Tokyo to Tokyo

Aboard Silver Whisper with Silversea Cruises

Departure Date

23 March 2025

Duration

14 Nights

Fly Cruise From

£8,600pp

Cruise Reference

ART-7TOSI13

Cruise Overview

Lights, sushi, manga!

Sprawling, frenetic, and endlessly fascinating, Japan’s capital is a city of contrasts.

Shrines and gardens are pockets of calm between famously crowded streets and soaring office buildings.

Mom-and-pop noodle houses share street space with Western-style chain restaurants and exquisite fine dining.

Shopping yields lovely folk arts as well as the newest electronics.

And nightlife kicks off with karaoke or sake and continues with techno clubs and more.

Whether you seek the traditional or the cutting edge, Tokyo will provide it.
From Minami's neon-lighted Dotombori and historic Tenno-ji to the high-rise class and underground shopping labyrinths of Kita, Osaka is a city that pulses with its own unique rhythm.

Though Osaka has no shortage of tourist sites, it is the city itself that is the greatest attraction.

Home to some of Japan's best food, most unique fashions, and warmest locals, Osaka does not beg to be explored—it demands it.

More than anywhere else in Japan, it rewards the impulsive turn down an interesting side street or the chat with a random stranger.

People do not come here to see the city, they come to experience it.Excluded from the formal circles of power and aristocratic culture in 16th-century Edo (Tokyo), Osaka took advantage of its position as Japan's trading center, developing its own art forms such as Bunraku puppet theater and Rakugo comic storytelling.

It was in Osaka that feudal Japan's famed Floating World—the dining, theater, and pleasure district—was at its strongest and most inventive.

Wealthy merchants and common laborers alike squandered fortunes on culinary delights, turning Osaka into "Japan's Kitchen," a moniker the city still has today.

Though the city suffered a blow when the Meiji government canceled all of the samurai class's outstanding debts to the merchants, it was quick to recover.

At the turn of the 20th century, it had become Japan's largest and most prosperous city, a center of commerce and manufacturing.Today Osaka remains Japan's iconoclastic metropolis, refusing to fit Tokyo's norms and expectations.

Unlike the hordes of Tokyo, Osakans are fiercely independent.

As a contrast to the neon and concrete surroundings, the people of Osaka are known as Japan's friendliest and most outgoing.

Ask someone on the street for directions in Tokyo and you are lucky to get so much as a glance.

Ask someone in Osaka and you get a conversation.The main areas of the city, Kita (north) and Minami (south), are divided by two rivers: the Dojima-gawa and the Tosabori-gawa.

Between Kita and Minami is Naka-no-shima, an island and the municipal center of Osaka.

Kita (north of Chuo Dori) is Osaka's economic hub and contains Osaka's largest stations: JR Osaka and Hankyu Umeda.

The area is crammed with shops, department stores, and restaurants.

Nearby are a nightlife district, Kita-shinchi; Naka-no-shima and the Museum of Oriental Ceramics; Osaka-jo (Osaka Castle); and Osaka Koen (Osaka Park).

Restaurants, bars, department stores, and boutiques attract Osaka's youth to Minami (south Chuo Dori); theatergoers head to the National Bunraku Theatre and electronics-lovers to Den Den Town.

For a glimpse of old Osaka, visit Tenno-ji Temple and Shin Sekai.

The main stations are Namba, Shin-sai-bashi, Namba Nankai, and Tenno-ji.

There's easy access to the Municipal Museum of Fine Art and Sumiyoshi Taisha (Sumiyoshi Grand Shrine).The bay area, to the west of the city center, is home to the Osaka Aquarium and Universal Studios Japan.

The Shinkansen stops at Shin-Osaka, three stops (about five minutes) north of Osaka Station on the Mido-suji subway line.

To the north of Shin-Osaka is Senri Expo Park.
From Minami's neon-lighted Dotombori and historic Tenno-ji to the high-rise class and underground shopping labyrinths of Kita, Osaka is a city that pulses with its own unique rhythm.

Though Osaka has no shortage of tourist sites, it is the city itself that is the greatest attraction.

Home to some of Japan's best food, most unique fashions, and warmest locals, Osaka does not beg to be explored—it demands it.

More than anywhere else in Japan, it rewards the impulsive turn down an interesting side street or the chat with a random stranger.

