Culinary tours in Japan — for the trade.
Food-led Japan experiences — sushi and ramen tours, sake and whisky tastings, market walks, cooking classes and Michelin reservations, with full dietary handling.
Operated in-house, accountable end to end.
Japan is a culinary destination in its own right. We run guided street-food and market tours, secure hard-to-get restaurant and Michelin reservations, arrange sake breweries and whisky distilleries, and book cooking classes — with halal, vegetarian and allergy handling communicated to every kitchen.
Who it's for: Agents whose clients travel for food, sake and culinary culture.
Japan is a culinary destination in its own right — the country with the most Michelin stars on earth, a street-food culture that runs from Osaka's Dotonbori to Fukuoka's yatai, regional specialities worth travelling for, and drink traditions in sake and whisky that rival any in the world. A food-led Japan trip is not a tour with meals attached; it is an itinerary where the eating is the point, and building it well means knowing which counter, which market, which brewery and which season. We run guided street-food and market tours, secure hard-to-get and Michelin reservations, arrange sake breweries and whisky distilleries, and book cooking classes — with the dietary handling that makes it all accessible.
The two practical realities of food travel in Japan are reservations and dietary needs, and both reward an operator with relationships. The best counters — the intimate sushi-ya, the famous kaiseki rooms, the booked-out Michelin tables — do not take walk-ins and often will not take overseas online bookings, so access runs through introductions and held relationships, not luck. And Japan's cuisine, for all its glory, can be genuinely hard for halal, vegetarian and allergy-restricted travellers, since dashi and fish stock are everywhere; we communicate requirements to every kitchen in advance and route clients to the places that can truly accommodate them, so a dietary restriction becomes a curated trip rather than a closed door.
- Street-food and market tours
- Sushi, ramen and regional specialities
- Sake and whisky tastings
- Cooking classes
- Michelin and hard-to-book reservations
- Halal, vegetarian and allergy handling
How culinary tours works with Explera — step by step.
Every file follows the same accountable sequence from first enquiry to closed account. Here is the workflow your booking moves through, and what you can expect from us at each stage.
Taste brief
Tell us the client's food interests, dietary needs, budget per experience and the cities — or just forward the enquiry. We come back within 24 hours with matched experiences at net rates, from market walks to Michelin counters, with honest notes on what each involves and what makes it special.
Net quotation
Each experience is quoted net with inclusions itemised: guide, tastings, reservations, transport where needed. Reservation deposits and any prepaid courses are stated, so the food line in your package is transparent and your margin is yours.
Reservation & access
On confirmation we lock the bookings — including the hard-to-get and Michelin tables that run through our relationships rather than online portals — and arrange brewery and distillery visits and cooking classes. Dietary requirements go to every kitchen in writing at this stage.
Dietary confirmation
Halal, vegetarian and allergy needs are confirmed with each venue before the date, because dashi and fish stock pervade Japanese cooking and "vegetarian" cannot be assumed. Where a famous venue cannot accommodate a restriction, we say so and route to one that genuinely can.
Experience day
Guided food experiences run with knowledgeable guides who add the context that turns a meal into an education, reservations are confirmed the day before, and the operations desk stands behind every booking. A late client or a closed venue triggers a real-time fix, not a lost reservation.
Feedback & settlement
The file settles against quotation, and feedback shapes the catalogue — a venue or guide that disappoints gets changed. The account closes in your working currency, and food-led clients are among the most loyal an agent can have.
What is included in culinary tours — in detail.
The summary list above is what fits in a card. This is what each line actually means operationally, because partners deserve to know what the net rate buys before they resell it.
Street-food and market tours
Street-food and market tours — managed with the seriousness food deserves on a group file. Menus are agreed in writing in advance, dietary and allergy requirements travel on the manifest to every kitchen involved, and religious-compliance needs — halal certification, vegetarian segregation — are verified with the venue, not assumed. Hard-to-book reservations are held under our relationships, and pricing is contracted per head, so the dining line in your quote holds. It is itemised on the quotation, so you can show clients exactly what their rate buys.
