For years, Japan has been defined internationally by its iconic cherry blossom season. But a new behaviour shift is emerging among Indian travellers. According to Cox & Kings, the world’s first travel house and one of India’s most trusted travel brands, Japan has now become a top winter bucket-list destination with demand rising 15% for December–February departures compared to last year.
Winter Illuminations Driving High-FOMO Evenings
Cox & Kings’ traveller insights point to several defining shifts behind the winter surge.
Winter illumination season is becoming a major travel driver. From Tokyo Midtown’s Illumination Walk to the famous Nabana no Sato light gardens, Japan’s winter lighting festivals, among the world’s most elaborate, are now trending across Indian couples, families and young travellers. These attraction-based evenings are becoming a high-FOMO seasonal experience.
A Deep Dive Into Japan’s Winter Culture
Indian travellers are also leaning into Japan’s deep winter culture. Snow-led experiences like skiing, snow villages, wildlife trails, snowy hikes and open-air onsens (hot springs) are rising fast. The magic is in the contrast: steaming baths against snowy forests, winter street-food stalls, and quiet, white-covered lanes. It’s a season where snow, culture and comfort come together.
“Japan in winter has a completely different soul,” said Karan Agarwal, Director, Cox & Kings. “From local food trails to cultural rituals and unhurried neighbourhood days, travellers want depth and winter is when Japan reveals its most authentic side. Already among the top choices for 2025, Japan’s growing winter appeal now makes it a truly all-season destination.”
Exploring Culture Beyond Sakura Season
Travellers are also increasingly exploring culture beyond sakura (spring cherry bloom). Tea ceremonies in Kyoto, winter food tours in Osaka, kimono dressing workshops, traditional ryokan stays, and “onsen circuits” aka hot spring baths in Hakone are seeing strong traction.
Interest in slow-travel experiences such as neighbourhood stays in Kyoto’s Gion district, curated cooking workshops and local craft has also grown over the last year.
Winter Growth Enhancing Japan’s Year-Round Travel Curve
Data from Cox & Kings shows advance bookings for next year’s cherry blossom itineraries are already up by 10%, showing that winter demand is not replacing the cherry blossom season, it is expanding the overall Japan travel curve.
As 2026 approaches, Japan continues to dominate Indian bucket lists both for its cherry blossom and its richly layered winter season.

AloJapan.com