People do not come here to see the city, they come to experience it.Excluded from the formal circles of power and aristocratic culture in 16th-century Edo (Tokyo), Osaka took advantage of its position as Japan's trading center, developing its own art forms such as Bunraku puppet theater and Rakugo comic storytelling.

It was in Osaka that feudal Japan's famed Floating World—the dining, theater, and pleasure district—was at its strongest and most inventive.

Wealthy merchants and common laborers alike squandered fortunes on culinary delights, turning Osaka into "Japan's Kitchen," a moniker the city still has today.

Though the city suffered a blow when the Meiji government canceled all of the samurai class's outstanding debts to the merchants, it was quick to recover.

At the turn of the 20th century, it had become Japan's largest and most prosperous city, a center of commerce and manufacturing.Today Osaka remains Japan's iconoclastic metropolis, refusing to fit Tokyo's norms and expectations.

Unlike the hordes of Tokyo, Osakans are fiercely independent.

As a contrast to the neon and concrete surroundings, the people of Osaka are known as Japan's friendliest and most outgoing.

Ask someone on the street for directions in Tokyo and you are lucky to get so much as a glance.

Ask someone in Osaka and you get a conversation.The main areas of the city, Kita (north) and Minami (south), are divided by two rivers: the Dojima-gawa and the Tosabori-gawa.

Between Kita and Minami is Naka-no-shima, an island and the municipal center of Osaka.

Kita (north of Chuo Dori) is Osaka's economic hub and contains Osaka's largest stations: JR Osaka and Hankyu Umeda.

The area is crammed with shops, department stores, and restaurants.

Nearby are a nightlife district, Kita-shinchi; Naka-no-shima and the Museum of Oriental Ceramics; Osaka-jo (Osaka Castle); and Osaka Koen (Osaka Park).

Restaurants, bars, department stores, and boutiques attract Osaka's youth to Minami (south Chuo Dori); theatergoers head to the National Bunraku Theatre and electronics-lovers to Den Den Town.

For a glimpse of old Osaka, visit Tenno-ji Temple and Shin Sekai.

The main stations are Namba, Shin-sai-bashi, Namba Nankai, and Tenno-ji.

There's easy access to the Municipal Museum of Fine Art and Sumiyoshi Taisha (Sumiyoshi Grand Shrine).The bay area, to the west of the city center, is home to the Osaka Aquarium and Universal Studios Japan.

The Shinkansen stops at Shin-Osaka, three stops (about five minutes) north of Osaka Station on the Mido-suji subway line.

To the north of Shin-Osaka is Senri Expo Park.

Cruise Itinerary

Aboard Silver Whisper

Launch Year: 2001 Length: 186 Width: 24 Currency: USD Capacity: 392 Crew Count: 302 Deck Count: 7 Cabin Count: 194

Silver Whisper, sports a relaxing, sophisticated and genuinely elegant atmosphere. A multi-million dollar refit in 2018 makes her one of the most technically up-to-date ships at sea.

The amenities of a larger ship with the charm of a boutique hotel. Silversea’s Millennium Class ships Silver Whisper and sister ship Silver Shadow invite you to enjoy Silversea’s world-class accommodation, shipboard conviviality and warm, personal service. Revel in the pampering treatments of an expanded spa, enjoy dynamic full-scale productions in a multi-tiered show lounge and dine on delectable cuisine in her four superlative restaurants. Silver Whisper has it all.

Small and nimble, Silver Whisper features four restaurants and many suite options. She emphasises the hallmarks of boutique ship passenger pampering, including fine dining and spaciousness throughout. View her deck plan here.

Silver Whisper Facilities

Silver Whisper Includes

Cabin Details

Silversea’s suites offer one of the highest space-per-guest ratios of any luxury cruise accommodations. All Silversea suites have ocean views, and most include a private teak veranda so that you can breathe in the fresh sea air simply by stepping outside your door. And regardless of the ship or suite category, all guests will be pampered with the personalised services of an attentive butler.

For a truly personal experience, customise your suite with an abundance of thoughtful options and luxurious amenities from Bulgari toiletries and personalised stationery to a bar with your favourite wines and liquors. Settle in with a complimentary movie or choose instead to simply watch the ocean swim by. You can even have dinner in-suite served course by course by your butler. Then, when it’s time to retire, curl up beneath Egyptian cotton linens and a fluffy duvet, with your choice of nine different pillow types. The ultimate in luxury cruise accommodations, Silversea’s suites are your home away from home.

You don't have permission to register