I've been to NRT Int'l Airport 5 years ago when entering and exiting Japan for the first time with my dad and brothers. I think it was Terminal 3 of the airport when I fly from my only home airport, NAIA (MNL) and I think we used Cathay Pacific in this case. As we leave the airport, bound for Tokyo, we used the Narita Express and we used that for going back to the airport flying back to Manila. However, Manila (MNL) isn't the only Philippine desination from NRT, but it also links the Philippines from Angeles City (CRK) and Cebu City (CEB).
@@VirtCam, no, I haven't. Although, HND Airport and NRT Int'l Airport are both mega world class airports. The difference is, not only HND is busier than NRT, but HND handles more domestic flights than NRT while NRT handles more international flights than HND. Both airports serve some of the same international destinations while one each serve a different destination while the other can't. For example, if you want to fly to Washington-Dulles, take Haneda, but not Narita. A flight to Newark NJ and New York-JFK can be served by either of the two Tokyo airports. If you want to fly to Boston, take Narita, but not Haneda.
Thank you for the very informative video. I am planning to visit Tokyo in may, and just looking at trains. Wouldn't it be faster (and cheaper) to go from Narita to Ginza with the Access Express?
Thanks for a very helpful video. I have one question. When you use the QR code at immigration, do you get a vistor stamp in your passport? I ask because you need it for some things, for example, you need the stamp if you are buying a Pasmo Passport IC card.
How to get to Tokyo from Narita Airport Narita Airport ↓Free Terminal Shuttle Bus Higashi Narita Station ↓Keisei Higashi Narita Line Keisei Narita Station ↓Keisei Main Line (Limited Express) Keisei Tsudanuma Station ↓Keisei Main Line (Local) (750JPY) Keisei Nishifuna Station ↓On Foot Nishi-Funabashi Station ↓Tokyo Metro Tozai Line (300JPY) Otemachi Station ↓On foot Tokyo Station (Total 1050JPY)
You were probably so far ahead of them cause you walk so fast. That and you look like the type to stand head and shoulders above almost everyone in Japan and the rest of Asia for that matter
OMG! You walked that long and complicated way from the plane to the immigration! How did you ever figure out where to go? I fly from the US to Narita soon, and I tried to look on the maps of the airport to see how to get from the arrival to immigration, but the maps were awful and I didn't understand how to get to immigration. How did you manage to get to the immigration?
At virtually any airport, it’s a pretty long walk from the plane to immigration. I thought the walk shown here was pretty short. On our last flight to Haneda, we were in the last gate, so we had a very long walk. But it’s well signed (as is Narita), so there’s no worries about getting lost. It actually took us longer to exchang3 our JR Pass voucher than i5 did to get through customs and immigration.
@@Elena-mk6bf Just make sure you get the QR codes by registering at the Visit Japan website. It makes it very easy and fast to get through immigration and customs. Not sure at Narita, but at Haneda, they read your passport and QR code, and take fingerprints at a station with about 30 workers, so there’s virtually no wait. The actual immigration station has another 20 or so lines, and that’s to get the stamp in your passport. When you go to pick up your luggage, there’s a QR reader that will read the customs code. You pick up the luggage and go out with no issues. Best tip I read was to take screenshots of the two QR codes in case you can’t connect to the internet. Been through Haneda three times now with the new system, and it’s fantastic. What used to be an hour is now, at most 15 minutes.
Thank you very much for your advice! To get to Immigration, what sign do I have to look for? I thought it would be something like “To Immigration”, but have just read that it’s more like “Arrivals”. Thank you very much for your time!
Hi do you have the aproximate time between plane landing and quitting custom time? Trying to catch a domestic flight from same terminal but booked on a seperate flight
I’ll be going to Japan in September and will meet up with my partner who will arrive at Terminal 2 while I’ll land in Terminal 1 earlier than them. Since I’m arriving at around 1730, what’s the best plan of action to get to Terminal 2 since the free bus transfer stops at 5pm?
hey! was just wondering do we still need to fill in visit japan web? or its a paper system now? where you fill in forms? cuz google says its not mandatory, I'm going next month! your reply would surely help a lot! Thanks!
By any chance do you know if i have a layover of 5 hoursin narita arriving in terminal 1 and would like to visit the pokemon store can I leave terminal 1 and go to terminal 2? Or i can only stay in the transfer area?
@VirtCam thanks I will stay at narita airport the whole time, I will only switch from terminal 1 yo terminal 2, but I'm not sure if it's allowed because my flight is only a layover. Do you think it will be an issue with immigration?
This was a what not to do video. You took the wrong train to Ginza. You missed the assigned seating. You went the wrong way to get your card. If you got on the NEX it would take you straight to Tokyo Station/Ginza.
“Where is everybody?” Lol. I was thinking the same thing.
Yeah I was first off the plane and walking really fast. Because they were way behind me.
I think everyone went home
Nice
I've been to NRT Int'l Airport 5 years ago when entering and exiting Japan for the first time with my dad and brothers. I think it was Terminal 3 of the airport when I fly from my only home airport, NAIA (MNL) and I think we used Cathay Pacific in this case. As we leave the airport, bound for Tokyo, we used the Narita Express and we used that for going back to the airport flying back to Manila. However, Manila (MNL) isn't the only Philippine desination from NRT, but it also links the Philippines from Angeles City (CRK) and Cebu City (CEB).
Have you been to Haneda yet?
