When a Paper Ticket Beats an IC Card in Japan

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Quick answer

For everyday city travel, an IC card like Suica or Pasmo is easiest. But for long-distance trips, reserved seats, the Shinkansen, and some discount or tourist tickets, a paper ticket can be cheaper or even required. Match the ticket type to the journey.

IC card or paper ticket? A quick decision guide

For most short rides in a city, an IC card (Suica, Pasmo, ICOCA and others) is the easiest way to travel: tap in, tap out, done. But it is not always the cheapest or even an option. Use this quick check to decide.

Your journeyBest choice (as of June 2026)
Short ride within one cityIC card — fast and simple
Long intercity trip on local linesPaper ticket or pass — IC may not cover it
Shinkansen or limited expressPaper ticket, online reservation, or EX service
Reserved seat neededPaper ticket or app — IC alone does not reserve
Using a tourist/discount dealPaper or QR ticket — the deal sets the format
Several long trips in a regionRail pass — often cheaper than either

The rule of thumb: tap your IC card for everyday city hops, but switch to a paper ticket, app reservation, or pass once distance, seats, or special fares enter the picture.

When is a paper ticket actually cheaper or required?

IC cards are convenient, but several situations favour paper. As of June 2026, watch for these.

SituationWhy paper wins
Long-distance JR travelIC tapping is limited to set fare areas; long trips need a paper fare ticket.
Shinkansen and limited expressYou need a basic fare ticket plus a limited-express/seat ticket, or an EX reservation — not a plain IC tap.
Reserved seatsA specific seat requires a seat ticket, bought separately.
Discount and round-trip ticketsSpecial-fare paper tickets can be cheaper than the IC fare.
Tourist passes and area ticketsThese come as paper or QR products with their own rules.
Children’s and group faresSome discounts are only sold as paper tickets at a counter.

If your trip is long, involves a fast train, or uses any kind of deal, check the paper or pass option before tapping in. Tapping a plain IC card can leave you without a seat or with an incomplete fare.

How do I buy the right ticket?

Matching the ticket to the journey avoids gate trouble and wasted money. Here is the practical flow.

  1. Decide the journey type. City hop, long local trip, or fast train with a seat?
  2. For city hops, top up your IC card at any station machine and tap through the gate.
  3. For long-distance or fast trains, use a ticket machine, counter, or app. Buy the basic fare ticket plus any limited-express or seat ticket together.
  4. For reserved seats, choose the seat at purchase — at a green ticket machine, a staffed counter (“Midori no Madoguchi” on JR), or an online service.
  5. Keep paper tickets until you exit. You may need to insert several tickets together at the gate; collect them all as they pop out.
  6. For passes, follow the pass rules. Some are tapped, some are shown to staff, some scan as QR codes.

If you are unsure at the station, staff at the ticket counter can sell the correct combination for your route. Tell them your start, destination, and whether you want a reserved seat.

Cost comparison: a simple picture

Exact fares vary by route and change over time, so treat this as the pattern, not a price list (as of June 2026).

JourneyIC cardPaper ticketBetter choice
Short city rideSame or a few yen lessSlightly moreIC card
Long local-line trip across areasMay not be allowedStandard farePaper ticket
Shinkansen with reserved seatNot possible aloneFare + seat ticket / EXPaper or app
Multiple regional tripsAdd up per rideAdd up per rideRail pass, often cheapest

For everyday travel the difference is tiny, so convenience wins and IC cards are ideal. For big trips, the right paper ticket or pass can save real money and guarantees you a seat.

Quick reference: IC vs paper at a glance

TopicDetail (as of June 2026)
Best for city ridesIC card (Suica, Pasmo, ICOCA, etc.)
Best for long distancePaper ticket or rail pass
ShinkansenFare + limited-express/seat ticket, or EX service
Reserved seatsPaper ticket or app reservation, not plain IC
Special discountsOften paper-only, bought at a counter
Keep ticketsUntil you exit the final gate
When in doubtAsk at the ticket counter

An IC card is the right default for getting around town, and you should absolutely use one for daily travel. But it is not a universal ticket: long trips, fast trains, reserved seats, and special fares often call for paper or a pass. Check your route’s options, and confirm current fares on the official JR or JNTO pages before you travel.

FAQ

Can I use my Suica or Pasmo on the Shinkansen?

Not directly for a normal bullet-train fare. As of June 2026, riding the Shinkansen needs a basic fare ticket plus a limited-express (and seat) ticket, or a dedicated smart-EX/EX service linked to a registered card. Tapping a plain Suica at the regular gate does not buy a Shinkansen seat.

Is an IC card cheaper than a paper ticket?

For short city rides, IC fares are equal to or a few yen cheaper than paper. For long distances, special discount tickets, round-trip deals, or tourist passes, a paper ticket can be clearly cheaper. It depends on the journey.

Do I need a paper ticket for a reserved seat?

Usually yes, or a smartphone/online reservation tied to a service like EX. As of June 2026, a basic IC tap does not reserve a specific seat on limited-express or Shinkansen trains. You buy a seat ticket separately at a machine, counter, or app.

Can I use an IC card for long-distance travel between cities?

On many JR lines you can tap in and out within the same area, but most IC cards do not allow tapping across separate fare areas for very long trips. For intercity travel, a paper ticket or a pass is the reliable choice. Confirm the rules for your route.

Should tourists buy a rail pass instead of single tickets?

Sometimes. If you take several long-distance trains, a regional or nationwide pass (a paper or QR product) can beat both single paper tickets and IC fares. For a few city rides, an IC card is simpler and cheaper to top up.