GETTING AROUND

Suica vs Pasmo: Which IC Card Should You Get?

SuicaとPasmo、どっちを買うべき?結論から言うと、どちらでもOKです

Last updated: April 2026

Every Japan travel guide tells you to "get an IC card" but nobody explains which one. Suica? Pasmo? Does it matter? Here's the honest answer.

どのガイドにも「ICカードを買え」と書いてあるけど、SuicaとPasmoのどちらを選ぶべきかは曖昧。正直な答えをまとめました。

01The short answer

They're basically the same. Both Suica and Pasmo work on all trains, buses, convenience stores, and vending machines across Japan. Pick whichever is available when you arrive. They are interchangeable everywhere.

If you have an iPhone, get Suica via Apple Wallet before you even leave home. No physical card needed. No deposit. Instant setup.

SuicaもPasmoも使える場所は完全に同じ。どちらでもOK。iPhoneユーザーなら出発前にApple WalletでSuicaを追加するのが最速です。

VERDICT

Don't overthink it. They're functionally identical. Suica is slightly easier to get because it's available at Narita and Haneda airports. If you have an iPhone, set up Suica digitally before your trip.

02What is an IC card?

An IC card is a rechargeable tap-and-go card for public transport and small purchases in Japan. Think of it like a contactless debit card that works on every train, bus, and most convenience stores in the country.

Where it works

Trains and subways (all companies, nationwide), city buses, vending machines, convenience stores (7-Eleven, FamilyMart, Lawson), some restaurants and shops, coin lockers at stations, and taxi cabs in major cities.

電車・バス・自動販売機・コンビニ・一部飲食店・コインロッカー・タクシーなど、日本中で使えます。

How tapping works

When you ride a train, you tap your card on the reader at the entry gate. When you exit at your destination, you tap again. The system calculates the exact fare and deducts it from your balance automatically. No need to figure out ticket prices or buy paper tickets.

Deposit
¥500
Physical card only
Digital
¥0
No deposit needed
Top-up
Anywhere
Station or konbini
Max balance
¥20,000
~$135 USD

03Suica vs Pasmo comparison

Suica Pasmo
Issuer JR East Tokyo Metro / Private railways
Where to buy JR stations, airports Metro stations
Apple Wallet Yes Yes (since 2020)
Google Wallet Yes Yes
Accepted Everywhere Everywhere
Deposit ¥500 ¥500
VERDICT

Functionally identical. The only practical difference: Suica is slightly easier to get because JR has ticket machines at both Narita and Haneda airports. Pasmo is just as good — if you land at a Metro station first, grab Pasmo.

04How to get one

Physical card

Go to any JR station ticket machine (for Suica) or Metro station ticket machine (for Pasmo). The machines have English language support. You'll pay a ¥500 deposit plus whatever amount you want to charge initially. The whole process takes about 2 minutes.

JRの券売機(Suica)または地下鉄の券売機(Pasmo)で購入。英語対応あり。デポジット500円+チャージ金額で2分で完了。

Digital card (recommended)

iPhone: Open Apple Wallet → tap "+" → search "Suica" → add card. No deposit needed. Top up instantly with a credit card. You can do this from your home country before you even board the plane.

Android: Open Google Wallet → add "Suica" or "Pasmo" transit card. Same process — no deposit, instant top-up.

WHY DIGITAL IS BETTER

No ¥500 deposit. Instant top-up from your phone. No risk of losing a physical card. Works the same at every gate and reader. Set it up before you leave home and you're ready to ride the moment you land.

05How much to charge

First day
¥2,000-3,000
Airport to hotel + basics
Daily train use
¥500-1,500
Average tourist
Top-up at
Any station
Or any konbini
Also pays for
Konbini
Snacks, drinks, etc.

Start with ¥2,000-3,000 on your first day to cover the airport-to-hotel train and some walking-around money. After that, top up as needed. An average tourist uses ¥500-1,500 per day on trains, depending on how much sightseeing they do.

You can also use your IC card to pay at convenience stores, vending machines, and many small shops. It's often faster than cash or credit card — just tap and go.

Top up at any station ticket machine (bills and coins accepted) or at any convenience store register. Digital card users can top up directly from their phone anytime.

初日は2,000〜3,000円チャージしておけば安心。その後は都度チャージ。1日の電車代は平均500〜1,500円。コンビニ支払いにも使えます。

06Common mistakes

Don't buy both

There is zero reason to have both a Suica and a Pasmo. They work in exactly the same places. One card is all you need for your entire trip.

Don't confuse IC cards with day passes

IC cards and day passes serve different purposes. An IC card is for pay-as-you-go travel. A day pass gives you unlimited rides on a specific network for a flat fee (e.g., Tokyo Metro 24-hour pass for ¥600). If you're making 4+ Metro rides in a day, a day pass might save money. Otherwise, your IC card is simpler.

ICカードと1日乗車券は別物。1日4回以上メトロに乗るなら1日券(600円)の方がお得な場合も。

Don't forget to tap OUT

This is the most common tourist mistake. You must tap your card both when entering AND exiting the gate. If you forget to tap out, the system charges you the maximum possible fare from your entry station. If this happens, go to the station attendant window and they'll adjust the fare.

Card expiration

Physical IC cards expire after 10 years of non-use. If you return to Japan after a long gap and your old card doesn't work, take it to a station window — the balance is recoverable. Digital cards don't have this issue.

物理カードは10年未使用で失効。ただし残高は窓口で復旧可能。デジタルカードならこの問題はなし。

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