
Japan's castles, and what the walls remember
How castle lovers actually travel — a pilgrimage that teaches you to read a castle, west from Osaka into Shikoku
Last verified: 2026-06-21
Who this plan suits
- First tripWorks well
- Been beforeGreat fit
- With kidsWorks well
- SoloGreat fit
- As a coupleWorks well
- Gentle paceNot the focus
Year-round; cherry-blossom castles in spring and sea-of-clouds dawns in late autumn are the windows enthusiasts plan around. Expect climbs and stairs.
Castles are where a lot of first trips to Japan quietly deflate. You climb what looks like a four-hundred-year-old tower and find an elevator, air-conditioning and glass display cases — and somewhere around the second or third one, they all start to blur into 'seen one, seen them all'. I felt that too, until a friend who loves castles taught me to look at them completely differently, and it changed every castle I've seen since.
The quiet trick is this: in almost every Japanese castle, the tall tower you photograph — the tenshu, the keep — is only one building, and very often a modern rebuild in concrete. The real castle is the ground it stands on: the moats, the great mortarless stone walls, the trick gates, and the way the whole site was laid out to trap an attacker. Once you read a castle that way, even a small one becomes a puzzle you can solve, and the gap between a true original survivor and a 20th-century reconstruction turns from a letdown into the most interesting thing in front of you.
This is the trip I'd take to learn that eye — a relaxed castle pilgrimage running west from Osaka and across the bridges into Shikoku, about one castle a day. Only twelve original keeps survive in all of Japan, and chasing even a few of them carries you, almost by accident, into a quieter, rural Japan most visitors never reach. Take the whole thing or lift out two or three days; either way, by the end you'll have a way of seeing that pays off at every castle you ever stand in front of again.
Where to base yourself
There's no single base for this one — it's a moving trip, and that's part of the pleasure. I'd sleep a night or two at each stop rather than day-tripping out and back, because the castle towns themselves — their markets, their evening streets, their hot springs — are half the reward.
Where the castles bunch up. If you only have a few days, the densest, easiest run is the mainland stretch — Osaka → Himeji → Okayama — all on one fast line, with a famous reconstruction, the white original masterpiece and a mountaintop survivor within a couple of hours of each other. Shikoku is the deeper half: four of the twelve original keeps sit on the island (Marugame, Matsuyama, Uwajima and Kochi), and it travels slower, which is exactly why it feels like a gentler, older Japan.
Comfortable anchors. I'd start in Osaka, since every line west begins here and it's where most people arrive. On Shikoku, Matsuyama — with Dogo Onsen to soak in after the climb — and Kochi — warm, friendly, and built around the finest-preserved of all the originals — both make lovely places to slow down for two nights.
Getting around & tickets
One line does most of the work. The Sanyo Shinkansen runs Osaka–Himeji–Okayama in a string of short hops, and from Okayama the Marine Liner glides over the Seto-Ohashi bridges into Shikoku — one of the great train views in the country. After that it's a couple of limited expresses across the island. An IC card (ICOCA, Suica and the rest are interchangeable) taps you onto the local trains and trams; the Shinkansen and the limited expresses need their own ticket. The lines and rough times are in the fact boxes — durable, but always check the day's timetable.
The one honest gap: there's no fast, direct train between Matsuyama and Kochi across the mountains, so most people take a highway bus. It's an easy ride, just not a rail one.
The note that changes everything: the keep you queue for is only one building. The castle is the whole hill — the moats, the stone walls, the gates. At every stop I'd give myself time to walk the grounds slowly before climbing the tower, reading how the walls and gates were laid out to slow an attacker down. Opening hours, admission and the climb itself differ at each castle, so I've left those to each castle's own guide rather than print numbers that drift.
Osaka — where the eye begins

I'd start with the most famous castle of all, because it teaches the lesson fastest. Osaka Castle's great keep is magnificent from across the moat — but step inside and you're in a modern museum with an elevator: the present tower is a 1931 reconstruction in steel and concrete. That isn't a swindle, it's a story. The city's mayor proposed rebuilding it in 1928, and Osaka's citizens funded the whole tower with donations in a matter of months. What you're looking at is less a medieval fortress than a monument to civic pride. And here is the thing to carry all week: walk down to the moat and put your hand on the colossal stone walls. Those are real — Tokugawa-era stonework, some blocks the size of a small room. The tower is a rebuild; the ground is the genuine castle. Hold that one distinction, and every castle after this opens up.
