We visited Tokyo in Autumn 2018, staying at a hotel in Shinjuku. Given that this was 7 years ago, note that our experience is that of the time.
We stayed mainly in & around the city, but we did make a trip out to Hakone. Having a local friend who speaks the language made all the difference - especially out in Hakone - but it is easy to pick up the most basic greetings & manners.
Thoroughly enjoyed ourselves.
Confirmed Expectations
- Public transit runs well and is frequently overpacked.
- High speed trains are exciting.
- People are generally polite & will try to help.
- Food is to die for.
- Gaijin tax does exist in some places - e.g. foreign language menus with different prices. Only ran into this twice over a 10-day stay.
- General orderliness and tidiness. Almost everywhere.
- Salarymen can drink like fish.
- Most things can be obtained from a convenience (Lawson, 7-Eleven etc).
Surprises
- Cash is king.
- Depending on the line, the trains may change track at fairly high speed. You are warned when this will happen. How the locals can free-stand and not fall over during this remains a mystery.
- Smoking is inside, not out, with some exceptions.
- Not many public bins - expect to hold trash for a time until you find one or get back to where you are staying.
- The best and worst in toilet technology.
- The variety in the KitKat department.
- Hot bottled drinks in vending machines.
- McDonald's is actually good, and caters to the local tastes.
- 100 Yen shops have some neat stuff.
- Elevators to places that open onto the street, and tell you if you need an umbrella.
- On umbrellas - stands exist in shops specifically for quickly wrapping wet umbrellas, preventing puddles.
Tips
- Don't tip.
- Bow.
- Accept and give anything meaningful with both hands. Gifts, cards etc.
- Look up customs at shrines & temples before visiting.
- Buy your transport tickets (JRPass esp.) in advance.