Comfort upgrade decision
Is the Shinkansen Green Car Worth It? Seats, Price, and the Fuji Window
The Green Car is the Shinkansen's first class: 2+2 seating, more recline and legroom, quieter cars. It costs roughly ¥4,000–6,000 extra Tokyo–Kyoto. The Mt. Fuji view is the same — the window just becomes Seat D.
Quick answer
- Worth it for: space and quiet on a 2.5h+ ride, working on board, or a one-time treat.
- Skip it if: budget matters — Ordinary reserved is already spacious by global rail standards.
- Fuji window: Seat D in the Green Car (2+2 layout) — not Seat E.
- The view: identical to Ordinary Car. Don’t upgrade for scenery.
What the upgrade actually buys
Four seats per row instead of five means every seat is wider, with generous recline, legroom, and a footrest. Green Cars also tend to be noticeably quieter — fewer tour groups, more business travelers — which is the part frequent riders actually pay for.
What it does not buy: speed (same train), a better Mt. Fuji view (same glass), or meals (there is no included service; bring what you want to eat or drink).
The Seat D detail most people miss
Because the Green Car drops to a 2+2 layout, the seat letters shift: the Fuji-side window is Seat D, not Seat E. Book Green Car Seat D heading Tokyo → Kyoto/Osaka (or returning) and you have the same right-side/left-side view logic as Ordinary Car Seat E.
A simple rule of thumb
If the extra ~¥5,000 is meaningful to your trip budget, spend it on a better dinner or hotel night instead — Ordinary reserved with Seat E already gives you the comfortable ride and the view. If the cost is trivial to you, or you want two calm hours to work, the Green Car is a genuinely pleasant upgrade.
Book your seat
Ordinary Car: pick Seat E. Green Car: pick Seat D. Both from the seat map at booking.
FAQ
- What is the difference between the Green Car and Ordinary Car?
- The Green Car uses a 2+2 layout instead of 3+2, with wider seats, more recline, more legroom, footrests, and a quieter atmosphere. Ordinary reserved cars are already comfortable — the Green Car is a comfort upgrade, not a necessity.
- How much extra does the Green Car cost?
- Roughly ¥4,000–6,000 more than an Ordinary reserved seat for Tokyo–Kyoto/Osaka, depending on the season and service. Confirm the exact fare when booking.
- Which Green Car seat faces Mt. Fuji?
- Seat D. Green Cars use a 2+2 layout, so the Fuji-side window that is Seat E in Ordinary Cars becomes Seat D in the Green Car. The view itself is identical.
- Is the Green Car worth it for the Mt. Fuji view?
- Not for the view alone — the mountain looks the same through an Ordinary Car window. Pay for the Green Car if you want space, quiet, or a comfortable place to work; choose it for comfort, not scenery.
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