Seasonal Mt. Fuji Scenic Views, Fruit Picking and Ropeway Ride!

REVIEW · TOKYO

Seasonal Mt. Fuji Scenic Views, Fruit Picking and Ropeway Ride!

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Operated by H.I.S.Co., Ltd. · Bookable on Viator

Traveller rating 4.5 (35)Price from$92.24Operated byH.I.S.Co., Ltd.Book viaViator

Mount Fuji in one long, fruit-filled day. This tour stacks Mount Fuji viewpoints with the ropeway ride and hands-on seasonal fruit picking, plus an included udon lunch so you’re not left hunting food in the cold. The trade-off: on cloudy, windy, or icy days, you may see less of Fuji and the plan can shift.

You start in Shinjuku at 8:00 am and head into Yamanashi Prefecture for a full 10 hours 30 minutes of sightseeing, ropeway time, farm fun, and lake views. The day runs on a schedule, so show up on time and wear warm layers—mountains weather does not care about your itinerary.

Key highlights you’ll actually use

Seasonal Mt. Fuji Scenic Views, Fruit Picking and Ropeway Ride! - Key highlights you’ll actually use

  • Ropeway over Lake Kawaguchi: bird’s-eye views with the ride included.
  • Seasonal fruit picking + tasting: fruit type changes by season, with all-you-can-eat time.
  • Udon lunch (houtou pot set): included so your day stays stress-free.
  • Mount Fuji 5th Station plan with reroutes: road closures can swap in alternatives like Fuji Visitors Center or Oshino Hakkai.
  • Small-group feel (max 45): plus the option of a mini van if fewer people join.

A Fuji day that’s more than a quick photo stop

Seasonal Mt. Fuji Scenic Views, Fruit Picking and Ropeway Ride! - A Fuji day that’s more than a quick photo stop
This is the kind of day trip I like for first-timers to Fuji’s area. You’re not just getting one distant view from Tokyo. Instead, the plan moves you through several angles: up toward the Mt. Fuji 5th Station area, then across to Lake Kawaguchi, and finally into garden viewpoints like Oishi Park—with a farm stop as the temperature and pace reset button.

The practical win is that you’re doing a whole loop in one go. You get the structured transport, ticketed attractions (like the ropeway), and a scheduled lunch, all wrapped into a single price. If you want a day that feels full but not chaotic, this fits.

The one thing to keep in mind is that Fuji visibility is weather-dependent. The tour doesn’t promise a clear view, and it explicitly notes that there can be no refund if Mt. Fuji can’t be seen due to bad weather.

You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Tokyo.

Getting from Shinjuku at 8:00 am: plan for time on the bus

Your day starts in Shinjuku at 8:00 am at the Robert Indiana Sculpture: LOVE, 6-chōme-5-1 Nishishinjuku. The tour guide checks names on arrival, and you board the bus from there. It’s meant to be near public transportation, and the end point is Tokyo Mode Gakuen (Mode Gakuen building, 1-chōme-7-3 Nishishinjuku).

This is a big deal because you’re committing to a long day. The tour runs about 10 hours 30 minutes, and traffic can stretch things. The operator warns that congestion can shorten time at stops or change the schedule.

Two more logistics points worth taking seriously:

  • Arrive close to departure time. Late arrivals don’t get refunds.
  • Bring patience for mountain roads. If the road to the 5th Station can’t be passed, the plan swaps.

On comfort, you do get Wi‑Fi service, but one review specifically noted no Wi‑Fi in the bus. Another mentioned the guide audio didn’t reach the back rows. If you care about hearing every detail, sit closer to the front if you can.

Ropeway time at Lake Kawaguchi: the cleanest view-per-minute

Seasonal Mt. Fuji Scenic Views, Fruit Picking and Ropeway Ride! - Ropeway time at Lake Kawaguchi: the cleanest view-per-minute
At around 10:00 am, the day moves to Lake Kawaguchiko for the Mount Fuji Panoramic Ropeway. You’re up in the air for about 1 hour, and the point is simple: bird’s-eye views of Lake Kawaguchi and Mt. Fuji.

This is where the tour is at its most efficient. You don’t need to hike for panoramic sightlines. You get height, fresh air, and photos that are hard to recreate from ground level in Tokyo.

Practical tips from how this kind of day tends to feel:

  • Pack warm layers. The tour notes it can get cold in the mountains.
  • Wear shoes that handle walking smoothly. You’ll be moving around outside and in lines.
  • Build in line time. One review mentioned waiting in line for 30+ minutes for the ropeway on a hot day. Weather can also slow things down.