Sushi, ramen and regional specialities
Sushi, ramen and regional specialities — included in the net rate and operated under the same standards as every other element of culinary tours: licensed suppliers, written confirmations, a named coordinator and the 24/7 desk behind it. We treat the quiet line items with the same care as the headline ones, because programs are judged by the day that goes wrong, and any element can be that day. Partners can request the underlying detail — supplier names, specifications, timings — at any point.
Sake and whisky tastings
Sake and whisky tastings — managed with the seriousness food deserves on a group file. Menus are agreed in writing in advance, dietary and allergy requirements travel on the manifest to every kitchen involved, and religious-compliance needs — halal certification, vegetarian segregation — are verified with the venue, not assumed. Hard-to-book reservations are held under our relationships, and pricing is contracted per head, so the dining line in your quote holds. If a file does not need it, we say so and quote without it; nothing is padded in.
Cooking classes
Cooking classes — included in the net rate and operated under the same standards as every other element of culinary tours: licensed suppliers, written confirmations, a named coordinator and the 24/7 desk behind it. We treat the quiet line items with the same care as the headline ones, because programs are judged by the day that goes wrong, and any element can be that day. The operations desk owns delivery on this line, with a named coordinator accountable for it.
Michelin and hard-to-book reservations
Michelin and hard-to-book reservations — handled by people who plan Japan by rail every day. JR Pass value is assessed against the actual routing rather than assumed, reserved-seat bookings are made the moment booking windows open, luggage forwarding (takkyubin) is timed hotel-to-hotel so clients travel light on the busy legs, and IC cards and pocket Wi-Fi are pre-arranged for arrival. The rail layer is what makes a Japan trip flow, and getting it wrong is the classic avoidable failure. It is covered by the same 24/7 support and incident process as every other element.
Halal, vegetarian and allergy handling
Halal, vegetarian and allergy handling — managed with the seriousness food deserves on a group file. Menus are agreed in writing in advance, dietary and allergy requirements travel on the manifest to every kitchen involved, and religious-compliance needs — halal certification, vegetarian segregation — are verified with the venue, not assumed. Hard-to-book reservations are held under our relationships, and pricing is contracted per head, so the dining line in your quote holds. Documentation for this element travels in the client pack, in plain language, before departure.
Two practical notes on reading this list. First, it is a floor, not a ceiling: requirements that fall outside it — an unusual language, a tighter timing, a compliance document your market demands — are quoted as named lines rather than refused, and the answer to "can you also" is usually yes with a price attached. Second, every line above is auditable: registered partners can request the supplier contracts, licence copies and specification sheets that sit behind any element of culinary tours, because reselling a service you cannot verify is a risk no agent should be asked to carry.
Where we run culinary tours in Japan.
Service lines are only as good as the ground they stand on. City by city, here is how this one actually operates — gateways, seasons and the local logic that shapes delivery.
Culinary tours in Tokyo
Japan’s electric capital — where neon districts and centuries-old shrines share a city block. It is one of the proven home grounds for culinary tours on the Explera network. Tokyo programs are built around timing: temples and gardens before the heat and the crowd build, markets in their working morning hours, and rail legs slotted where road traffic would otherwise eat the schedule. Timed-entry tickets — teamLab, popular museums — are pre-issued so groups walk past the queue, not into it. Clients arrive via NRT Narita & HND Haneda, and tour pickups are confirmed the evening before with the hotel front desk as well as the guest, so no one waits in a lobby wondering. Guides assigned here are nationally licensed for the work and matched to your clients' language first.
Culinary tours in Osaka
Japan’s kitchen — a bold, neon food city with a samurai castle at its heart. For culinary tours, it is a market we operate week in, week out — not an occasional request. From Osaka, the program mix is cultural and dense: Fushimi Inari at dawn before the tour buses, Arashiyama early, Gion in the lantern-lit evening, Osaka's street food after dark. Distances are short and rail-linked, so we base clients once and tour out, pacing the day honestly rather than overstuffing it. Clients arrive via KIX Kansai International, and tour pickups are confirmed the evening before with the hotel front desk as well as the guest, so no one waits in a lobby wondering. Join-in departures keep solo and couple files affordable; private versions of every program quote on request.
