From
Vancouver International
Vancouver
To
Narita International
Tokyo
Approximate flight time: 10h 0m
Airlines operating this route
Cherry blossom season (late March-April) is most popular. Book 8-12 weeks ahead.
The best months to fly from Vancouver to Tokyo are:
Book 4-8 weeks in advance for the best prices. Prices typically increase closer to departure dates, especially during peak travel seasons.
Low Season
$0
Peak Season
$0
Prices are per person for round-trip economy class tickets. Actual prices vary based on dates, airline, and availability.
Tokyo seamlessly blends ultra-modern technology with ancient traditions. Narita International Airport connects to central Tokyo via the Narita Express (about 60 minutes) or the more affordable Keisei Skyliner.
Experience neon-lit Shibuya, serene Meiji Shrine, the Tsukiji outer market, and Akihabara's electric town. Japan's legendary punctual trains make exploring the city and beyond incredibly easy.
Cherry blossom season (late March-April) and autumn foliage (October-November) are most popular. Book well ahead for these periods. Summer is hot and humid; winter offers clear skies and hot spring season.
Vancouver International (YVR) consistently ranks as North America's best airport. It features stunning Indigenous art throughout the terminals.
The Canada Line SkyTrain connects the airport to downtown Vancouver in 26 minutes. Taxis to downtown cost approximately $35-40 CAD.
YVR offers US pre-clearance, so you clear customs in Vancouver before boarding US-bound flights.
Narita International Airport operates three passenger terminals. Terminal 1 (T1) handles the majority of non-Japanese full-service carriers: Air Canada (AC, T1 South Wing), United Airlines, Lufthansa, KLM, Singapore Airlines, Cathay Pacific, and Turkish Airlines, among others. Terminal 2 (T2) is the home base of Japan Airlines (JL) and its oneworld partners — Qantas, British Airways, Iberia, Finnair, and Royal Jordanian. Terminal 3 (T3) serves low-cost carriers exclusively: Scoot, Jetstar Japan, AirAsia X, Peach, and Vanilla Air.
Inter-terminal transfers are managed by a dedicated free shuttle bus service. The T1–T2 airside shuttle runs every 3–5 minutes and takes approximately 10–12 minutes gate-to-gate. The T2–T3 landside shuttle adds passport control re-entry time if passengers have cleared immigration — plan a minimum of 25 minutes terminal-to-terminal before security re-entry. There is no airside walkway between any NRT terminal pair.
IATA Minimum Connection Times (MCT) at NRT are published as follows: International-to-International same terminal (T1–T1 or T2–T2): 60 minutes. International-to-International cross-terminal (T1–T2): 90 minutes. For flights with checked baggage transfer and cross-terminal connections, booking a minimum of 120 minutes is strongly advisable, particularly during peak August–September inbound traffic when T1 immigration queues for non-Japanese passport holders can exceed 45 minutes.
Air Canada YVR–NRT (AC 003 / AC 004)
AC operates this route as AC 003 (YVR–NRT) and AC 004 (NRT–YVR) on Boeing 787-9 Dreamliner equipment, arriving and departing Terminal 1 (South Wing, Pier S). Block time approximately 10 hours eastbound, 9 hours 10 minutes westbound.
Air Canada's Maple Leaf Lounge is not present at NRT T1. Eligible Star Alliance Gold members can access the ANA Lounge at T1 Satellite (15-minute walk from the South Wing gate area, or 5 minutes by the intra-terminal shuttle that operates between T1 Main and T1 Satellite).
ANA YVR–NRT (NH 116 / NH 115)
ANA operates YVR–NRT as NH 116 (NRT–YVR) and NH 115 (YVR–NRT) on Boeing 787-9, departing T1. Both AC and ANA code share on this route — confirm operating carrier on your ticket to identify the correct terminal.
ANA's Suite Lounge and Business Class lounge at NRT T1 are accessible to ANA Business and First passengers, and to Star Alliance Gold members on any Star carrier.
Japan Airlines connecting flights from NRT (T2)
Passengers connecting from a YVR–NRT AC/NH flight (T1) to a JAL domestic or onward international flight (T2) must take the inter-terminal shuttle. Domestic connections in Japan via NRT require clearing immigration and customs on arrival — there is no domestic sterile transit corridor at NRT.
If booking a YVR–NRT–domestic Japan itinerary on separate tickets, you must collect and recheck luggage at NRT. If on a single interline ticket with NRT transit, baggage may be checked through to the domestic destination — confirm with the issuing carrier.