- MorningThe keep, from across the moatOsaka Castle Park is free and always open, and the tower reads well from a distance, mirrored in the water. Go up if you'd like the view and the museum — just know you're in a 1931 reconstruction, not an original interior. Linked guide: Osaka Castle.
- AfternoonReading the stones, not the towerWalk the moat and the giant stone walls — the Tokugawa-era fortress that outlasted the tower. Find the Tako-ishi, the 'octopus stone', among the largest castle stones in Japan. Your first lesson in seeing the castle, not just the keep.
Himeji — the real thing, in white

An easy run west on the Shinkansen brings you to the castle every other one is measured against. Himeji is an original — a genuine wooden keep finished in 1609 that has never burned and never fallen, even through the 1945 bombing. It's dazzling white because the plaster is fireproofing, not decoration, and the climb up through the keep is the real medieval thing: dark, steep, ladder-like stairs and bare wooden floors, not a display case. Coming straight from Osaka, the contrast does the teaching for you. One gentle heads-up: Himeji is the most visited of all the originals, and at busy times you're moved through quickly — a lot of regulars go right at opening, or simply admire it from the garden and skip the climb. Either way, before you go in, walk the long zig-zag approach: it doubles back on itself again and again, on purpose, to expose attackers to the walls above. That maze is the castle.
- At openingThe white keep, earlyIt's a straight, signposted walk from Himeji Station (the time's in the fact box). Arriving early is the difference between open space and a slow shuffle. Linked guide: Himeji Castle.
- Late morningWalk the maze of gatesFollow the winding approach up to the keep and notice how it keeps turning back under the walls — laid out to trap. The white plaster you can touch on the way is fireproofing, not paint.
- AfternoonKoko-en, beside the wallsIf the keep was crowded, the neighbouring garden is a calm place to sit with the castle as a backdrop and let the morning settle.
Bitchu-Matsuyama & Okayama — a castle in the clouds, a black tower below

Today is the one that turns ordinary travellers into castle lovers. Bitchu-Matsuyama is the only one of the twelve originals that still stands on a mountaintop — a small keep at the top of a thickly forested hill, reached on foot. The climb up past the looming stone walls gives you, in your legs, what photographs never can: a real sense of how nearly impossible this place would have been to attack. On cold mornings from autumn into early winter, a sea of clouds pools in the valley below and the castle floats above it; the spot to watch that is on a neighbouring peak, and you go before dawn. Down on the plain, Okayama's black-lacquered 'Crow Castle' is a striking reconstruction beside one of Japan's great gardens — and meeting the two in one day, the mountain original and the rebuilt tower, sharpens the eye again. This is the trip's biggest day — a pre-dawn start, a real climb, and a second castle on the plain — so outside sea-of-clouds season I'd happily drop the dawn leg and take it gently.
- Before dawn (autumn–early winter)The sea of cloudsOn cold, clear mornings roughly late October to early December, fog fills the valley and the castle seems to float. The viewing point is on a separate hill — a pre-dawn taxi from Bitchu-Takahashi is the usual way up. Skip it if it isn't the season; the castle rewards any day.
- MorningClimb to the mountaintop keepFrom Bitchu-Takahashi it's a bus or taxi partway, then a walk up through the great stone walls to the only surviving mountaintop keep. Read the rough 'wild-stacked' stonework and the box-shaped gates as you climb.
- AfternoonOkayama: the black keep and KorakuenBack on the plain, Okayama Castle is a black reconstruction beside Korakuen, one of Japan's most celebrated gardens — a soft, green counterpoint to the morning's climb.
Marugame & Takamatsu — across the bridges, where the walls do the talking

Crossing into Shikoku is half the pleasure: the Marine Liner rides a chain of bridges over the island-studded Seto Inland Sea, one of the loveliest train hours anywhere in Japan. It lands at Takamatsu, and Marugame is a short hop further west, so I'd duck out there first and loop back. Marugame keeps one of the smallest of the original keeps, but for me the little tower isn't the point: it sits on some of the tallest, most beautiful stone walls in the country, tier upon tier of them, and they're what I'd come for — the clearest lesson yet, the way I've come to see it, that it's the walls, not the keep, that really repay the eye. Back in Takamatsu, round off the day at Ritsurin, a feudal lord's strolling garden so refined it's counted among Japan's finest — a reminder that a castle town was a centre of culture, not only defence.