Weather matters here. One winter review said the ropeway was closed due to high winds and the route ended up changing. Translation: you’re not paying for a guarantee. You’re paying for a good chance at the full experience when conditions cooperate.

Yamanashi fruit farm: fun, yes. Expectations should be flexible

Seasonal Mt. Fuji Scenic Views, Fruit Picking and Ropeway Ride! - Yamanashi fruit farm: fun, yes. Expectations should be flexible
After lunch, you head to Yamanashi for seasonal fruit picking with all-you-can-eat tasting. The scheduled fruit-farm time is about 30 minutes.

The best part is that it’s not one “grab a piece” moment. You actually pick, then you get to eat. The tour also explains that the fruit you pick depends on the season. Examples given include:

  • Late December to early May: sweet strawberries
  • Seasonal fruit examples mentioned elsewhere include cherries, peaches, and grapes

Here’s the one realistic consideration: ripeness rules. The tour states that depending on ripeness and growing conditions, some fruit picked in advance may be used as a fruit plate for tasting or provided as a souvenir. In other words, it’s still a farm experience, but you may not control every last detail of what’s in front of you.

Also, fruit can be hit-or-miss on flavor day to day. One review said cherries weren’t especially special, while another praised grapes—so treat this as a hands-on activity rather than a fine-dining guarantee.

Oishi Park: seasonal lake views when Fuji cooperates

Seasonal Mt. Fuji Scenic Views, Fruit Picking and Ropeway Ride! - Oishi Park: seasonal lake views when Fuji cooperates
Next comes Oishi Park for about 1 hour 30 minutes. This stop is explicitly seasonal: cherry blossom and red leaf viewing spots are planned depending on the time of year. The tour also notes that winter scenic spots can be different (the listing provides seasonal ranges, even if the full details are truncated in the material you shared).

The value of Oishi Park is that it gives you a second chance at beauty after the ropeway. You’re near the lake, you can find photo angles, and the garden viewpoints are designed for the same reason you came here: big views of Fuji and the surrounding area.

In practice, on a cloudy day you’ll often shift from chasing a perfect silhouette to enjoying the wider scenery and the park atmosphere. One review mentioned still having fun even in rain, including time in a village shopping area near the sights.

Mount Fuji 5th Station: the dream stop with a weather reality check

Seasonal Mt. Fuji Scenic Views, Fruit Picking and Ropeway Ride! - Mount Fuji 5th Station: the dream stop with a weather reality check
The tour is built around visiting the Mt. Fuji 5th Station, but it’s honest about how that can change. If road access to the 5th Station isn’t possible due to bad weather, the schedule may swap in alternatives such as Fuji Visitors Center or Oshino Hakkai.

It also states plainly that in bad weather there’s a chance Mount Fuji cannot be seen, and the operator won’t cancel or issue refunds for that. That’s why I recommend thinking of the 5th Station as a high-up bonus, not the only measure of success.

You’ll also want to accept timing trade-offs. One review said traffic caused them to skip the 5th Station stop. Another described seeing the 5th Station when it was foggy and still having a memorable moment. Fog can flatten the view, but it can also make the experience feel different—more atmosphere than postcard.

Bring warm clothing regardless. Even if you get clear views, altitude and wind can turn a pleasant morning into a chilly end-of-day memory.

Lunch with houtou udon: included food that keeps the schedule sane

Seasonal Mt. Fuji Scenic Views, Fruit Picking and Ropeway Ride! - Lunch with houtou udon: included food that keeps the schedule sane
Lunch is included at a local restaurant: houtou pot set, a Yamanashi udon specialty. The tour description frames this as a way to avoid hunger during the day, and that’s important when you’re working with a fixed schedule.

In reviews, lunch shows up as one of the most consistent positives:

  • Some people described it as delicious and filling.
  • One review said lunch quality was low except for strawberries—so quality can vary, but you’re still getting a warm meal without paying extra on the road.

Value-wise, included lunch matters on this kind of day trip. You’re spending hours outside Tokyo. Having food planned means you can concentrate on sights instead of timing trains, finding a restaurant, and choosing something quickly in the cold.

Guide style and bus comfort: why pacing matters as much as scenery

Seasonal Mt. Fuji Scenic Views, Fruit Picking and Ropeway Ride! - Guide style and bus comfort: why pacing matters as much as scenery
The tour includes an English-speaking guide, and group size can go up to 45. In one review, a guide named Alex was praised for helping everyone enjoy the Fuji views, and Yuko earned strong notes for doing a good job at the mountain viewpoint. Peter also got credit for being helpful and patient.

But it’s not uniform. One review complained about a guide (Umar/Amar) being rushed and not personable, which hurt the experience for people in the group who needed more time. Another criticized a different guide (Shin) as unenthusiastic and focused too much on sales talk instead of Fuji information.

