Quote:
Originally Posted by kenmei
yeah I just checked EKITAN and it seems your only way from Nagoya Airport to Nagoya Eki is by bus and is 500en. There are few non-reserved seats on shinkansen so it's much better to reserve a seat.
Why didn't you just fly in to Haneda or Narita?
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HUH?
"Nagoya Airport" no longer handles international flights, and hasn`t for
quite a while. Unless you`re flying from somewhere inside Japan, then you`re not going to be flying into "Nagoya Airport"... And even then, it`s pretty doubtful as I hardly ever hear of that airport still being used these days. It seems they`ve switched over to more industrial uses than passenger.
International flights all come into Chubu - which is casually referred to as Nagoya airport, even though it`s not really in Nagoya. (Neither is the actual Nagoya Airport, to be honest.)
I think this is more a case of thinking of Chubu as as Nagoya airport, just like thinking of Narita as Tokyo airport. When someone flies into Tokyo, in almost every case it`s Narita, not Haneda.
Chubu is connected
directly to the train system. You board the train literally in the lobby of the airport. You can take the express straight to either Nagoya station or Kanayama, where you can get on to the Shinkansen.
As far as personal experience goes, unless you can buy your shinkansen ticket hours in advance, it`s not all that worthwhile to reserve a seat. If reserved seats are still available for the train coming in the next 10 or 15 minutes, non-reserved seats are going to be open. Reserved seats go long before the non-reserved. Unless you`re trying to travel on a major holiday, there is pretty much no chance of not being able to get on the train. If for some strange strange reason there are no free seats, wait another 10 minutes in line and be the first to get on the next train - as they pretty much start from either Nagoya or Kanayama.
You can pull the whole thing off in 3 hours or less.