- MorningOver the Seto bridgesThe Marine Liner from Okayama crosses the Seto-Ohashi bridges and lands at Takamatsu — sit on the sea side. Marugame is a short hop further west on the Yosan Line, so I'd head there first and come back to Takamatsu after. The art islands below belong to the Setouchi route, if you'd like to linger there another time.
- MiddayMarugame's towering wallsA small original keep on huge, elegant stone ramparts. Walking the tiers and looking up, this is the stonework I'd come for — for me, the heart of the day.
- AfternoonRitsurin Garden, TakamatsuBack in Takamatsu: a daimyo's strolling garden, centuries in the making. Castle towns grew whole cultures, and this is one of the loveliest things they left behind.
Matsuyama & Dogo — a castle on the hill, a bath below

Matsuyama's original keep sits on a steep hill in the middle of the city, and here's what I'd read in it: it's one of the rare survivors built as a connected cluster — the main tower joined by corridors and smaller turrets into a ring around an inner courtyard, so each building covers the next. After the lonely single towers of the days before, this is the one you don't just look at but walk among, feeling how the whole crown of the hill was laid out to defend itself. A ropeway or a wooded climb takes you up; it's many people's quiet favourite. Then the town hands you the reward — Dogo Onsen, among the oldest hot springs in Japan, a short tram ride away — and the trip finally slows down and the castle town folds you in.
- MorningUp to the keepA lift or ropeway, or a wooded walk, takes you up; then wander among the connected cluster of keep, turrets and corridors — noticing how each one covers the next — with the city and the Inland Sea spread out below.
- AfternoonSoak at Dogo OnsenA short tram ride to one of Japan's oldest hot springs — the gentle, local way to end a day of castle climbing.
Kochi — the whole castle, still standing

I'd save Kochi for last, because it's the most complete of them all — and by now you'll have the eye to feel why. Almost everywhere else, only the keep survived. Here the entire inner citadel still stands: the original keep and the lord's honmaru palace together, the one place in Japan where you can walk straight from a daimyo's audience hall into his tower. The approach is laid with false gates and walls studded with anti-intruder spikes, and local volunteers love to explain all of it. Where Osaka was a tower without a castle, Kochi is a castle entire — keep, palace, gates and walls — and standing in the lord's hall, you're not in a museum, you're inside the past. It's the perfect place to finish: the whole thing you've been learning to read, finally gathered in one place.
- MorningThrough the gates to the keepClimb the approach past the Otemon gate, the false entrances and the spiked walls, reading the defences you now know how to spot.
- MiddayThe keep and the honmaru palaceKochi is the only castle where the original keep and the lord's palace both survive, side by side. Walk from the audience hall into the tower — a vision of the past, not a glass case.
- AfternoonHirome Market & the townDown in the friendly city, Hirome Market is the place to try katsuo no tataki (seared bonito). From Kochi you can fly out, or ride the limited express back to Okayama and the mainland.
If you have one more day
+1 dayChase a sea of clouds. If your trip lands in late autumn or early winter, I'd build in a dawn at Bitchu-Matsuyama — or, off this route, at the Takeda Castle ruins in Hyogo, the famous 'castle in the sky', where only the great stone walls remain and the mist does the rest. It means an early, cold start and the weather has to cooperate, but floating above the clouds is the kind of morning you don't forget.
Or add another original. Uwajima, further down the Shikoku coast, keeps a small, honest keep that few visitors reach; Hikone, back near Lake Biwa on the way home, pairs a lovely original keep with a stately garden. Either one deepens the pilgrimage by a day.
If you're short a day
−1 dayYou don't need all six days, and you don't need Shikoku, to come away seeing castles differently. If time is short, I'd take just the mainland stretch: Osaka, Himeji and Bitchu-Matsuyama in two or three days. That's the whole lesson in miniature — a citizens' reconstruction, the white original masterpiece, and a mountaintop survivor — and all three sit on the same fast line west. Better to walk three castles slowly, reading the walls, than to rush a dozen towers.
Extend from here
OnwardThis trip plugs straight into the regions around it. Osaka and Himeji sit inside the Kansai block, so you can fold them into a Kyoto–Nara–Osaka trip; the Okayama and Shikoku legs overlap the Setouchi route through Hiroshima and the inland-sea art islands.
Other castles, other moods, whenever you go back. Central Japan has the black originals — Matsumoto, Inuyama and the golden reconstruction at Nagoya. Tohoku has Hirosaki, a tiny keep ringed by one of the country's wildest cherry-blossom festivals. Kyushu has Kumamoto, a great reconstruction being painstakingly healed after the 2016 earthquake. And the castle towns of Kanazawa and Takayama show the other half of the story — how a castle grew a whole culture around itself.
