” not an exhaustive directory.

Namba / Minami

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The obvious first-timer base: Dotonbori, Kuromon Market and the Shinsaibashi arcade on foot, plus the Midosuji subway line and the direct Nankai train from the airport. It runs loud until 2-3am, so pick a street back from the canal if you want to sleep.

Best for: First-timers, food and nightlife, short stays

Browse hotels South-central

Umeda / Kita

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The transport-led alternative around Osaka and Umeda stations: hotels connect straight into the rail network, Shin-Osaka shinkansen is one stop, and Kyoto, Nara and Kobe day trips start easiest here. Quieter at night and better in Osaka's hot summers because you barely step outside.

Best for: Rail-heavy trips, Kansai day-trippers, light sleepers

Browse hotels North-central

Shinsaibashi / Honmachi

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The middle ground between Minami's buzz and Kita's order: walkable to Dotonbori, strong coffee and shopping, and a more local evening rhythm. Honmachi in particular is central and well connected without the late-night noise.

Best for: Repeat visitors, shopping, central but calmer

Browse hotels Central spine

Tennoji

ยฃ value

Cheaper rooms around the Abeno Harukas tower and Shinsekai, with the JR Haruka airport train stopping here directly. Useful for value and for Nara trips, but the area is plainer and a couple of stops out from the Dotonbori action.

Best for: Budget, value, Nara and airport convenience

Browse hotels 5-10 min by subway

Airport to city centre

Osaka airport transfer options
OptionTimeCostBook ahead?
Nankai Airport Express to Namba ~45 min about ยฅ970 single Cheapest direct route to Minami
Nankai Rapi:t limited express to Namba ~35-40 min about ยฅ1,490 reserved seat Reserved seat, good with luggage
JR Haruka limited express to Tennoji / Osaka Tennoji ~35 min; Osaka ~47 min Tennoji about ยฅ1,710; Osaka about ยฅ2,710 Best if Kyoto-bound or staying in Kita
Airport limousine bus / taxi bus ~50-65 min bus about ยฅ1,600; taxi ยฅ15,000+ Bus for door-to-hotel; skip the taxi
Pre-book a door-to-door transfer

When to go

Sweet spot: Late March to mid-April for cherry blossom (busy and pricey but spectacular at Osaka Castle), and late October to November for cool, dry days and autumn colour, are the two sweet spots. May and early June are also pleasant before the summer humidity arrives.

July and August are hot and sticky at around 35ยฐC with sudden showers, so plan indoor stops like Umeda Sky and arcades; the rainy season runs roughly mid-June to mid-July. Winter is cold but mild and good value, with the food scene at its best. Book blossom and autumn dates months ahead because Kansai demand is heavy.

What it costs

There are no direct UK-Osaka flights, so expect one stop via the Gulf, mainland Europe or East Asia. Return economy fares are typically ยฃ550-ยฃ800 booked well ahead, rising past ยฃ1,000 for peak cherry-blossom (late March-April) and autumn dates.

Daily budget per person

Sample trip: A realistic 2-night mid-range Osaka stop for one person is roughly ยฃ260-ยฃ400 before flights: ยฃ150-ยฃ260 hotel share, ยฃ55-ยฃ85 food (Osaka eats cheaply if you stick to takoyaki, kushikatsu and ramen), ยฃ20-ยฃ30 local transport, and ยฃ30-ยฃ60 for the castle keep, Umeda Sky and a river cruise. Add about ยฃ55-ยฃ75 if you do Universal Studios Japan.

Osaka is the city where street food beats restaurants for both value and atmosphere: a ยฅ500 plate of takoyaki and a ยฅ800 bowl of ramen is the point, not a downgrade. The expensive trap is Universal Studios Japan on a peak day without an Express Pass.

Book the essentials

Where to stay

Browse staysvia Booking.com

Tours & tickets

Book tours & ticketsvia GetYourGuide

Airport transfers

Pre-book a transfervia Welcome Pickups

Stay connected

Get an eSIMvia Airalo

Trains & rail passes

Book railvia Trainline

Also in Japan

See the full Japan guide

Osaka FAQs

How many days do you need in Osaka?
Two nights covers Osaka itself: one day for the castle, Umeda Sky and the Minami food streets, and a second for Universal Studios Japan or a slower market-and-shopping day. Add nights if you're using Osaka as a base to day-trip across Kansai rather than moving hotels.
Is Osaka or Kyoto a better base for the Kansai region?
Osaka, if you want food, nightlife and the cheapest direct airport train into Namba; Kyoto if temples and quiet are your priority. Osaka and Kyoto are only about 30 minutes apart, so basing in Osaka and day-tripping to Kyoto, Nara and Kobe works well and usually costs less per night.
Do you need a car in Osaka?
No. Osaka's subway and JR network reaches everything you'll want and a car is a liability for parking and traffic. Use an ICOCA or contactless tap-in, and only consider rail passes if you'll make several Kansai day trips.

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