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🍁 Autumn Guide · Updated 2026

Kawaguchiko Autumn Leaves
& Mt Fuji: When to Catch the Peak

Picture a tunnel of fiery red maples along the lakeshore, with snow-capped Mt Fuji rising right behind it — the shot everyone chases every November. Here's everything in one place: when colour peaks, where to shoot it, the festival, and how to get there from Tokyo with real, current fares.

Start Here

Why Kawaguchiko IsThe Place for Autumn Leaves with Fuji

Honestly, Japan has hundreds of gorgeous spots for autumn leaves — but Kawaguchiko offers something almost nowhere else does: maples blazing red right around the lake, with the snow-capped volcano of Mt Fuji standing behind them, all in a single frame. The lake sits at roughly 830 metres, so the air is colder than Tokyo and the leaves turn earlier and deeper. When the morning light hits the still water, you can catch the real Fuji and an upside-down "reflected Fuji" at the same time.

The biggest draw is the Momiji Festival (Fujikawaguchiko Autumn Leaves Festival) on the north shore, with its maple tunnel and an evening illumination. And it isn't only a daytime affair — after dark, spotlights catch the red leaves reflected in the stream, and plenty of visitors say the night scene is even more worth it than the daylight one.

🍁 The one thing to know first: the peak foliage date shifts every year with the weather — nobody can promise an exact day months ahead. This guide gives you the "likely window" to plan around, but before you actually fly, always check the latest koyo (foliage) report about a week out, via japan-guide or the official Fujikawaguchiko tourism site.
🍁
400–500 Maples
Around 400–500 maple trees ring the lake, with about 60 large ones in the Momiji Corridor alone.
🗻
Fuji in Frame
The one place to get autumn leaves and snow-capped Mt Fuji in a single shot — clearest at dawn.
🌃
Night Illumination
The Momiji Festival lights the maples along the stream until about 22:00 — a different mood entirely.
🚌
Easy from Tokyo
Under two hours by highway bus from Shinjuku, or a relaxed direct ride on the Fuji Excursion train.
When to Go

Kawaguchiko Foliage Timeline — Peak Mid-to-Late November

At 830 metres the lake turns earlier than the city. Here's the rough rhythm of each stage (based on past years — this year could run a week or two early or late).

Late Oct
Turning
First flashes of yellow and orange; snow begins to dust Fuji's summit. Crowds are still thin — good for clean, open Fuji shots.
Peak
Mid Nov
Fully Red
The golden window — maples deep red right around the lake, the Momiji Corridor at its best. Also the most crowded; book accommodation ahead.
Late Nov
Still Lovely
Many spots still in full colour, with the first leaf-fall carpeting the ground red. The Momiji Festival usually runs to the month's end.
Early Dec
Late Season
A few spots cling to colour, but most leaves have dropped. Fuji's snow deepens as winter sets in.
📅 For reference, 2025: japan-guide's foliage report dated 7 Nov 2025 had the Momiji Corridor and the wider Fuji area "approaching peak," and judged roughly 8–14 Nov as the best viewing window; the festival itself ran 1–30 Nov. Use that as a broad guide — but for 2026 you must re-check the live report, because the peak date is never fixed.
Photo Spots

4 Fuji-and-Maple Photo Spots You Can't Miss

Ordered by how strongly we'd recommend them — each with location, how to get there, the best time of day, and tips from people who've actually been.

The red maple tunnel of the Momiji Corridor beside Lake Kawaguchiko during autumn foliage season 🍁 The Headliner1
Momiji Corridor (Maple Tunnel)
Momiji Kairo · North Shore

The heart of the autumn festival: about 60 large maples line both banks of the Nashigawa stream to form a red-and-orange tunnel. Lovely by day, magical after dark when the illumination lights the leaves and reflects them in the water. The festival grounds are dotted with Yamanashi food stalls and a craft market to browse.

