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⛩️ Koyasan · Wakayama

Koyasan — The Sacred Mountain, a Shukubo Temple Stay and Okunoin Cemetery

Climb to a basin 800 metres up that has been the heart of Shingon Buddhism for over a thousand years — sleep in a working temple, eat the monks' shojin-ryori vegetarian cuisine, wake for the morning prayers, then walk the Okunoin cemetery under lantern light at dusk. One of the quietest, most haunting trips in all of Japan.

Start Here

Leave the Restless City Behind —for a Mountain Where Time Slows Down

Picture this: this morning you're still wedged into a packed Osaka train, but two hours later you're standing in a forest of cedars hundreds of years old, the only sounds running water and the distant chant of monks drifting from a temple — that's Koyasan (Mount Koya), a basin set on a mountain around 800 metres high in Wakayama Prefecture, where the monk Kobo Daishi (Kukai) chose to found the centre of Shingon Buddhism back in 816 CE. Today more than 110 temples cluster into this one small town, and the whole area is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

What sets Koyasan apart from other destinations is that you don't just come to look — you come to live in a temple. You sleep in a shukubo (a temple's lodging) on tatami mats, eat shojin-ryori vegetarian food the monks cook themselves, rise early to join the prayer service and fire ceremony, and walk into Okunoin, one of the most haunting cemeteries in all of Japan. This page covers it all — the sights you can't miss, how a temple stay works, the food, and how to get up the mountain from Osaka.

⛩️ Straight up, before anything else: the real magic of Koyasan is in the early morning and the evening, once the day-trippers have headed back down the mountain. If you're going to make the trip, plan to stay one night in a shukubo. Bath fees, entry tickets and timetables can change — always check the latest 2026 figures on the official town sources (the Koyasan Shukubo Association) and Nankai before you travel.
🕯️
The Most Haunting Cemetery
Okunoin · 200,000+ graves, ancient cedar forest, a walk under lanterns at dusk.
🏯
Sleep in a Real Temple
Shukubo lodging, tatami mats, vegetarian meals, the morning prayer service.
🛕
Buddhist Architecture
The vermilion Konpon Daito, Danjo Garan, Kongobu-ji, and the Daimon Gate.
🌲
Quiet, Cool and Calm
At 800 m the air is cooler than the lowlands — a true escape from the bustle.
Getting There

Up to Koyasanfrom Osaka, Leg by Leg

The main gateway is Osaka — ride the Nankai Koya Line up the mountain, then connect to the cable car and a bus, about 2 hours all in. No rental car needed (2026 prices and times may change — check the Nankai site before you travel).

LegHowTimeApprox. fare
Namba → GokurakubashiOsaka → foot of the mountainNankai Koya Line — Limited Express (Koya / newer trains)~80 min~1,880–2,030 yen (incl. reserved-seat fee)
Namba → Gokurakubashibudget optionExpress / rapid express, change at Hashimoto~100 min~930 yen
Gokurakubashi → Koyasancable car up the mountainNankai Koyasan Cable Car (very steep)5 min~390 yen
Koyasan Station → town centreinto townNankai Rinkan bus to Senjuinbashi~10 min~460 yen
🎫 The pass beats paying separately: look for Nankai's Koyasan World Heritage Ticket, which bundles a return train trip + the cable car + unlimited town buses for 2 days, plus discounts on some entry fees. The town up top is small and walkable between many points, but Danjo Garan to Okunoin cemetery are on opposite sides of town, so the bus saves your legs. Coming from Kyoto? Switch to the Nankai line in Osaka the same way.
6 Things to See & Do

What to See and Doat Koyasan

Everything sits in one small town, easy to reach on foot or by bus. Roughly speaking, Okunoin cemetery is to the east, and the Danjo Garan / Kongobu-ji temple complex is to the west. Start with the most haunting spot of all.

🕯️ 🌲 East side1
Okunoin Cemetery
Okunoin · Kobo Daishi Mausoleum

The largest cemetery in Japan, with more than 200,000 graves and memorial stupas for samurai, lords, and notable figures, lining a cedar-forest path some 2 kilometres long where the trees are hundreds of years old. At the end lies the mausoleum of Kobo Daishi, who Shingon followers believe is still "in meditation". Before you reach it you pass through the Torodo (Lantern Hall), where over ten thousand lanterns burn without ever going out.

🕯️Highlights: cedar-forest path · the Torodo · most haunting at dusk
🕒Hours: path open 24 hrs · free to enter (the Torodo hall has set hours)
📷Rule: no photos beyond Gobyobashi bridge, before Kobo Daishi's mausoleum
💡Tip: dusk or early morning is quietest and at its most atmospheric; many temples run night walks
See other Japan travel towns →
The vermilion Konpon Daito pagoda in the Danjo Garan complex at Koyasan 🛕 West side2
Konpon Daito + Danjo Garan
Konpon Daito · Danjō Garan

Danjo Garan is the first sacred temple complex Kobo Daishi laid out, and its standout is the Konpon Daito, a vermilion pagoda around 48 metres tall (the one in this photo). Inside, Buddhist statues and a mandala arrangement let you walk through the Shingon vision of the cosmos. The grounds are free to wander, but entering the pagoda itself costs around 500 yen.

