How to handle weather and train disruption
Check the forecast before leaving, react by condition instead of guessing, and do not commit to a route until weather and operator status both look stable.
Steps
- Check JMA forecast and warning pages before leaving on rain, snow, wind, or heat-risk days.
- Screenshot your hotel name, address, and one safe fallback route before you move.
- If trains stop, pause before entering the station and confirm whether bus, taxi, or waiting is the smarter move.
- In any wide disruption, protect shelter, water, battery, and communication before sightseeing plans.
Common mistakes
- Walking into a station during a suspension before checking operator status.
- Treating typhoon, heatstroke risk, or heavy snow like a normal sightseeing day.
- Assuming a pass matters if the entire line is suspended.
Next branch
Use the quick steps above first. Open the full detail only when you need examples, edge cases, or the next task.
Detailed guide Full notes, examples, and recovery steps
By condition
- Earthquake: protect yourself first, stay away from glass and shelves, then wait for station or staff instructions instead of moving blindly.
- Typhoon or heavy rain: avoid committing to long-distance rail until the operator status page looks stable.
- Heat: plan shade, water, indoor breaks, and shorter midday exposure.
- Snow or ice: add walking time and expect bus or ropeway delays even when main rail is running.
If service stops
- Do not push deeper into the network.
- Re-check the operator page and weather page.
- Decide between waiting, rerouting, or staying near the current station.
- Tell the hotel if late check-in is now likely.