📍Location: North shore, near the Kawaguchiko Natural Living Center / Nagahama
Hours: Walkable anytime · festival site approx 9:00–19:00 · illumination sunset–~22:00 · Free
🚌Getting there: Omni Bus (Red Line) from Kawaguchiko Station, alight near the Natural Living Center
💡Tip: Weekends bring heavy traffic and crowds — go on a weekday or before 9 am. Want both moods? Arrive in late afternoon and stay until the lights come on.
All Kawaguchiko Attractions →
Oishi Park flower beds beside Lake Kawaguchiko with snow-capped Mt Fuji in the background 🌺 Fuji + Flowers2
Oishi Park
Oishi Park · North Shore

The postcard Fuji view that everyone photographs. A lakeside path runs through seasonal flower beds — in autumn you get fiery red kochia and maples in the foreground with snow-capped Fuji behind. It's right next to the Momiji Corridor, so you can walk over or hop one bus stop.

📍Location: North shore of Lake Kawaguchiko (Oishi)
Hours: Open anytime, free · Fuji clearest and crowds thinnest at dawn
🚌Getting there: Omni Bus (Red Line) from Kawaguchiko Station to the Oishi Park stop
💡Tip: Come for the morning light — Fuji often hides behind cloud by late morning. Pair it with the nearby Momiji Corridor in one loop.
All Kawaguchiko Attractions →
Chureito Pagoda, a red five-storey pagoda, with Mt Fuji rising behind it ⛩️ Pagoda + Fuji3
Chureito Pagoda
Chureito Pagoda · Arakurayama Sengen Park

A red five-storey pagoda on a hillside, looking down over the town of Fujiyoshida with Mt Fuji filling the background — one of the most recognised "this is Japan" views in the world. In autumn the maples around the steps turn red and orange. It's a climb of about 400 steps, but the view up top earns every one.

📍Location: Arakurayama Sengen Park, Fujiyoshida (across from the lake, ~20 min by road)
Hours: Open anytime, free · best at dawn or dusk
🚆Getting there: Fujikyu Railway to Shimoyoshida Station, then a ~400-step climb
💡Tip: Hugely popular at peak with long viewing-platform queues — arrive early for an open angle. Wear shoes you can climb stairs in.
All Kawaguchiko Attractions →
Photo: Chureito Pagoda with Fuji (shown here in cherry-blossom season — in autumn the maples around the pagoda turn red and orange instead).
Snow-capped Mt Fuji reflected in the still water of Lake Kawaguchiko with autumn-coloured trees along the far shore 🪞 Reflected Fuji4
North Shore & Reflected Fuji
North Shore · Sakasa Fuji

On a calm morning when the water turns to glass, snow-capped Fuji mirrors onto the surface as an upside-down "Sakasa Fuji." The north shore has lines of trees that flush red and yellow at this time of year, giving the reflection a foreground with depth. No ticket needed — just arrive early and hope the sky cooperates.

📍Location: Along the north shore, around Oishi–Nagahama
Hours: Early morning before 8 am (calmest air, stillest water) · Free
🚌Getting there: Omni Bus (Red Line) · or cycle along the lakeshore
💡Tip: A reflected Fuji takes luck — the water must be still and the sky clear. Try a few mornings if you can, and accept that some days Fuji simply hides all day.
Kawaguchiko City Guide →
The Festival

The Kawaguchiko Momiji Festival — Go After Dark Too

The Fujikawaguchiko Autumn Leaves Festival (the Momiji Festival) runs throughout November — in 2025 that was 1–30 November — centred on the Momiji Corridor along the north shore. Entry is free. The festival site is open roughly 9:00–19:00, and the highlight many people prefer is the evening illumination, with spotlights catching the red maples reflected in the stream, on from sunset until about 22:00. Around the grounds you'll find Yamanashi food stalls and a craft market to graze and browse.