@@VirtCam, no, I haven't. Although, HND Airport and NRT Int'l Airport are both mega world class airports. The difference is, not only HND is busier than NRT, but HND handles more domestic flights than NRT while NRT handles more international flights than HND. Both airports serve some of the same international destinations while one each serve a different destination while the other can't. For example, if you want to fly to Washington-Dulles, take Haneda, but not Narita. A flight to Newark NJ and New York-JFK can be served by either of the two Tokyo airports. If you want to fly to Boston, take Narita, but not Haneda.
Thank you for the very informative video. I am planning to visit Tokyo in may, and just looking at trains.
Wouldn't it be faster (and cheaper) to go from Narita to Ginza with the Access Express?
Thanks for a very helpful video. I have one question. When you use the QR code at immigration, do you get a vistor stamp in your passport? I ask because you need it for some things, for example, you need the stamp if you are buying a Pasmo Passport IC card.
They put a visa sticker in your passport now no stamps anymore
How to get to Tokyo from Narita Airport
Narita Airport
↓Free Terminal Shuttle Bus
Higashi Narita Station
↓Keisei Higashi Narita Line
Keisei Narita Station
↓Keisei Main Line (Limited Express)
Keisei Tsudanuma Station
↓Keisei Main Line (Local) (750JPY)
Keisei Nishifuna Station
↓On Foot
Nishi-Funabashi Station
↓Tokyo Metro Tozai Line (300JPY)
Otemachi Station
↓On foot
Tokyo Station (Total 1050JPY)
You were probably so far ahead of them cause you walk so fast. That and you look like the type to stand head and shoulders above almost everyone in Japan and the rest of Asia for that matter
The station name that you said sounds Spanish is actually pronounced Kay-Say. It's also a train company in the Kanto Region.
OMG! You walked that long and complicated way from the plane to the immigration! How did you ever figure out where to go? I fly from the US to Narita soon, and I tried to look on the maps of the airport to see how to get from the arrival to immigration, but the maps were awful and I didn't understand how to get to immigration. How did you manage to get to the immigration?
At virtually any airport, it’s a pretty long walk from the plane to immigration. I thought the walk shown here was pretty short. On our last flight to Haneda, we were in the last gate, so we had a very long walk. But it’s well signed (as is Narita), so there’s no worries about getting lost. It actually took us longer to exchang3 our JR Pass voucher than i5 did to get through customs and immigration.
@@stevenelson3515 Thank you so much for your helpful advice! 🙏
@@Elena-mk6bf Just make sure you get the QR codes by registering at the Visit Japan website. It makes it very easy and fast to get through immigration and customs. Not sure at Narita, but at Haneda, they read your passport and QR code, and take fingerprints at a station with about 30 workers, so there’s virtually no wait. The actual immigration station has another 20 or so lines, and that’s to get the stamp in your passport. When you go to pick up your luggage, there’s a QR reader that will read the customs code. You pick up the luggage and go out with no issues.
Best tip I read was to take screenshots of the two QR codes in case you can’t connect to the internet. Been through Haneda three times now with the new system, and it’s fantastic. What used to be an hour is now, at most 15 minutes.
Thank you very much for your advice! To get to Immigration, what sign do I have to look for? I thought it would be something like “To Immigration”, but have just read that it’s more like “Arrivals”. Thank you very much for your time!
@@Elena-mk6bf Arrivals is what you look for.
Hi do you have the aproximate time between plane landing and quitting custom time? Trying to catch a domestic flight from same terminal but booked on a seperate flight
I’ll be going to Japan in September and will meet up with my partner who will arrive at Terminal 2 while I’ll land in Terminal 1 earlier than them. Since I’m arriving at around 1730, what’s the best plan of action to get to Terminal 2 since the free bus transfer stops at 5pm?
You can walk between T2 & T3 it’s a bit of a walk but not a huge distance
hey! was just wondering do we still need to fill in visit japan web? or its a paper system now? where you fill in forms? cuz google says its not mandatory, I'm going next month! your reply would surely help a lot! Thanks!
at 3:40 I do speak about that and then later in the video exactly. But you must watch the video.
Were you able to buy the Skyliner ticket with a card?
By any chance do you know if i have a layover of 5 hoursin narita arriving in terminal 1 and would like to visit the pokemon store can I leave terminal 1 and go to terminal 2? Or i can only stay in the transfer area?
Narita is a 45 minute train ride to the city and 45 minutes back. So that would be cutting it close
@VirtCam thanks
I will stay at narita airport the whole time, I will only switch from terminal 1 yo terminal 2, but I'm not sure if it's allowed because my flight is only a layover. Do you think it will be an issue with immigration?
If you leave the airport you will need to process immigration and then come back through. The gamble is on how long the lines would be
@@gc2428
@@VirtCam thank you for the information. ❤️
If I arrive at narita at 8pm. What are my options to get to tokyo before trains and buses close?
Great vid keep the great work up
What time did u arrive?
This was around 6 pm
I am so confused… i need a guide. 😂😂
It was scary, really empty for an international airport. even night flights are more busy and full of people and alive.
“Narita Airport Arrival Process to city by Skyliner Train - & Tokyo Metro Card”
"Living in Arizona Now" channel ...is that you?
I know that voice lolllll
Yup it’s me! 😂
That's the North wing, isn't it?
Milan Landing
Madge Extensions
Ludwig Parkways
West Cove
Halvorson Port
Huel Walks
Cyrus Wall
Hansen Turnpike
Oberbrunner Court
Neal Stream
Donald Skyway
Fritsch Isle
This was a what not to do video. You took the wrong train to Ginza. You missed the assigned seating.
You went the wrong way to get your card.
If you got on the NEX it would take you straight to Tokyo Station/Ginza.
Oh well.