My take as a practical reader: this is why you should treat your “must-see” items as the sights, not the narration. A good guide makes the day better, but weather and time constraints still drive what you get.

Bus comfort details are part of the experience too. One review said the Wi‑Fi wasn’t available, and another said the speaker system wasn’t loud enough for people in the back. If you care about explanations, sit toward the front.

Price and value: what $92.24 buys in this day’s pacing

At $92.24 per person, you’re paying for a full-day structured loop: transport, guide, ropeway admission, fruit picking, and lunch. You also get mobile tickets and a Wi‑Fi service option.

Is it a bargain? It’s priced like a ticketed, planned day trip rather than a DIY experiment. That can be a smart choice if you don’t want to coordinate multiple transit legs on your own, and you want the fruit farm and ropeway handled for you.

It’s also worth noting that the operator says the tour requires a minimum of 10 participants and will not operate if that number isn’t reached. So if you’re traveling in a thin season, you may want to check schedule availability before you build other plans around it.

Best time to go: match fruit and views to your month

The tour is explicitly seasonal, both for fruit and for park scenery. You’ll pick different fruit depending on the season, and examples given include:

  • Strawberries in the late Dec to early May window
  • Fruit types mentioned across the description include cherries, peaches, and grapes

Oishi Park also changes by season, with cherry blossom and red leaf periods called out. That means your best experience may depend less on “having good weather” and more on timing your visit so your farm fruit lines up with what you want.

If you’re booking in winter, treat the plan as more flexible. One review described ropeway closure due to high winds and road closures due to icy conditions. In winter, always pack warm clothes and keep expectations realistic about what’s reachable.

Who this tour fits best (and who should think twice)

This works best if you want:

  • A one-day plan out of Tokyo that mixes lake views, mountain time, and a farm activity
  • Included houtou udon lunch so you don’t burn time hunting food
  • A guide-led day with a manageable group size (max 45)

You might think twice if:

  • You need guaranteed views of Mount Fuji. The tour warns Fuji can be obscured, and the plan won’t be refunded or canceled just for visibility.
  • You dislike group timing. Some reviews mention being rushed at stops, and traffic can reduce time at key points.

If you’re the kind of person who enjoys photos but also likes the hands-on piece of travel (like picking fruit), you’ll probably have a good day even when the sky isn’t perfect.

Should you book this Mt. Fuji scenic views, fruit picking, ropeway tour?

I’d book it if you want a full Fuji-region day with ropeway views, a genuine seasonal fruit farm stop, and lunch included, all without having to coordinate every transfer yourself. It’s good value for a structured day.

I wouldn’t book it if your trip depends on getting an Instagram-clear Mt. Fuji at the 5th Station. This tour can reroute, shorten, or shift based on wind, roads, and clouds—and it explicitly says there’s no refund if Fuji can’t be seen.

If you’re flexible and warm-weather prepared, this is an efficient way to see why Lake Kawaguchi and the 5th Station area are famous.

FAQ

What’s included in the tour price?

Lunch at a local restaurant (houtou pot set udon), admission to the Mt. Fuji Panoramic Ropeway, an English-speaking guide, seasonal fruit picking experience, and Wi‑Fi service.

How long is the experience?

The tour runs about 10 hours 30 minutes.

Where do you meet in Tokyo?

The pickup is at the Robert Indiana Sculpture: LOVE, 6-chōme-5-1 Nishishinjuku, Shinjuku City. The meeting point is near JR Shinjuku Station for convenience.

Where does the tour end?

The tour ends at Tokyo Mode Gakuenモード学園総合校舎コクーンタワ, 1-chōme-7-3 Nishishinjuku, Shinjuku City.

What fruit do you pick?

Fruit type varies by season. The information specifically mentions sweet strawberries for late December to early May, and the description notes seasonal fruits such as cherries, peaches, grapes, or strawberries.

Is Mount Fuji guaranteed to be visible?

No. The tour notes that in bad weather there’s a chance Mount Fuji cannot be seen, and it will not be canceled or refunded for that reason.

What happens if the road to the Mt. Fuji 5th Station can’t be used?

If the road to Mt. Fuji 5th Station isn’t passed through due to bad weather or traffic congestion, the schedule can change to visit Fuji Visitors Center or Oshino Hakkai instead.

What should I wear or bring?

Bring warm clothes because it can get cold in the mountains. Wear shoes that make walking smoothly and easily during the tour possible.

Can I cancel and get a full refund?

Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund, but cancellations made less than 24 hours before the start time are not refunded.

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