Japan's oldest sport is a completely different experience live than on TV — here we lay out the six tournaments a year (Tokyo · Osaka · Nagoya · Fukuoka), how to buy tickets in each seat zone, viewing etiquette, watching morning practice at a sumo stable, and chanko-nabe in the Ryogoku district, all on one page.
Picture a wooden hall where 10,000 people fall completely silent, watching two giant men stare each other down on a raised clay platform — then suddenly they charge with a force you can feel through the whole building. A single bout is over in a few seconds, but the ritual before it (the salt-throwing, the foot-stamping, the staring) stretches on for minutes. All of this is sumo, a sport bound up with the Shinto religion and Japanese history for well over a thousand years, and still the country's official national sport today.
Honestly, watching on TV and watching live are two completely different feelings — the scent of the hair oil, the slap of flesh on flesh, the whole arena holding its breath together. The aim of this page is to get you to book the right seat zone, watch like you know what's going on, and make the most of the area around the arena — from the full-year tournament calendar and how to buy tickets, to in-arena etiquette, watching morning practice at a sumo stable, and eating chanko-nabe like a wrestler.
The major tournaments (honbasho 本場所) are held six times a year, 15 days in a row, always starting and ending on a Sunday — Tokyo hosts three, with the rest rotating through Osaka, Nagoya, and Fukuoka. The first day is shonichi; the final day, when the champion is decided, is senshuraku and the most crowded.
| Tournament | City | Month | 2026 dates | Venue |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hatsu BashoNew Year tournament | Tokyo | January | Jan 11–25 | Ryogoku Kokugikan |
| Haru BashoSpring tournament | Osaka | March | Mar 8–22 | Edion Arena Osaka |
| Natsu BashoSummer tournament | Tokyo | May | May 10–24 | Ryogoku Kokugikan |
| Nagoya BashoNagoya tournament | Nagoya | July | Jul 12–26 | IG Arena (new venue) |
| Aki BashoAutumn tournament | Tokyo | September | Sep 13–27 | Ryogoku Kokugikan |
| Kyushu BashoKyushu tournament | Fukuoka | November | Nov 8–22 | Fukuoka Kokusai Center |
Kokugikan is split into several zones with prices that vary many times over — the closer to the ring, the pricier and the stricter the rules, while the arena chairs up top are the best value for first-timers. Choose from these and book the moment tickets go on sale, because the good days fill up fast (2026 prices may change, check the official site before buying).
Cushions on the floor right at the edge of the ring — so close a wrestler could land on top of you. It's the most thrilling view and the clearest sight in the house, but it also carries the strictest rules. These are hard to come by and tough to book ahead, as locals hold them on standing reservations.
Tokyo Travel Guide →A square box laid with tatami, seating four on the floor — the most traditional way to watch sumo and the best for atmosphere. Many boxes come with a set of food and souvenirs, making them ideal for a group or family outing.
Tokyo Travel Guide →Upper-level chair seats with a comfortable backrest, a full view of the whole ring, freedom to come and go, and the friendliest prices — for a first-timer wanting to catch their first sumo, this zone is the answer that balances cost and comfort.
Tokyo Travel Guide →If advance tickets are sold out, a limited number of cheap tickets are still sold only outside Kokugikan on the morning of each day, for the very back upper zone — not the closest view, but a chance to soak up the real atmosphere at a price anyone can afford.
Tokyo Travel Guide →The bout itself is over in seconds, but the magic is in the ritual that comes first. Know these three beats and you'll enjoy it far more, instead of just waiting for two men to collide.
The wrestlers throw salt across the ring to purify it in the Shinto tradition, stamp their feet (shiko) to drive out evil, then set themselves and lock eyes to psych each other out. At the top division (makuuchi) they get up to ~4 minutes to prepare before the charge — and this is exactly when the arena is at its tensest and most fun.
When both are ready, the referee (gyoji) gives the signal and the two charge from their lines — pushing, throwing, slapping. Most bouts are over in a few seconds to half a minute, and a blink can cost you the moment, so focus the instant they both go still and set.
The rules are simple — you lose the moment any part of your body other than the soles of your feet touches the ground, or you step outside the ring. The referee points to the winner with his fan; if it's too close to call, the ringside judges step down to confer (mono-ii) and decide again.
The atmosphere inside Kokugikan is more relaxed than you'd expect — you can cheer and shout a wrestler's name — but there are a couple of rules worth knowing before you go in, so you can enjoy it without slipping up.
See where Ryogoku Kokugikan (Tokyo) — the most frequent host — sits, along with the venues in Osaka, Nagoya, and Fukuoka. Time your trip to whichever city has a tournament while you're around, and watching sumo becomes the highlight of the whole trip.
If your travel dates don't line up with a honbasho, don't give up yet — watching morning practice at a sumo stable and eating chanko-nabe in the Ryogoku district get you just as close to the sport.
Get to know chanko-nabe in more depth, along with the Japanese dishes you have to try — ramen, sushi, and regional specialities city by city.
Japanese Food Guide →Sumo's home base is here — hotels, sights, the Ryogoku district, and how to get around the greater Tokyo metropolis.
Tokyo Guide →Host of the March tournament — Osaka Castle, Dotonbori, and the best of Kansai in a single trip.
Osaka Guide →Another winter experience not to miss — the legendary "Japow" powder snow, and which resorts to choose.
Japan Ski Guide →Akihabara, the Ghibli Museum, and anime-location pilgrimages — for the otaku traveller in Japan.
Anime Guide →Visa · eSIM · IC cards · JR Pass · yen · power plugs · Japanese etiquette — everything before you fly.
Travel Prep →Check that the honbasho schedule lines up with your dates, open a city guide for hotels, sights, and transport, or start hunting early for a place to stay near Kokugikan or that city's venue.