Culinary tours in Fukuoka
Kyushu’s vibrant gateway — tonkotsu ramen, yatai food stalls and easy access. Our Fukuoka team handles culinary tours as core daily business, with the local relationships to show for it. Around Fukuoka, touring means volcanoes, onsen and history on a milder calendar: Aso and Sakurajima conditions permitting, the Beppu hells, Nagasaki's layered past and Fukuoka's food culture. We sequence the loop by shinkansen and road, pacing it as a genuine alternative to a second Golden Route trip. Clients arrive via FUK Fukuoka International, and tour pickups are confirmed the evening before with the hotel front desk as well as the guest, so no one waits in a lobby wondering. Each program here carries a wet-weather alternative that is genuinely worth doing, not a token substitute.
Culinary tours in Kanazawa
Samurai and geisha districts, a top-three garden and gold-leaf craft. Demand for culinary tours here is strong across the season, and our local bench is sized for it. Around Kanazawa, touring means elevation and craft: alpine old towns at first light, gassho-zukuri villages, sake breweries and Fuji viewpoints timed for the clear early-morning window. Distances between sights are longer than the map suggests, so our programs are paced honestly, with seasonal routes confirmed against opening dates. Clients arrive via Via Tokyo — 2h30 by shinkansen, and tour pickups are confirmed the evening before with the hotel front desk as well as the guest, so no one waits in a lobby wondering. Entrance fees, meals as listed and hotel pickup are inside the net rate — no on-the-day surprises.
These 4 bases are where culinary tours runs at full operational depth — resident teams, contracted suppliers and daily movements. But the map does not stop at the labels above: the same desk quotes and operates this service anywhere in Japan a partner needs it, from secondary prefectures to multi-region circuits, drawing on the regional office nearest the action. If your client's brief names a destination you do not see here, send it anyway — the answer is usually yes, with a costed plan attached.
Seasonality runs in two distinct directions on this part of the map. Winter (December to March) is the powder-and-festival peak — deep, dry snow, the Sapporo Snow Festival, ski-in inventory that clears six to twelve months out at premium rates. The green season flips it: lavender and flower fields, cool, low-humidity air, brilliant early-autumn foliage and sharply better value. We sell both windows deliberately, steering date-flexible files toward whichever season the client's brief actually wants.
Tokyo
Japan’s electric capital — where neon districts and centuries-old shrines share a city block.
Agent guideOsaka
Japan’s kitchen — a bold, neon food city with a samurai castle at its heart.
Agent guideFukuoka
Kyushu’s vibrant gateway — tonkotsu ramen, yatai food stalls and easy access.
Agent guideKanazawa
Samurai and geisha districts, a top-three garden and gold-leaf craft.
Agent guideWhat to expect — scenes from the ground.
Our operating standards for culinary tours.
Standards are only real if they are specific. These are the controls we hold ourselves to on every file in this service line — the checks that run whether or not anyone is watching.
Reservation relationships
Hard-to-get and Michelin tables are secured through held relationships and introductions, not online luck, so clients reach the counters that do not take walk-ins or overseas bookings. The access is the value, and it depends on relationships we maintain continuously.
Dietary integrity
Halal, vegetarian and allergy requirements are communicated to every kitchen in writing and confirmed before the date, with honest routing to venues that genuinely accommodate them — because dashi and fish stock are pervasive and an assumed "vegetarian" dish often is not.
Knowledgeable guiding
Food guides bring genuine subject depth — the history of a dish, the etiquette of a counter, the regional context — so an experience educates rather than merely feeds. Language and subject are matched at assignment.
Authentic venue selection
Venues are chosen for genuine quality, not commission, and re-checked because standards drift. A street-food stall, a market, a brewery, a three-star counter — each is selected because it delivers, and pulled if it slips.
Honest experience descriptions
Spice, rawness, formality, the realities of a counter where the chef sets the pace — described accurately so the experience matches the client's expectation and comfort, especially for first-time visitors to formal Japanese dining.
Operations cover
Every food experience is backed by the operations desk, so a delay or a venue problem is fixed in real time rather than becoming a lost reservation and a disappointed client.