🗓️ 2026 update: the festival is held in November every year, but start/end dates and illumination hours can shift slightly with the season's foliage — before you travel, reconfirm exact dates on the official Fujikawaguchiko tourism site or kawaguchiko.net. On peak weekends, expect heavy traffic and full car parks — use the sightseeing bus rather than driving.
Getting There from Tokyo

3 Ways to Reach Kawaguchiko — Real Fares, Updated 2026

Fares and times below are based on operator information (Keio/Fujikyu, JR East) — prices can change, so reconfirm on the official sites before you travel.

🚌 Best Value · Recommended

Highway Bus from Shinjuku

¥2,200 / ¥2,000 online
  • ⏱️ Time: Under 2 hours (about 1 hr 45 min)
  • 🚏 From: Shinjuku Expressway Bus Terminal (Busta Shinjuku) to Kawaguchiko Station
  • 🔁 Frequency: Roughly two departures per hour (Keio / Fujikyu)
  • 🎟️ Tip: Autumn is busy — reserve online in advance; it's cheaper and you won't risk a full bus.
🚆 Most Comfortable

Fuji Excursion Direct Train

¥4,200 / one way
  • ⏱️ Time: About 1 hr 55 min, Shinjuku straight to Kawaguchiko, no transfer
  • 🪑 Seats: Reservation required · about 4 round trips/day (extra runs in high season)
  • 💴 Breakdown: Base fare ¥2,580 + express fee ¥1,620
  • 🎟️ Tip: Booking opens 10 am, one month ahead. It sells out fast in autumn — book the moment it opens.
🚉 Flexible Timing

Train via Otsuki

~¥2,580 / total
  • ⏱️ Time: JR Chuo to Otsuki ~100 min + Fujikyu to Kawaguchiko ~55 min
  • 💴 Fare: JR ¥1,410 + Fujikyu ¥1,170
  • 🎫 JR Pass: Valid to Otsuki · the Otsuki–Kawaguchiko leg needs a ¥1,170 supplement
  • 🎟️ Tip: Good if you're travelling outside Fuji Excursion times or already hold a JR Pass.
🚌 Getting around the lake: once you reach Kawaguchiko, the photo spots (Momiji Corridor / Oishi Park / north shore) are on the opposite side from the station. Use the Omni Bus sightseeing loop (Red Line), which comes roughly every 15 minutes. If you'll make several stops, the 2-day pass (¥2,000) — or 1-day (¥1,500) — beats paying per ride. Reconfirm prices on the official site.
Map

Autumn Spots Around Lake Kawaguchiko

See where each spot sits so you can plan one efficient bus loop and catch several in a single visit.

Tips

6 Things That Make Your Autumn Trip Smoother — and Catch the Peak

📊
Check the Koyo Report
Peak dates shift yearly — about a week before you go, check the foliage report on japan-guide or the official Fujikawaguchiko site.
🧥
Colder Than You Think
Daytime is around 10–17°C, but dawn and evening by the lake can dip close to 0–5°C. Pack a warm jacket, hat, and gloves.
🌅
Fuji Loves Mornings
At dawn the air is calm and skies clear — Fuji is sharpest and the crowds thinnest. By late morning cloud often hides the summit.
📅
Avoid Weekends
Peak weekends mean heavy traffic and big crowds. If you can choose, go midweek — far better photos and no jostling for angles.
🚌
Use the Sightseeing Bus
The Omni Bus (Red Line) loops the lake; the 2-day pass (¥2,000) beats driving — car parks fill up completely at peak.
🛏️
Book Lodging Early
Lakeside ryokan sell out fast in autumn. Book weeks ahead, or stay on the Tokyo side and visit on a long day trip.
Read Next

Plan the Whole Kawaguchiko Trip

🗻

Kawaguchiko City Guide

The whole town at a glance — lakeside stays, where to eat, what to see, itineraries, and how to get around.