The quest that outlasts the trip. Plenty of castle lovers keep a stamp book for the Japan Castle Foundation's hundred (and second hundred) famous castles, collecting an inked stamp at each one and being formally certified once the book is full; others gather goshuin-style castle seals. It's a gentle way to let a single trip turn into a reason to keep coming back — which, once you have the eye, you'll quietly want to.
Good to know — fares & times
Go deeper
Schloss Himeji — Warum der Weiße Reiher zum Überleben gebaut wurde, nicht zum Bestaunen
Schloss Himeji ist Japans vollständigste Original-Burg aus Holz von 1609 — UNESCO-Welterbe. Erfahren Sie, warum der Weiße Reiher zum Überleben gebaut wurde, plus Öffnungszeiten, Eintritt und Anreise.
Himeji Castle
Schloss Osaka — der Turm, den Osaka dreimal erbaute
Lernen Sie den wiederaufgebauten Bergfried von Schloss Osaka lieben: kostenloser Park und eintrittspflichtiger Turm. Der Wassergraben und die gewaltigen Steinmauern sind das wahre, vierhundert Jahre alte Schloss.
Osaka Castle
Burg Kochi — wo nicht nur der Turm, sondern die ganze Burg erhalten blieb
Ein kultureller Audioguide zur Burg Kochi — der einzigen originalen japanischen Burg, bei der Hauptturm und Fürstenpalast beide erhalten sind. Mit dem 300 Jahre alten Sonntagsmarkt, Öffnungszeiten, Eintritt und Anreise.
Kochi Castle
Burg Matsumoto — Warum eine für den Krieg gebaute Festung einen Raum zum Mondschauen hat
Burg Matsumoto, einer von zwölf erhaltenen Original-Holzbergfrieden Japans. Warum bekam eine schwarze, für den Krieg gebaute Flachlandfestung einen Turm zum Mondschauen? Mit Wassergraben, Nordalpen, Öffnungszeiten, Eintritt und Besuchstipps.
Matsumoto Castle
Burg Kumamoto — eine Festung, die Stein für nummerierten Stein wieder zusammengesetzt wird
Burg Kumamoto heilt nach den Beben von 2016 — sieh der Reparatur vom erhöhten Steg aus zu. Öffnungszeiten, Tickets und Anreise findest du in diesem Guide.
Kumamoto Castle
Kanazawa — Die Burgstadt, die ein Vermögen in Gärten und Blattgold steckte, nicht in Heere
Die Maeda-Domäne gab ein Vermögen von einer Million Koku für Gärten, Blattgold und Kunsthandwerk aus statt für Heere. Plus praktische Infos zum Garten Kenroku-en.
Kanazawa
Takayama — Die Altstadt, die nie zum Museum wurde
Entdecken Sie Takayama, eine Bergstadt, in der die Altstadt Sanmachi noch bewohnt ist und die Morgenmärkte die Einwohner weiterhin versorgen. Ein WMJS-Leitfaden über eine lebendige Stadt, kein Museum: das Takayama Jinya, Hida-Rind und die Busverbindung nach Shirakawa-go.
Takayama Old Town (Sanmachi)
Combine with another plan
Kansai, an easy few days
Japan's older heart — Kyoto, Nara, Osaka — at a comfortable pace
Chubu & the Japan Alps, a slower few days
Mountains and old towns — Matsumoto, Takayama, Shirakawa-go, Kanazawa — at a reserve-ahead pace
Kyushu, an easy few days
A north-to-south spine down the island — a shrine of hope, an open-window harbour, a castle being healed, and a city under a volcano
Hiroshima & the Seto Inland Sea
Okayama, an art island, Hiroshima and Miyajima — run gently east to west
Sources
- JNTO — Japan's Twelve Original Castles
- Nippon.com — Japanese Castles' Defensive Features
- Osaka Castle Museum (Official) — 90th-Anniversary History
- Himeji Castle (Official) — Guide & History
- UNESCO World Heritage — Himeji-jo
- Takahashi City (Official) — Bitchu-Matsuyama sea-of-clouds platform
- Asago City (Official) — Takeda Castle Ruins
- Kochi Castle (Official)
- Japan Castle Foundation — 100 Famous Castles stamp rally (Official)
- JR-West — route & fare search (Official)
- JR Shikoku — limited express & ticket information (Official)