🛕Highlights: ~48 m vermilion pagoda · mandala inside · the original temple grounds
🎫Entry: grounds free · inside Konpon Daito ~500 yen (check 2026)
📍Where: west side of the town centre, near Senjuinbashi bus stop
💡Tip: there's a combo ticket (~2,500 yen) covering several sites including Konpon Daito — buy it at the shukubo office
Osaka Attractions (Gateway) →
🏯 🛕 West side3
Kongobu-ji Temple
Kongobu-ji · Head Temple

The head temple and headquarters of the Koyasan branch of Shingon Buddhism. Inside are rooms decorated with sliding-screen paintings (fusuma) by the Kano school, and the most famous feature is the Banryutei rock garden — one of the largest in Japan, where rocks and raked white gravel form a pair of dragons swimming through a sea of clouds. They often serve tea and a sweet so you can sit and take in the garden.

🪨Highlights: the Banryutei rock garden · Kano-school screen paintings · the great hall
🎫Entry: around 1,000 yen (often included in the combo ticket · check 2026)
📍Where: near Danjo Garan, a few minutes' walk apart
💡Tip: pair it with Danjo Garan in one loop — they're side by side on the west side
Osaka Attractions (Gateway) →
🪷 🌙 Overnight4
Shukubo Temple Stay
Shukubo · Temple Lodging

The highlight that makes people climb the mountain to stay over — sleeping in a real temple on tatami mats, laying out your own futon, eating a shojin-ryori vegetarian dinner and breakfast. Many temples have their own bath or shared bathing room and a Japanese garden. In the morning you can join the prayer service and the goma fire ceremony on a voluntary basis. Read up on vegetarian/vegan options before you book.

🍱Highlights: shojin-ryori · the morning fire ceremony · tatami and futon
🛏️Price: per person, both meals included (check the latest 2026 rates)
📝Booking: Koyasan Shukubo Association / Agoda / the temple directly
💡Tip: book ahead, especially in autumn-leaf season · flag any allergies/vegan needs when you book
Japan vegetarian / halal guide →
⛩️ 🛕 West side5
Daimon Gate
Daimon Gate

The great vermilion gate on the western edge is Koyasan's original welcoming gateway — a two-storey wooden structure around 25 metres tall (the current building was rebuilt in 1705), with carved Nio guardian deities on either side. At sunset the light streaming through the gate is gorgeous, and on a clear day you can see the mountains stretching off into the distance. Free to walk through.

⛩️Highlights: ~25 m vermilion wooden gate · Nio figures · sunset viewpoint
🎫Entry: free (open to walk through any time)
🚌Getting there: bus route 51 to the western end of town
💡Tip: come in the late afternoon for the golden light through the gate before heading back to your lodging
Osaka Attractions (Gateway) →
🖼️ 🛕 West side6
Reihokan Museum
Reihōkan Museum

Home to more than ten thousand pieces of Koyasan's Buddhist art — statues, mandala paintings, and old scriptures, many of them National Treasures and Important Cultural Properties. Worth a stop if you want to understand the roots of Shingon art more deeply, either before or after you walk the temples themselves.

🖼️Highlights: Buddhist art, mandalas, scriptures · several National Treasures
🕒Hours: 8:30–17:30 (May–Oct) · 8:30–17:00 (Nov–Apr) · last entry 30 min before close
📍Where: near Danjo Garan, ~10 min walk from Senjuinbashi
💡Tip: entry fees and exhibits rotate — check the official Reihokan site before you go
Japan Travel Guide →
Where to Stay

What a Night in a ShukuboIs Really Like

Koyasan has no big hotel chains — "accommodation" here means a shukubo, a temple that opens its doors for the night, and there are dozens to choose from. Rates are per person and include dinner and breakfast. Here's how the night unfolds before you book.

AFTERNOON
Check In Over Tea

You arrive in the afternoon, and a monk or staff member shows you to your tatami room and serves green tea and a sweet. Change into the temple's robes, wander the Japanese garden, then take a bath to relax before dinner — some temples have an onsen or a shared bathing room.

EVENING
A Shojin-Ryori Dinner

Several vegetarian dishes arrive on a low tray, from koya-dofu tofu to seasonal mountain vegetables, pickles, and vegetable tempura — no meat, no fish. Afterwards, head out to walk the Okunoin cemetery under lantern light, the most atmospheric hour of the day.

