Just landed in Fukuoka and not sure where to start? Most people begin in Hakata — the side with the shinkansen station, the Canal City fountain show, and thousand-year-old temples all within walking distance. We'll walk you through the district spot by spot, with where to eat, where to stay, and how to head on to other cities.
Picture yourself just off the shinkansen or out of Fukuoka Airport, with no idea where to head first — for most people, the answer is Hakata. This is the eastern side of central Fukuoka, built around Hakata Station: JR trains, the shinkansen, the airport bus, and a huge mall all in one place. A few minutes' walk from the station and you've got the Canal City mall, thousand-year-old temples, and the shrine that hosts the city's biggest festival.
What makes Hakata so easy is that everything clusters within walking distance — visit the old-town temples in the morning, shop at Canal City in the afternoon, slurp tonkotsu ramen under the station in the evening, then still have time to hop over to Tenjin or Nakasu for the night. This page walks you through Hakata spot by spot, with where to eat, the smartest places to stay, and how to use Hakata Station as a base for the rest of Kyushu.
Almost all of Hakata's main sights sit within a 10–15 minute walk of the station. Pick by the time and the mood you're in — even half a day is enough to cover several of them.
| Spot | Type | Admission | Time needed | Good for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Canal City HakataMall + fountain show | Shopping | Free | 1.5–3 hrs | Shopping, dining, the fountain show, families |
| Hakata Old TownTochoji + Shofukuji | Temples | Free/cheap | 1–2 hrs | Old temples, the giant wooden Buddha, a quiet walk |
| Kushida ShrineKushida Shrine | Shrine | Free | 30–45 min | Prayers, the Yamakasa float, culture |
| Sumiyoshi ShrineSumiyoshi Shrine | Shrine | Free | 30 min | An old shrine, big trees, shade and calm |
| Hakata StationJR Hakata City | Hub/Shopping | Free | 1–2 hrs | Shopping, ramen under the station, souvenirs, rooftop views |
All real picks from the district — a mall with a fountain show, old temples with a giant wooden Buddha, the guardian shrine of the city, and a station that's a destination in its own right. You can walk between all of them in a single day.
🏬 Central Hakata1
A mall built around a "man-made canal" that runs the length of the complex, open since 1996. The highlight is the fountain-and-music show every 30 minutes; at night the Aqua Panorama show projects 3D images onto a water curtain. Inside you'll find shops, restaurants, a cinema, and the Ramen Stadium food zone, all under one roof.
What to Eat in Fukuoka →
⛩️ Hakata Old Town2
A quiet temple quarter that's a world away from the malls nearby. The highlight is Tochoji, home to the Fukuoka Daibutsu — a seated wooden Buddha about 10.8 metres tall, one of the largest in Japan — and Shofukuji, said to be Japan's first Zen temple, founded in 1195 by Eisai, the monk who brought Zen to Japan. You can stroll easily from one to the other.
Fukuoka Attractions →
⛩️ Hakata3
The spiritual heart of Hakata, founded around 757, and host of the Hakata Gion Yamakasa festival, when teams of men race giant festival floats through the streets every July (a UNESCO Cultural Heritage). Outside the festival season a float is kept on display year-round, alongside the old Hakata-bei stone wall in the grounds.
Fukuoka Attractions →
⛩️ Hakata4
Of the more than 2,100 Sumiyoshi shrines across Japan, this one in Hakata is among the oldest — around 1,800 years. It's notable for its Sumiyoshi-zukuri architecture, one of Japan's most ancient shrine layouts, with grounds shaded by big old trees. It's a calm corner to drop into on the walk from Hakata Station.
Fukuoka Attractions →Hakata Station isn't just where you catch the train — it's a destination in itself. It's the terminus of the Sanyo Shinkansen (Osaka/Tokyo) and the Kyushu Shinkansen (Kumamoto/Kagoshima). Above it sits the JR Hakata City mall, combining AMU Plaza, Hankyu, and Deitos in one building, packed with souvenirs, plus a rooftop with city views and a Hakata ramen zone under the station for a bowl before or after your train.
Where to Eat Hakata Ramen →Hakata is the birthplace of several of Fukuoka's famous dishes, from rich pork-bone tonkotsu ramen to motsunabe and the riverside yatai stalls — here's the short version, with a link through to the full food guide for the best shops.
Thin noodles in a rich, milky pork-bone (tonkotsu) broth, with your choice of noodle firmness and a free noodle refill (kaedama). Slurp it everywhere from the Hakata Men Kaido zone under Hakata Station to the riverside yatai stalls at Nakasu.
Motsunabe, a beef-offal hotpot with cabbage and garlic chives, and mizutaki, a clear chicken hotpot, are Fukuoka's classic dinners. They're great to share with a group at a restaurant around Hakata or Tenjin.
Fukuoka is famous for its yatai — open-air street stalls that set up after dark, where you sit on a stool for ramen, yakitori, and oden. The most famous cluster is along the river at Nakasu, a few minutes from Hakata on the subway.
If you're choosing where to base yourself in Fukuoka, staying near Hakata Station is the best-value pick for travellers — you can walk to the trains, the airport bus, and the malls. It works whether you're here to see Fukuoka or using the city as a launchpad for the rest of Kyushu.
A roundup of well-placed hotels around Hakata Station, an easy roll to the trains and the airport bus, with prices and the highlights of each.
See Hotels Near Hakata Station →The whole-city overview of Fukuoka — where to stay, what to see, where to eat, and how to get around. Choose the right area before you plan.
Open the Fukuoka Guide →Compare available rooms around Hakata and across Fukuoka. Lock in a free-cancellation room first, then adjust your plans later.
Search Fukuoka Stays →Hakata's main sights cluster around Hakata Station — Canal City, Kushida Shrine, and Tochoji are all within a 10–15 minute walk. Hakata Station is the shinkansen hub plus the Kuko subway line, which reaches the airport in just a few minutes.
Fukuoka's other centre — shopping in Tenjin, the riverside yatai stalls at Nakasu, and the nightlife. Five minutes from Hakata on the subway.
Open Tenjin–Nakasu →The whole-city overview — where to stay, what to see, where to eat, and how to get around. Choose the right area before you plan.
Fukuoka Guide →The best sights across Fukuoka, from temples and shrines to malls, viewpoints, and spots around the city.
Fukuoka Attractions →Hakata ramen, motsunabe, mizutaki, yatai, and local sweets — the must-try dishes and the best places to find them.
Fukuoka Food Guide →10 well-placed hotels around Hakata Station, an easy roll to the trains and the airport bus, with prices.
See Hotels Near the Station →Visa · eSIM · IC cards · JR Pass · yen · power plugs · Japan etiquette — everything before you fly.
Travel Prep →Stay near Hakata Station and you can sightsee comfortably all day, just minutes' walk from the trains, the airport bus, and the malls — see the well-placed hotels we've picked, or compare available rooms across Fukuoka.