Visa requirements for airside transit at Narita are determined by the traveller's nationality, not by the final destination. Japan does not require an airside transit visa for most Western Hemisphere passport holders, but specific nationalities must obtain a Shore Pass (陸揭証) or Temporary Visitor visa before departure if they intend to exit the international sterile zone.
Canadian passport holders
No transit visa required for airside connections at NRT. If clearing immigration for a short layover or shore excursion, Canadians qualify for visa-free temporary visitor entry for up to 90 days under the Japan–Canada visa exemption agreement.
Narita's International Transit Area (airside, T1 and T2) offers duty-free retail, yen currency exchange, and limited food and beverage options. For layovers exceeding 6 hours, exiting immigration for Tokyo (Narita Express, 75 min to Shinjuku) is straightforward for Canadian passport holders.
Indian passport holders
A transit visa (Short-Term Stay visa, 通過ビザ) is required to transit NRT even airside in most cases. This must be obtained from the Consulate-General of Japan before departure — it cannot be obtained on arrival. Processing time is typically 5–7 business days. Required documents: valid passport, onward ticket, valid visa for the country of final destination, completed application form, and one passport photo.
Exception: Indian nationals holding a valid visa for or permanent residency in Canada, the USA, Australia, or a Schengen country may be eligible for visa-free airside transit under Japan's transit exemption list. Confirm current exemption status directly with the Consulate-General of Japan in Vancouver (1177 West Hastings Street) or Toronto prior to booking.
Filipino passport holders
Philippine passport holders require a transit visa for NRT connections in most circumstances. The same consular application process as for Indian nationals applies. However, holders of a valid US visa (B1/B2, F-1, or similar non-immigrant class) may qualify for Japan's group exemption for certain transit routes — verify the current list with the Japanese Embassy in Manila or Vancouver.
BC-based Filipino travellers connecting at NRT en route to Manila (MNL) or Cebu (CEB) should confirm transit visa requirements at least 4 weeks before travel, particularly for Christmas peak (December) and Holy Week travel, when consulate appointment slots are heavily subscribed.
NRT Layover Planning — BC Travellers
For BC residents using YVR–NRT as a connection to Southeast or South Asia: a 3–4 hour layover is the operational minimum for T1 same-terminal connections. If your onward flight is JAL metal from T2, allow at minimum 150 minutes after NRT arrival. Narita Airport has a 24-hour pharmacy in T1 Arrivals and a JNTO tourist information desk that issues IC Suica cards for yen-denominated transit — useful for long layovers involving a Tokyo excursion. Currency exchange rates at NRT are competitive for yen but inferior for onward Asian currencies; exchange only what you need for the Japanese leg.
YVR–NRT is a Star Alliance-dominated route, with Air Canada and ANA competing on the same city pair and frequently cross-selling inventory. When booking a YVR–NRT connection for onward travel to South or Southeast Asia, compare the one-stop routing cost against direct YVR–ICN (Seoul Incheon, operated by Korean Air and Asiana) or YVR–HKG (Cathay Pacific) alternatives — NRT is rarely the cheapest transit hub for South Asian corridors, though it is the most operationally convenient for Japan-specific onward travel.
BC travellers with Japanese travel on the itinerary benefit from NRT's domestic connectivity: Tokyo Haneda (HND, approximately 75 minutes from NRT via Airport Limousine Bus or N'EX train) provides access to ANA's and JAL's dense domestic network covering Sapporo (CTS), Osaka (ITM), Fukuoka (FUK), and Okinawa (OKA). A YVR–NRT itinerary with a planned overnight in Tokyo before a domestic Japanese leg is an operationally sensible split that avoids tight connections entirely.
The cheapest flights from Vancouver (YVR) to Tokyo (NRT) start from approximately $0 for economy class. Prices vary by season, booking date, and airline. We recommend booking 8-12 weeks in advance for the best fares.
Direct flights from Vancouver to Tokyo take approximately 10 hours and 0 minutes. Connecting flights may take longer depending on the stopover duration and routing.
Airlines operating the YVR to NRT route include Air Canada, ANA, Japan Airlines. Each airline offers different service levels, baggage policies, and loyalty programs. We compare all options to find you the best deal.
The most popular months to fly from Vancouver to Tokyo are March, April, October, November. Cherry blossom season (late March-April) is most popular. Book 8-12 weeks ahead.
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