These standards are not marketing furniture — they are the audit points we invite partners to test. Ask for the licence copies, the insurance certificates, the inspection notes; send a mystery booking through the desk and grade what comes back. Operators who have been burned elsewhere in Japan tend to become our most demanding auditors in their first season and our longest-standing partners in every season after, because a standard that survives scrutiny is the only kind worth printing. Where we fall short of our own bar — it happens, this is a real operation in a real country — the incident note says so plainly, and the fix is documented on the same page.
Who books culinary tours — and how to sell it.
Four client profiles account for most of the demand we see in this line. If your book includes any of them, this service has a place in your Japan offer.
Food-focused leisure travellers
Clients who travel for food are the heart of this line, and they want an itinerary where the eating drives the route — a sushi counter in Tokyo, the Dotonbori crawl in Osaka, regional specialities, a Michelin night. We build the food into the trip's spine and secure the access that turns a wish list into confirmed reservations, producing the kind of trip clients rave about.
Sake and whisky enthusiasts
Japan's drink culture is a destination of its own — sake breweries in Niigata and beyond, the famous whisky distilleries, izakaya and tasting experiences. We arrange brewery and distillery visits, tastings with knowledgeable hosts, and the pairings that bring it together, for clients whose interest in Japan starts in the glass.
Cooking-class and hands-on travellers
For travellers who want to learn, not just eat, we book cooking classes — sushi, ramen, wagashi, home cooking — and market-to-table experiences. These hands-on sessions are memorable, accessible and a strong upsell, and they suit families and special-interest groups as much as couples.
Dietary-restricted food lovers
Halal, vegetarian and allergy-restricted travellers often assume Japan's food scene is closed to them — and an operator who knows otherwise turns that into a selling point. We curate food experiences that genuinely accommodate the restriction, communicate it to every kitchen, and route around the pervasiveness of fish stock, so the client eats brilliantly within their needs.
If your client book does not map neatly onto any profile above, send the brief anyway — the four segments describe the centre of the demand we see, not its edges. The desk quotes culinary tours for niches these cards do not name every week, and an unusual file gets the same 24-hour response discipline as a standard one. The commercial logic for partners is consistent across all of them: net rates that leave your margin yours, white-label delivery that keeps the client relationship yours, and an operations layer in Japan that makes the promise you sold survivable in practice.
Culinary tours pricing — what drives the quote.
We publish how pricing works because guesswork wastes everyone's time. Here is what moves the number on this service, and what the net rate does and does not contain.
Culinary pricing ranges enormously by experience, which is the nature of the category: a guided street-food walk and a three-star kaiseki dinner are different universes of cost. The drivers are the venue tier (casual to Michelin), the guiding, any reservation deposits or prepaid courses, and the exclusivity of access. We quote each experience net and itemised, so a food itinerary built from several experiences shows exactly where the spend sits and lets you present a tiered choice.
Season affects culinary travel through ingredients and demand. Japanese cuisine is profoundly seasonal — the kaiseki course, the market catch, the regional speciality all shift through the year — which is part of the appeal, and we route clients to what is at its best when they travel. The sakura and autumn peaks also tighten the famous reservations, so the marquee counters need booking further ahead in those weeks. Brewery and distillery visits have their own seasonal and capacity calendars we plan around.
Net quotes include the guide, the tastings or meal as itemised, reservations and any transport stated, with reservation deposits and prepaid courses shown explicitly. Not included unless listed: additional drinks beyond the tasting, gratuities (rarely expected and always discretionary), and personal spending, all flagged up front. Settlement is per file or on account in JPY or your working currency. For the hard-to-get and Michelin tables, deposit and cancellation terms are stricter and stated at confirmation, because those reservations carry real commitment to the venue.
To turn these principles into a live number, send the dates, party size and the shape of the file — the quotation that returns within one business day is itemised against everything described above, valid for a stated window, and rate-locked the moment you confirm. Registered partners receive the current seasonal rate guidance for culinary tours as a matter of course, including the surcharge calendar for the sakura, autumn and ski peaks, so annual budgeting can start from real numbers rather than last year's hopes. And where a budget and a brief genuinely cannot meet, we say so on the first pass — with the closest workable alternative costed alongside, because a fast honest no is worth more to a working agent than a slow optimistic maybe.
