Some classic Tokyo day trips are magical by car. The Mount Fuji and Fuji Five Lakes area rewards flexibility; you can chase clear vantage points, detour to lesser known shores, and time a sunset without worrying about bus schedules. Hakone becomes simpler when you weave together lakeside stops, small art museums, and private onsen inns tucked up side roads. Nikko blends shrines with waterfalls and marshlands that are much easier to reach if you can jump from one trailhead to another. The Boso Peninsula in Chiba offers sea cliffs, farm stands, surf towns, and flower fields, spread out along scenic coastal routes.
Expressways around Tokyo are tolled. With an ETC card in the slot, gates open automatically and charges accrue under your rental. Watch signs that split for cash and ETC lanes. Plan transitions onto expressways well ahead; exits can arrive quickly and ramps are short. For navigation, set destinations using phone numbers or map codes when available, which Japanese GPS systems love. If you rely on your phone, download offline maps and carry a backup power bank.
Forget what looks cool and picture your routine. If you navigate dense campus streets and parallel parking, a compact hatchback or small sedan is your friend. Hatchbacks punch above their weight for cargo—you can fit laundry, instruments, a dorm fridge, or bags for a weekend getaway. If you often drive home in winter or tackle unpaved roads to outdoor spots, a small SUV with all-wheel drive can be practical, but do the math on fuel and parking. Two-door coupes look fun but can be a pain for friends and moving stuff. As for performance trims, they are rarely worth the insurance and fuel penalty in a student budget. Ground clearance matters more than you think when you meet that speed bump or slushy lot. Think about seating: four real seatbelts and usable back seats make group rides safer and simpler. Choose the car that makes your everyday easier, not the one that looks best only on move-in day.
Must de Cartier is a time capsule that still turns heads. A green oriental with a chic hit of galbanum up top and a resinous, ambery-vanilla base, it starts sharp and verdant before settling into a plush glow. There is an old-school glamour here, the kind that pairs beautifully with a long coat and leather gloves. If La Panthere is a poised feline, Must is the velvet chaise it reclines on. The eau de toilette leans greener and airier; the eau de parfum runs warmer, creamier, and closer to evening wear. Either way, you get that unmistakable contrast: cool opening, warm heart, lingering base.
Most of the real cost in small-item sales comes from delivery choices, not the platform. If you mail or courier an item, someone pays postage—either you, the buyer, or you split it. Tracked shipping costs more but protects both sides if something goes missing. Local favorites like SF Express or Hongkong Post offer multiple tiers; pick one that matches the item’s value and urgency. For cash-on-delivery options, check if there’s a courier surcharge and who will cover it. Payment-wise, meet-up cash is free but costs time and transport. If you lean on in-app checkout and payout, factor in any processing nuances, such as minimum withdrawal thresholds or timelines. If you arrange payment off-platform (bank transfer, FPS, e-wallets), you might avoid fees, but you also waive Carousell’s built-in safeguards. A simple rule of thumb: on low-value items, keep delivery costs lean; on higher-value items, pay for tracking and build that into your price so you don’t grudgingly eat it later.