
Japan’s former capital experiences a historic first as inbound travel boom continues and Japanese travelers avoid staying in the city.
Recently, with Japan experiencing a surge in inbound international travelers, it’s not unusual to hear locals remark “These days, it feels like there are more foreign tourists in [sightseeing place] than Japanese people!” Oftentimes this is an exaggeration, but in the case of hotels in Kyoto, it’s the statistical truth.
The Kyoto municipal government recently released its tourism-related numbers for 2024, reporting that during the year 8.21 million foreign travelers stayed in hotels within Kyoto City. That’s the largest number ever, and a 53.2-percent increase from the previous year. It’s also the first time in history for more foreign travelers than Japanese ones to stay in Kyoto hotels, which received 8.09 million Japanese guests in 2024.
That figure of 8.09 million Japanese guests is down 13.8 percent from the year before, illustrating that as Kyoto becomes an increasingly popular destination for visitors from outside Japan, a growing proportion of Japanese travelers are choosing to stay elsewhere. Along with large crowds at sightseeing attractions and congestion on public transportation, Kyoto’s rising hotel prices are making it a less attractive place for Japanese travelers to stay. At the end of May, the Kyoto City Tourism Association announced the results of an April 2025 survey of room rates at 106 hotels within the city, finding an average per-night room price of 30,640 yen (US$211), the highest amount since the organization began tracking the average price in 2014 and also the first time for it to go past 30,000 yen. With a favorable exchange rate to take advantage the higher hotel rates may not be much of a deterrent to foreign tourists, but for the local Japanese population already struggling with increasing consumer prices, hotel rate hikes in Kyoto aren’t nearly so easy to brush off.
Surprisingly, even as Kyoto’s hotels welcomed fewer Japanese travelers in 2024, the city itself still had an increase in Japanese sightseers, with an estimated total of 45.18 million Japanese people spending some amount of travel time within the city. That number is up 4.6 percent from 2023, and coupled with the drop of Japanese Kyoto hotel guests for the same period indicates that many Japanese visitors were either from-home day trippers or stayed in hotels outside of Kyoto City. On the other hand, the 10.88 million foreign tourists who visited Kyoto in 2024 were a 53.3-percent increase over the previous year, almost exactly the same increase as that for foreign Kyoto hotel guests.
The situation hasn’t been at all bad for Kyoto’s bottom line. Tourism-related spending in the city was up significantly in 2024, with visitors spending an estimated 1.9075 trillion yen, another record-breaking figure and a 24.1-percent increase from the year before. As such, the city is unlikely to enact any drastic policies to pump the brakes on inbound international tourism, but as the city gets more crowded and more expensive, it also gets closer to a tipping point where Japanese travelers might think it’s no longer worth visiting.
Source: City of Kyoto, Kyoto City Tourism Association via Nihon Keizai Shimbun (1, 2)
Top image: Pakutaso
● Want to hear about SoraNews24’s latest articles as soon as they’re published? Follow us on Facebook and Twitter!

As more foreign visitors visit Kyoto’s top sights, Japanese travelers increasingly staying away
Kyoto raises hotel accommodation tax to fight overtourism, travelers could pay up to 10 times more
Japanese travelers losing interest in Kyoto, top sightseeing spots slip behind Nara at peak season
Foreign travelers’ lukewarm reactions to traditional Japanese inn food causing changes in Kyoto
Japanese avoiding domestic travel as foreign tourists increase, possibly creating vicious cycle
Starbucks Japan unveils new sakura cherry blossom collection for hanami season 2026
Is Tokyo Station’s startlingly expensive wagyu bento boxed lunch worth its high price?[Taste test]
Sakura Festival in Chiyoda mixes illuminations, boats, music, and Rilakkuma in the heart of Tokyo
Starbucks Japan releases new sakura goods and drinkware for cherry blossom season 2026
Lawson adds doughnuts to its convenience store sweets range, but are they good enough to go viral?
The massive Pokémon card public art display going on in Japan right now is a thing of beauty【Pics】
Survey finds more than 70 percent of Japanese children have an online friend
These are Tokyo train lines people most want to live along【Survey】
Which convenience store onigiri rice balls are the most popular? Survey reveals surprising results
The results are in! One Piece World Top 100 characters chosen in global poll
Starbucks Japan releases first-ever Hinamatsuri Girls’ Day Frappuccino
Japanese restaurant chain serves Dragon Ball donuts and Senzu Beans this spring
Japan Extreme Budget Travel! A trip from Tokyo to Izumo for just 30,000 yen [Part 1]
Highest Starbucks in Japan set to open this spring in the Tokyo sky
Japan’s craziest burger chain takes menchi katsu to new extreme levels
Japan Extreme Budget Travel! A trip from Tokyo to Izumo for just 30,000 yen [Part 2]
Japan has only one airport named after a samurai, so let’s check out Kochi Ryoma【Photos】
Japanese drugstore sells onigiri at pre-stupid era prices, but how do they compare to 7-Eleven?
Viral Japanese cheesecake from Osaka has a lesser known rival called Aunt Wanda
Japan’s newest Shinkansen has no seats…or passengers [Video]
Foreigners accounting for over 80 percent of off-course skiers needing rescue in Japan’s Hokkaido
Super-salty pizza sends six kids to the hospital in Japan, linguistics blamed
Starbucks Japan unveils new sakura Frappuccino for cherry blossom season 2026
Foreign tourists in Japan will get free Shinkansen tickets to promote regional tourism
The 10 most annoying things foreign tourists do on Japanese trains, according to locals
Take a trip to Japan’s Dododo Land, the most irritating place on Earth
Naruto and Converse team up for new line of shinobi sneakers[Photos]
Is China’s don’t-go-to-Japan warning affecting the lines at a popular Tokyo gyukatsu restaurant?
Survey asks foreign tourists what bothered them in Japan, more than half gave same answer
Japan’s human washing machines will go on sale to general public, demos to be held in Tokyo
Starbucks Japan releases new drinkware and goods for Valentine’s Day
We deeply regret going into this tunnel on our walk in the mountains of Japan
Studio Ghibli releases Kodama forest spirits from Princess Mononoke to light up your home
Major Japanese hotel chain says reservations via overseas booking sites may not be valid
Put sesame oil in your coffee? Japanese maker says it’s the best way to start your day【Taste test】
No more using real katana for tourism activities, Japan’s National Police Agency says
Fewer Japanese people traveling domestically, government blames birth rate, others blame foreign crowds, costs
Kyoto study finds nearly 500 translation errors for foreign tourists, new guidelines released
Japanese government wants to build luxury resorts in all national parks for foreign tourists
Japanese travelers are avoiding Kyoto as the city’s number of foreign visitors continues to grow
Foreign tourists in Japan break inbound fall tourism record, are spending their money differently
“Foreign travelers are Japan’s guests” – Governor against charging tourists more than locals
Kyoto losing its luster as a school trip destination as tourist crowds continue to swell
Kyoto reportedly planning to raise hotel guest taxes, create highest accommodation tax in Japan
Japanese prefectural governor wants foreign tourists to pay special extra fee
Japan just had its first same-month foreign tourist decrease in four years
Kyoto creates new for-tourist buses to address overtourism with higher prices, faster rides
Kyoto will abolish one-day bus passes to combat tourism overcrowding
Japan’s foreign tourist numbers projected to fall for first time in years in 2026
Temple-heavy Kyoto presenting a unique challenge for travelers looking for Muslim prayer rooms
Kyoto planning surprise late-night inspections of Airbnb-style rentals to fight overtourism