Culture & Sightseeingapprox. 6.5 hoursInuyama Castle & Castle Town
A National Treasure keep on a green hill above the Kiso River, and the old castle town beneath it — an easy, unhurried day from Nagoya.

Central Japan · Nagoya
Small-group, local-led tours of Aichi, Gifu & Mie — departing from Nagoya. Clear prices, easy meeting points, support in your language.
Central Japan · Nagoya

Our story
For 20 years we built trust in Japan’s IT field. So why venture into tourism? The reason lies in our strong desire to "connect people with the world."
When our overseas plans paused in 2020, we travelled Japan again and realized: the essence of travel lies in "connecting people with people." Our greatest strength is "people."
More about us →Why travel with us
No hidden fees. The price you see is all-inclusive.
Minutes from major stations, with photo directions.
See at a glance when it is quiet — and when to go.
English & Vietnamese. Ask us anytime via chat.
Featured Tours
Price, duration and meeting point — clear at a glance, with photos.
Culture & Sightseeingapprox. 6.5 hoursA National Treasure keep on a green hill above the Kiso River, and the old castle town beneath it — an easy, unhurried day from Nagoya.
Culture & Sightseeingapprox. 6.5 hoursTwo homes of Japanese craftsmanship in one day — the Toyota Automobile Museum and Noritake Garden — with a plate of Nagoya's own food in between.
Culture & Sightseeingapprox. 7 hoursWalk the pottery lanes of Tokoname, one of Japan's six ancient kiln towns — black-tiled workshops, brick chimneys and a giant lucky cat. A lovely last day before a flight from Centrair, too.
Can't decide?
Tell us your dates, group size and interests — we will suggest the best plan, in your language.
Plan your trip
The three questions every traveller asks first — answered with photos, maps and plain words.
Where you're headed
Central Japan, around Nagoya — a region most travellers speed past on the bullet train but rarely stop to explore. Here’s why it’s worth it.

This is the cradle of the samurai age. Within a short distance of Nagoya, three of the most important figures in all of Japanese history were born within a single generation — Oda Nobunaga, Toyotomi Hideyoshi and Tokugawa Ieyasu, the warlords who ended a century of civil war and unified the country around 500 years ago. Their castles and battlefields remain to this day: Nagoya Castle with its golden shachihoko, Okazaki Castle (Ieyasu’s birthplace), and Inuyama Castle, whose wooden keep is one of the oldest still standing in Japan. Just beyond, in Mie, the Ise Grand Shrine has been the country’s most sacred Shinto site for some 2,000 years.

Today the Tokai region is the engine room of the Japanese economy. Centred on the Chukyo Industrial Zone, it leads the nation in manufacturing — automobiles above all, but also aerospace, machine tools and ceramics — shipping roughly ¥60 trillion of goods a year, the highest of any region in Japan. Toyota was founded and is still headquartered here, and the Port of Nagoya has ranked first in the country for trade volume and export value for more than twenty years running. It is also a region built by international hands: tens of thousands of Vietnamese residents live and work in Aichi — a community we know well and are proud to support.

There is a playful side, too. Aichi is home to Ghibli Park, which opened in 2022 in the wooded hills east of Nagoya, and to the Pokémon Center Nagoya. The region runs deep through Japanese pop culture: the quiet country bus stop that inspired a famous scene in the anime film “Your Name” is in neighbouring Gifu, and Akira Toriyama, the creator of Dragon Ball, was born in Aichi. Add family favourites like the Nagoya Port Aquarium and LEGOLAND Japan, and there is something here for every age.
News
An hour or so from Nagoya, a hot-spring hillside in Gamagori lights up 50,000 hydrangeas until 9pm — and mid-to-late June, right now, is the time to go.
That passport-at-the-register discount changes on 1 November 2026. From then you pay full price and claim the tax back when you fly out — here's how to be ready.

Most visitors never hear about ukai — fishing with birds, by firelight, on the Nagara River. It runs nightly all summer, and Gifu is closer than you think.

Everyone warns you about Japan's June rain. After years of running tours through it, here's why we quietly love it — and how to travel it beautifully.
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