Culinary tours — trade terms, quick reference.
Five terms that come up constantly in this line of business, defined the way we use them in quotations and contracts.
Kaiseki
A multi-course traditional Japanese meal of seasonal small dishes, usually served at ryokan and fine restaurants. Adaptable for halal, vegetarian and allergy needs when arranged in advance.
Izakaya
A casual Japanese pub serving small dishes alongside drinks — the heart of everyday eating-out culture and a staple of food-tour evenings.
Yatai
Open-air street-food stalls, most famously in Fukuoka, serving ramen and local dishes. A signature street-food experience we build into culinary itineraries.
Dashi
The foundational Japanese stock, usually made with fish (katsuobushi) and kombu. Its near-universal presence is why vegetarian and halal dietary handling needs care and advance confirmation.
Sake brewery
A kura producing Japanese rice wine, often open for tasting visits. Arranged with the regional and seasonal calendar in mind for drink-focused itineraries.
Culinary tours — asked by agents.
How do agents book culinary tours with Explera?
Send an RFQ from the contact page or WhatsApp with dates, pax and requirements — a fully-costed, client-ready quotation returns within 24 hours (2–3 business days for complex MICE programs).
Are rates net or commissionable?
All trade rates are net — your margin is yours to set. Quotations come in your working currency, rate-locked at confirmation.
Who looks after our clients on the ground?
Explera's own operations teams and licensed guides, backed by a 24/7 desk on Japan ground time. An emergency contact is printed in every set of travel documents.
Can this service combine with other Explera products?
Yes — most programs combine hotels, transfers, tours and dining under one itinerary, one invoice and one coordinator.
Can you secure Michelin and hard-to-book restaurant reservations?
Yes — this is a core part of the service and it runs on relationships, not online portals. The best counters in Japan, including many Michelin-starred rooms and intimate sushi-ya, do not take walk-ins and often will not accept overseas online bookings, so access goes through introductions and held relationships we maintain. The earlier you tell us, the better the table; the marquee names need booking well ahead, especially in peak weeks.
How do you handle halal and vegetarian diets in Japan?
Carefully, because Japanese cooking is harder for restricted diets than many expect — dashi and fish stock are in dishes that look vegetarian, and halal options are limited outside the right venues. We communicate requirements to every kitchen in writing in advance, confirm before the date, and route clients to the restaurants, halal-certified venues and adaptable kaiseki kitchens that genuinely accommodate the need, turning a potential closed door into a curated food trip.
What food experiences do you offer beyond restaurants?
A full range: guided street-food and market tours (Tsukiji outer market, Dotonbori, Nishiki, the Fukuoka yatai), sake breweries and whisky distilleries with tastings, cooking classes from sushi to ramen to wagashi sweets, izakaya crawls, and regional-speciality experiences. The eating is the spine, but the brewery visits, the markets and the hands-on classes are what turn a food trip into an immersion.
Are cooking classes suitable for families and groups?
Yes — cooking classes are among the most accessible and memorable food experiences, and they work beautifully for families, couples and special-interest groups alike. Sushi-rolling, ramen-making and wagashi classes are hands-on, fun and educational, with English-speaking instruction and dietary adaptation. They are a strong upsell that suits a wide range of clients and leaves them with a skill, not just a meal.
How far ahead must food experiences be booked?
For the marquee Michelin and famous counters, as far ahead as possible — weeks to months, and earlier still in the sakura and autumn peaks when the best tables tighten. Street-food tours, cooking classes and most brewery visits are comfortable at one to two weeks. The rule of thumb: the more exclusive the access, the earlier the booking, and we will tell you the realistic window for each experience on the quote.
Can you build a whole itinerary around food?
Absolutely — food-led FIT and group itineraries are a speciality. We route the trip around the eating: the cities for their specialities, the markets and counters and breweries, the cooking classes, the Michelin nights, with the rest of the itinerary built to support it. For a client who travels for food, an itinerary designed around the table rather than the temple is exactly the trip they want, and the access we hold is what makes it deliverable.