From the long downtown arcades of Sannomiya–Motomachi to the old Western houses of Kitano · from the seaside malls of Harborland to the lanterns of Nankinmachi Chinatown — here are Kobe's best shopping districts in the city they call "the sweet city," with the souvenirs you have to buy, opening hours, transit directions, and Japan's new 2026 tax-free rules you'll want to know before you fly.
Here's the honest truth about why shopping in Kobe is such a pleasure: everything sits within walking distance. Unlike the big cities where you hop trains between districts, here the Sannomiya and Motomachi arcades connect into one long strip through the centre — you can walk it end to end under cover. Turn uphill for a few minutes and you reach Kitano, full of old Western houses; head down toward the sea and you hit Harborland. So we've gathered Kobe's 6 main shopping districts on one page, spelling out exactly what each area is best for, when it opens, which station to use, and the souvenirs worth carrying home.
One more thing we'll whisper before you go — Kobe is Japan's "sweet city." Ever since the port opened in 1868, Western sweets like pudding, baumkuchen, and chocolate arrived here first, and many legendary confectionery brands were born in this city. So when you're in Kobe, leave a little room in your suitcase for some beautifully boxed desserts and the pearl jewellery the city is known for.
Until 31 October 2026, the existing system applies: spend ¥5,000 or more per store per day, show your passport at the tax-free counter, and the 10% consumption tax is deducted right at the point of sale.
From 1 November 2026, Japan switches to a "pay first, refund later" system — you pay the full tax-inclusive price when you buy, then claim the refund at the airport on departure. The upside: the old rules separating consumables from general goods (and the sealed-bag requirement) are abolished, making it much easier to reach the ¥5,000 threshold. · Read the full breakdown in our complete Japan Tax-Free guide · Always check the latest procedure and dates on the official customs/JNTO sources before you travel.
Ordered from the walkable city centre out to the seaside and Chinatown. Each area has its own specialities, opening hours, transit directions, and tips from real shoppers.
The heart of Kobe shopping, where everything begins. The highlight is the covered Sannomiya Center-gai arcade (split into 1–3 chome), just a 2-minute walk from the station and packed with fashion, trendy new shops, and food. Around it are the big department stores — Kobe Hankyu (formerly SOGO, rebranded as Hankyu in 2019) and Daimaru on the Motomachi side — so you can shop on and on without ever boarding a train.
Sannomiya–Harborland Guide →Kobe's historic shopping street, picking up west of Sannomiya. Starting in front of Daimaru, it's a covered arcade over 1.2 kilometres long with more than 300 shops — and a more classic feel than Sannomiya. You'll find long-established stores, bakeries, antique dealers, and pearl jewellers (a Kobe speciality), all under cover so you can browse even in the rain.
Kobe Travel Guide →
☕ Old Europe & Cafes3
A hillside quarter above Sannomiya full of "ijinkan" — the homes of foreign merchants from the port-opening era. Many are open to visit, and some have become cafes, boutiques, and European-style handmade shops. Come here for relaxed browsing and photogenic streets, away from the bustle of the arcades below — perfect for a day when you want cute, craft-style gifts.
Kitano District Guide →
🌊 Seaside Shopping4
A waterfront shopping district that comes with harbour views. The centrepiece is umie, a big mall made up of three buildings — MOSAIC, North Mall, and South Mall — with around 230 shops covering fashion, gifts, restaurants, a cinema, and a Hankyu store. The MOSAIC side is a Southern-European-style waterfront zone where you can stroll with views of Kobe Port Tower and the Ferris wheel — especially lovely at dusk.
Sannomiya–Harborland Guide →
🏮 Chinatown5
Kobe's Chinatown, one of Japan's three big Chinatowns, sitting right at the western end of the Motomachi arcade. The landmark is the red-and-gold Chōan-mon gate, and the main streets are strung with Chinese lanterns. It's packed with stand-and-eat snack stalls — steamed buns, dim sum, fried abalone — plus Chinese souvenir shops, making it a perfect snack stop while you shop the arcades. It's especially lively during the Lunar New Year festival.
Kobe Food Guide →If there's one thing not to skip in Kobe, it's the sweets. Ever since the port opened in 1868, Western confectionery arrived here first, so many legendary brands were born in this city — Morozoff (pudding/chocolate, started 1931), Juchheim (baumkuchen, started 1929), Königs-Krone, Henri Charpentier, and Mon Loire. The easiest place to buy is the depachika floor at Daimaru or Kobe Hankyu, or at Shin-Kobe Station before you board the shinkansen. Beyond sweets, there are Kobe beef products, Nada sake, and pearl jewellery.
Kobe Food Guide →See how the districts are laid out — Sannomiya, Motomachi, and Nankinmachi are right next to each other and walkable, while Kitano and Harborland sit in opposite directions, making it easy to plan your route on foot.
The refund process, the ¥5,000 threshold, and the new system from Nov 2026 — every step explained before you fly.
Read the Tax-Free Guide →Walk the two central and waterfront districts — highlights, food, harbour views, and how to link them on foot.
Open the Guide →Old Western ijinkan houses, cafes inside heritage buildings, and craft shops on the hill above Sannomiya.
Open the Kitano Guide →Kobe beef, sweets, Nankinmachi street food, and the best spots citywide — what to eat, where, all in one place.
Kobe Food Guide →A complete overview of Kobe across every tab — where to stay, eat, what to see, itineraries, and trip prep.
Open Kobe Guide →Every region, visa info, budgets, IC cards, the JR Pass, and itineraries for planning your Japan trip.
Japan Guide →Staying near Sannomiya is the most convenient option for shoppers — you can walk to the arcades, the big department stores, and the main station. Open the full Kobe city guide, or search for hotels in Kobe close to the district you want to shop.