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Asian Games 2026 in Aichi-Nagoya: Travel & Connectivity Guide

The 2026 Asian Games run September 19 to October 4 in Aichi-Nagoya, Japan. Tickets, venues, getting around the metropolitan area, and the connectivity setup for fans flying in from across Asia and beyond.

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eSimphony Editorial
Asian Games 2026 in Aichi-Nagoya: Travel & Connectivity Guide

The 20th Asian Games come to central Japan in September 2026. Aichi prefecture and the city of Nagoya host roughly 12,000 athletes from 45 National Olympic Committees competing in around 40 sports across two and a half weeks. For fans flying in from across Asia and beyond, this is the largest sporting event Japan has hosted since the Tokyo 2020 Olympics β€” and it lands in a region that is significantly easier to navigate, less expensive, and more characteristically Japanese than Tokyo.

This guide covers what international visitors need to know.

When and where

The Games run September 19 (opening ceremony) to October 4 (closing ceremony). Most events fall in the two-week window between. Specific event scheduling is published by the Aichi-Nagoya 2026 organizing committee.

Host cities and venues span Aichi prefecture and parts of neighboring Gifu, Mie, and Shizuoka. The major hubs:

  • Nagoya β€” Most ceremony venues, urban arenas, swimming pool, gymnastics
  • Toyota City β€” Football, some athletics
  • Toyohashi β€” Tennis, beach sports
  • Okazaki β€” Martial arts venues
  • Inazawa, Kasugai, Toyota Stadium area β€” Various team sports

The opening and closing ceremonies are at Toyota Stadium (Toyota City, ~30 min from Nagoya by train).

Getting to Aichi-Nagoya

By air. Chubu Centrair International Airport (NGO) on Ise Bay is the main international gateway. Direct flights from most major Asian capitals β€” Bangkok, Singapore, Manila, Seoul, Hong Kong, Taipei, Shanghai, Beijing β€” plus US west coast and a few European cities. The Meitetsu Airport Limited Express connects NGO to Nagoya station in about 30 minutes.

Via Tokyo. Many international travelers fly into Narita (NRT) or Haneda (HND) and take the Shinkansen. Tokyo to Nagoya by Tokaido Shinkansen is about 1 hour 40 minutes. This works well if you want to combine the Games with a Tokyo visit.

Via Kansai. Kansai International Airport (KIX) β†’ Nagoya by Shinkansen is about 50 minutes. Combines Games with Kyoto/Osaka/Nara.

JR Pass considerations. Japan’s tourist JR Pass covers the Tokaido Shinkansen including Nagoya. If you’re combining the Games with travel to Tokyo and Kyoto/Osaka, the 7-day or 14-day JR Pass is usually a strong value.

Where to stay

Nagoya is the practical base for most spectators. The city has substantial hotel inventory β€” large international chains around Nagoya station, business hotels in the central wards (Naka-ku, Sakae), and budget options out toward the suburbs.

For events at Toyota Stadium specifically, a small fan contingent stays in Toyota City rather than commuting. Toyota City’s hotel inventory is limited; book early.

For travelers planning to tour beyond the Games, Nagoya is also the gateway to Takayama (Japanese Alps), Ise (sacred shrine), and the Kiso Valley (post towns).

Tickets

Ticketing is run by the organizing committee and authorized resellers. Many events sell out in the early-bird ballot held in 2025. Resale through the official platform may have inventory closer to the Games.

Categories of tickets:

  • Opening / closing ceremonies β€” Premium pricing, sold out quickly. Resale only.
  • Marquee finals (athletics finals, swimming finals, basketball finals, etc.) β€” Premium tier
  • Preliminaries and group stages β€” Reasonable pricing, often available
  • Less famous sports β€” Often available even close to event date, lower pricing

For multi-day fans, day passes for venues with multiple sports running simultaneously offer good value.

Connectivity setup

Japan has the best mobile coverage in Asia. Continuous 4G/5G across all venues, all major transport, the Shinkansen at speed.

For non-Japan travelers, the connectivity options:

Travel eSIM is the recommended setup. eSimphony's Japan single-country plans work for fans staying only in Japan. The Asia regional plan is recommended if you’re combining the Games with stops in Korea, Taiwan, Singapore, or Southeast Asia β€” one eSIM, one purchase, automatic carrier handoff at every border.

Realistic data needs for a Games trip:

  • 5–7 day single-event trip: 4–6 GB
  • 2-week multi-event trip: 8–12 GB
  • 3-week Games + Tokyo + Kyoto trip: 12–18 GB

Roaming on home plan is generally expensive in Japan unless your home plan explicitly includes Japan in its free-roaming list (rare outside specific US plans). For most international fans, the eSIM math wins decisively.

Local Japanese SIM at the airport is possible but less convenient than eSIM. Japanese SIMs require ID registration; the queue at Centrair during the Games will be long.

What else to do in Aichi

The Games run for two weeks. Many fans extend a few extra days to explore the region. Highlights within easy reach of Nagoya:

Nagoya itself. Atsuta Shrine, Nagoya Castle, the Tokugawa Art Museum, Osu shopping district, the unique Nagoya foods (hitsumabushi eel, miso katsu, Taiwanese-style ramen).

Inuyama. Castle town with Japan’s oldest original castle, about 30 minutes from Nagoya.

Ise-Shima. The Ise Grand Shrine (most sacred Shinto site in Japan) and the pearl-cultivation islands, about 90 minutes by train.

Takayama. Mountain town with preserved Edo-era streets, about 2.5 hours by Hida Limited Express.

Kiso Valley. Post towns of the old Nakasendo highway (Magome, Tsumago) β€” atmospheric walks through preserved stage stops.

Food and culture during the Games

Japan in late September is between summer humidity and full autumn β€” pleasant temperatures, occasional typhoon weather (the first half of September is peak typhoon season; by late September the risk drops materially).

Eating during the Games. Nagoya restaurants accommodate international visitors well. Reservations are useful for the famous spots (Atsuta-Horaiken for hitsumabushi, the original Yamamotoya for miso udon) but most casual restaurants don’t require them.

Cash and cards. Japan is cash-friendlier than most developed countries. ATMs at Seven Eleven and post offices accept foreign cards. IC cards (Manaca in Nagoya, Suica/Pasmo from Tokyo) work for transit and convenience-store purchases.

Etiquette. Standard Japanese norms apply at venues. Quieter cheering than Western sports events, no political banners, respectful behavior toward officials. The Asian Games crowds are typically more disciplined than Olympic crowds.

After the Games

The 2026 Asian Games are followed by the 2026 Asian Para Games at the same venues, in October–November 2026. Spectators interested in continuing the trip can stay through both.

For travelers extending beyond Japan, the Asia regional eSIM covers neighboring destinations. A common post-Games trip: Nagoya β†’ Tokyo (Shinkansen) β†’ Seoul (flight) β†’ home. One eSIM handles all three.

Browse Japan plans, Asia regional plan, or download eSimphony before flying. The Games are a unique window into Asian sport at scale; the connectivity setup is the easy part β€” make sure that part is sorted before you focus on the rest.

References

  1. 1
    . "Aichi-Nagoya 2026 Asian Games β€” Official site." View source
  2. 2
    . "Olympic Council of Asia." View source
  3. 3
    . "Japan National Tourism Organization." View source

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