
The Brief
Visiting the Lake Pichola from Tokyo, Japan is a single managed mission with MyTripMyTravel. Flight: ~9–12 hrs to Delhi. Gateway: Udaipur (UDR). On-ground in Udaipur: escorted access to the Lake Pichola, pre-arranged at the prime viewing hour, with a vetted guide and the chauffeured Elite Fleet from arrival.
The mirror lake of the City of Lakes Lake Pichola is an artificial freshwater lake in Udaipur, India, created in 1362 by a Banjara gypsy tribe and later enlarged by Maharana Udai Singh II in 1568. Four islands sit in the lake: Jag Niwas (the 1746 Lake Palace, now a hotel), Jag Mandir (the 17th-century pleasure palace), Mohan Mandir, and Arsi Vilas.
From Tokyo, the routing is the first decision: Udaipur has its own commercial airport. From Tokyo, route via Delhi (DEL) or Mumbai (BOM) onwards by short domestic flight, or chauffeured road from Delhi for the slower scenic option.
Tokyo is a long crossing with a significant time shift. We build a firm first-night recovery into the architecture — orientation only, no marquee sites on arrival day. Sleep, light evening, breakfast at the stay, monuments from day two. On the ground, the Lake Pichola is sequenced for the prime viewing window — access timed to the prime viewing hours; private guide arranged. — rather than dropped into a generic city sightseeing block.
Beyond the Lake Pichola, Udaipur sits inside the wider Rajasthan Escapes; we plan the trip end to end on a single chauffeured architecture.
Tokyo → Lake Pichola
Flight
~9–12 hrs to Delhi
Gateway
Udaipur (UDR)
Access
Access timed to the prime viewing hours; private guide arranged.
How we run the mission
The Lake Pichola — what you're visiting
Lake Pichola is the centerpiece of Udaipur — a 4-square-kilometre artificial lake created in 1362 and enlarged by Maharana Udai Singh II in 1568 when he founded Udaipur as a defensible new capital after the sack of Chittor. The mirror lake of the City of Lakes
Gateway and routing from Tokyo
Udaipur has its own commercial airport. From Tokyo, route via Delhi (DEL) or Mumbai (BOM) onwards by short domestic flight, or chauffeured road from Delhi for the slower scenic option.
Arrival day pacing
Tokyo is a long crossing with a significant time shift. We build a firm first-night recovery into the architecture — orientation only, no marquee sites on arrival day. Sleep, light evening, breakfast at the stay, monuments from day two.
Monument access
Lake Pichola is sequenced for the prime viewing hour with escorted access and a vetted guide. Access timed to the prime viewing hours; private guide arranged.. Book the sunset boat for the best light; private charter for a slower pace.
How we run the visit
From Tokyo, the on-ground operation is: chauffeured Elite Fleet, escorted entry, the prime hour at the Lake Pichola, and a sequenced day around it — not a checklist sprint. We pre-arrange access where access requires arrangement.
Intelligence
LAKE PICHOLA FROM TOKYOHow do I visit the Lake Pichola from Tokyo?
Visiting the Lake Pichola from Tokyo, Japan is a single managed mission with MyTripMyTravel. Flight: ~9–12 hrs to Delhi. Gateway: Udaipur (UDR). On-ground in Udaipur: escorted access to the Lake Pichola, pre-arranged at the prime viewing hour, with a vetted guide and the chauffeured Elite Fleet from arrival.
How long is the flight from Tokyo?
~9–12 hrs to Delhi. Gateway: Udaipur (UDR); Udaipur has its own commercial airport. From Tokyo, route via Delhi (DEL) or Mumbai (BOM) onwards by short domestic flight, or chauffeured road from Delhi for the slower scenic option.
When is the best time to visit the Lake Pichola?
Access timed to the prime viewing hours; private guide arranged. Tip from our planning desk: Book the sunset boat for the best light; private charter for a slower pace.
Do I need a visa to travel from Japan?
India offers an e-Visa to travellers of many nationalities; our concierge advises on the current process for Japan passport holders as part of planning.
Is the visit private?
Always — single party, dedicated chauffeur, GPS-tracked Elite Fleet, escorted monument access. Never a shared group departure.
