Travel Japan Hands-Free: Forward Your Luggage City-to-City (Takkyubin Guide)
Back to Blog

Travel Japan Hands-Free: Forward Your Luggage City-to-City (Takkyubin Guide)

Quick AnswerWant to explore Japan without dragging suitcases through train stations? Forward them. Yamato's takkyubin delivers your bags hotel-to-hotel (about ¥2,000-3,000 each, usually next day) or ahead to the airport for your flight home. Ship the heavy bags forward, travel light with a carry-on, and your suitcases are waiting at the next stop. On a RydAgent Full Day Charter, your driver can stop at the nearest Yamato office and handle the paperwork for you — you just bring the bags.

The Smart Way to Travel Japan: Don't Carry It, Forward It

Most first-time visitors haul every suitcase from city to city — onto crowded trains, up and down station stairs, into tiny hotel elevators. Experienced travelers do something different: they ship their bags ahead and travel with almost nothing.

Japan's luggage delivery network — takkyubin (宅急便), run mainly by Yamato Transport (the black-cat "Kuroneko" logo) — is fast, inexpensive, and famously reliable. Here's the basic flow:

  1. Drop your bags at a hotel front desk or a Yamato sales office (TA-Q-BIN center).
  2. Fill out a short delivery slip with the destination name and address. Staff can help in English.
  3. Pay about ¥2,000-3,000 per suitcase and hand them over.
  4. They arrive the next day at your next hotel (some routes offer same-day; not guaranteed).

That's it. No racks to fight for on the train, no suitcase on your lap, no wrestling bags through the ticket gates.

A Real Example: Shop in Okinawa, Clean Clothes Waiting in Tokyo

One group we drove recently flew into Okinawa and, on day one, forwarded part of their wardrobe straight to their final hotel in Tokyo. As they finished each leg, they shipped their worn clothes onward to Tokyo too — so they never dragged dirty laundry around the country. From Kyoto, they sent another box ahead. By the time they reached Tokyo, the clean clothes they'd mailed on the first day were already waiting at the hotel.

The result: they toured Okinawa and Kyoto with almost nothing in hand, and re-stocked their suitcase in Tokyo from what they'd sent ahead. It's an especially neat trick if you pack a lot or plan to shop — you only ever carry what you need for the next two or three days, and your "base wardrobe" travels separately.

Planning a multi-city trip?
Book a private transfer or full-day charter in a minute — fixed price.
Check Your Price

Three Gotchas That Trip People Up

Forwarding is simple, but a few details catch travelers out:

1. Shipping to the airport is scheduled delivery, not "storage"

With Yamato's Airport Ta-Q-Bin, you pick a delivery date — up to about 10 days after the day you ship — and the bag is delivered to the airport baggage counter around the day before your flight. It rides safely in Yamato's network the whole time; it isn't piled up at the airport for days. Because 10 days is the limit, ship a day or two into your trip (not literally on arrival) so you keep a buffer.

2. Convenience stores cap at size 160

A 7-Eleven, Lawson, or FamilyMart register will accept takkyubin only up to size 160 (length + width + height combined). A full-size suitcase sits right at that line, and a conbini counter isn't really set up for a big bag anyway. For large suitcases, go to an actual Yamato sales office — staff there handle big bags and the airport label, and give you a tracking slip.

3. Unstaffed lodging can't receive a delivery

Many budget hostels and most Airbnbs have no front desk, so there's no one to accept a forwarded parcel. Easy workaround: address it to a Yamato sales office near your next stop and pick it up yourself with ID or your tracking number once it shows ready for pickup. (That's for regular takkyubin; the airport service is its own thing.)

Let Your Driver Handle It: RydAgent Full Day Charter

If you've booked a Full Day Charter or a city tour with us, shipping luggage becomes effortless. Because the car and driver are with you for the whole day — charters run a minimum of 8 hours, with 40km included per hour — the driver can simply stop at the nearest Yamato sales office along the way, help you fill out the delivery slip, and carry the bags in and out. You bring the luggage; that's the whole job on your end.

What you pay: just Yamato's shipping fee — about ¥2,000-3,000 per bag, paid to Yamato. Tolls, parking, and the driver's time during your charter are already included, so there's no surcharge from us for the stop.

It pairs perfectly with the forwarding strategy above: start your charter day, drop the heavy bags at a Yamato office on the way out, and spend the rest of the day sightseeing hands-free while your luggage heads to the next hotel — or to the airport for your flight home.

When to Forward vs. When to Ride With Your Bags

We'd rather you choose the option that actually fits — sometimes that's takkyubin, sometimes it's keeping everything with you in the car.

Your SituationBest OptionWhy
You don't need the bags tonight; they can arrive tomorrowForward (takkyubin)Cheapest way to travel light between cities
Arriving late and you need everything tonightPrivate transfer with room for luggageDoor-to-door; no waiting on a next-day delivery
Heavy luggage, airport to hotel on arrivalPrivate transfer (Alphard fits 4 bags, HiAce up to 9)No racks or stairs; driver loads and unloads
Big group, lots of bags, multi-stop sightseeing dayFull Day CharterDriver carries everything and can ship the extras at Yamato

Book in a Minute

Tell us your route, passengers, and luggage, and you'll see an all-in fixed price in about a minute — no account needed. Door-to-door, every bag accounted for, and on a charter we'll even handle the Yamato run for you.

Check Your Price

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I forward my luggage between hotels in Japan?

Yes. Yamato Transport's takkyubin (宅急便) delivers suitcases hotel-to-hotel, usually next day, for about ¥2,000-3,000 per bag. Drop them at a hotel front desk or a Yamato sales office and they arrive at your next hotel.

Can I send luggage ahead to the airport for my flight home?

Yes, via Yamato's Airport Ta-Q-Bin. You choose a delivery date (up to about 10 days after you ship), and the bag is delivered to the airport baggage counter around the day before your flight. It's scheduled delivery, not 10-day storage at the airport.

Can I forward a large suitcase from a convenience store?

Convenience stores only accept parcels up to size 160 (length + width + height). A full-size suitcase sits right at that limit, so it's smoother to ship from a Yamato sales office, where staff handle big bags and the airport label.

What if my next hostel or Airbnb has no front desk to receive the delivery?

Address the parcel to a Yamato sales office near your next stop instead, and pick it up yourself with ID or your tracking number once it shows ready for pickup. (That's for regular takkyubin; the airport version is a separate service.)

Can my RydAgent driver help me ship luggage?

On a Full Day Charter, yes. Because the car and driver are with you for the day, the driver can stop at the nearest Yamato sales office, help you fill out the slip, and load the bags. You pay only Yamato's shipping fee (about ¥2,000-3,000 per bag); tolls and parking are already covered by your charter.

Related

Book Your Transfer in 30 Seconds

Instant pricing. No waiting, no calls.