Open Kawaguchiko Guide →
📍

Kawaguchiko Attractions

Oishi Park · Chureito Pagoda · the Kachi Kachi Ropeway · Oshino Hakkai and every Fuji photo spot.

All Attractions →
🗓️

Kawaguchiko Itinerary

A precise, hour-by-hour route around Kawaguchiko, including the Fuji viewpoints and where to eat.

See the Itinerary →
🧭

Kawaguchiko Travel Tips

How to actually catch Fuji, the best seasons, the lake bus loop, and what to know before you go.

Read the Tips →
🇯🇵

Japan Travel Guide

Every region, plus visas, budgets, IC cards, the JR Pass, and itineraries for first-time visitors.

Japan Guide →
ℹ️

Japan Practical Info

Visa · eSIM · IC card · JR Pass · yen · seasonal weather — everything to sort before you fly to Japan.

Practical Info →
Frequently Asked Questions

FAQ — Fuji & Kawaguchiko Autumn Leaves

When do the autumn leaves peak at Lake Kawaguchiko?
Peak colour is usually mid-to-late November. The lake sits at around 830 metres, so leaves start turning in late October, deepen through early November, and hit their richest reds around the middle of the month — some spots hold colour into early December. Crucially, the exact peak shifts every year with the weather, so check the latest koyo (foliage) report about a week before you travel.
When is the Kawaguchiko Momiji Festival and is it free?
The Fujikawaguchiko Autumn Leaves (Momiji) Festival ran 1–30 November in 2025, centred on the Momiji Corridor along the Nashigawa stream on the lake's north shore. Entry is free; the festival site runs roughly 9:00–19:00, with an evening illumination from sunset until about 22:00. The 2026 edition is expected in November again, but confirm exact dates on the official Fujikawaguchiko tourism site before you go.
What's the cheapest and easiest way from Tokyo to Kawaguchiko?
The simplest option is the highway bus from Shinjuku (Busta Shinjuku) to Kawaguchiko Station — ¥2,200 (¥2,000 if booked online), under two hours, roughly two departures per hour. The most comfortable train is the direct Fuji Excursion limited express from Shinjuku at ¥4,200, about 1 hr 55 min, with a mandatory seat reservation. Alternatively, take the JR Chuo Line to Otsuki then change to the Fujikyu Railway (around ¥2,580 total). Check current fares on the operators' official sites.
Where exactly is the Momiji Corridor (maple tunnel)?
The Momiji Corridor (Momiji Kairo) is on the north shore of Lake Kawaguchiko, near the Kawaguchiko Natural Living Center, lining the Nashigawa stream. Around 60 large maples form a red-and-orange tunnel along both banks, and roughly 400–500 maples are spread around the lake in total. The easiest way there is the Omni Bus (Red Line sightseeing loop) from Kawaguchiko Station, alighting near the Natural Living Center.
Where are the best Fuji-and-autumn-leaves photo spots?
The most popular are Oishi Park on the north shore (Fuji plus flower beds, kochia, and maples), the Momiji Corridor (a maple tunnel framing Fuji), the Chureito Pagoda (a five-storey red pagoda overlooking the town and Fuji), and the quiet north shore at dawn, where still water reflects an upside-down "Sakasa Fuji." Early morning, when the air is calm, is the golden window — Fuji is most likely to be cloud-free.
What should I pack for Kawaguchiko in autumn?
Daytime is roughly 10–17°C, but early mornings and evenings by the lake can dip close to 0–5°C, so pack a warm jacket, hat, and gloves. Weekends bring heavy traffic and big crowds at peak — go on a weekday or early morning if you can. Carry cash for festival food stalls, and consider the 2-day sightseeing bus pass (¥2,000) if you plan to hop between several stops around the lake.
Ready to Chase the Colour?

Time It to the Peak
and Plan Your Fuji Trip

Open the full Kawaguchiko city guide for lakeside stays, food, and itineraries — or start searching for a place to stay near the Fuji photo spot you most want to shoot.

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