MORNING
Prayers + the Fire Ceremony

Wake around 6 am and join the prayer service in the hall. Some temples hold a goma fire ceremony, the Shingon ritual of burning wooden prayer sticks (you join voluntarily), then come back for a Japanese-set breakfast. Checkout is early, around 9–10 am.

🏯 How to choose a shukubo: temples near Danjo Garan / Senjuinbashi are handy for sightseeing, while temples on the east side near Okunoin suit you if you want to walk the cemetery at night and sleep close by. Rates are usually per person with both meals, so book ahead — especially in autumn-leaf season (Oct–Nov) and on long holidays. If the temples are full or you'd rather a hotel-style room, there are guesthouses and regular lodgings in town on Agoda below.
Eat & Drink

Shojin-Ryori —The Vegetarian Food the Monks Cook

The food up here is part of the experience, not just a meal to fill you up. Shojin-ryori is a meticulous Buddhist culinary heritage, every dish considered. Worth knowing a little before you sit down.

🍱
What Shojin-Ryori Is
The monks' vegetarian cuisine — no meat, fish, or animal products, built around seasonal mountain vegetables, tofu, pickles, and miso soup, beautifully arranged across several small dishes on a tray.
🧊
Koya-dofu, the Local Specialty
Tofu that's frozen then dried, a Koyasan recipe of its own. Its porous texture soaks up broth beautifully, making it a star ingredient in the shukubo meal.
🌱
Vegans & Vegetarians, Rejoice
Shojin-ryori is very vegan-friendly, though some temples may use seaweed- or fish-based dashi — flag your restrictions when you book, and check the vegetarian guide for backup.
🍵
Tea & Sweets Through the Day
Many temples (like Kongobu-ji) serve green tea and a sweet so you can sit and take in the garden. In town there are little cafés and confectionery shops to drop into.
🥢
Lunch Is Easy in Town
If you're on a day trip and not staying over, you'll still find shojin-ryori restaurants, udon/soba shops, and simple eateries around the town centre — but they close fairly early.
🍶
Drinks + Souvenirs
Some temples serve sake or beer with the meal (ask first). The most popular souvenir is dried koya-dofu and local sweets to carry home.
Map

The Key Sights of Koyasanon One Map

A small town with sights spread across two sides — Okunoin cemetery to the east, and Danjo Garan, Kongobu-ji, and the Daimon Gate to the west. See the layout and it's easy to plan a sensible walking order.

Know Before You Go

6 Things That Make a Koyasan TripRun Smoother

🌙
Stay Over — It Beats a Day Trip
A day trip is doable, but you'll miss the early-morning and evening hours when the crowds are gone and the mood is at its most powerful. One night in a shukubo is the main recommendation.
🎫
Buy the Nankai Combo Ticket
The Koyasan World Heritage Ticket bundles the train, cable car and bus for 2 days, plus discounts on some entry fees — cheaper than paying separately. Check 2026 prices.
🧥
Pack a Warm Layer
At 800 metres the air is several degrees cooler than the lowlands, especially at night and during the evening cemetery walk. Always bring a jacket.
🍁
The Prettiest — and Trickiest — Seasons
Autumn leaves (Oct–Nov) are gorgeous but busy and lodging fills fast. Winter is quiet and serene but bitterly cold, with some services reduced. Check conditions first.
💴
Carry Cash
Many temples and small shops up the mountain take cash only, and ATMs are limited. Withdraw enough back in Osaka before you head up.
🙏
Be Respectful in Sacred Areas
This is a living place of practice. Keep your voice down, dress modestly, and take no photos beyond the final bridge before Kobo Daishi's mausoleum.
Related Guides

Mountains, Nature and the Spirit — Where to Go After Koyasan

💧

Oku-Nikko

Kegon Falls, Lake Chuzenji, and the Senjogahara plateau — the mountains above Nikko, beautiful for both autumn leaves and onsen.

Oku-Nikko Guide →
🏔️

Kamikochi

The Japan Alps valley — Kappa Bridge, the Hotaka peaks, and the crystal-clear Azusa River — a paradise for hikers.

Kamikochi Guide →
🏙️

Osaka Guide

Koyasan's gateway city — where to stay, what to see, and how to connect to the Nankai train up the mountain, start to finish.

Osaka Guide →
🍜

Osaka Attractions

Osaka Castle, Dotonbori, Shinsaibashi, and the best of Kansai — pair them with Koyasan in a single trip.

Osaka Attractions →
🌱

Vegetarian / Halal Guide

How to eat vegan, vegetarian, and halal in Japan without the headache — a natural follow-on from the shojin-ryori up the mountain.

Vegetarian Guide →
♨️

Onsen Guide 101

How to bathe, the etiquette, and the tattoo question every first-timer should know — add an onsen to your slow, quiet trip.

Onsen Guide →
Frequently Asked Questions

FAQ —Koyasan

What is Koyasan, and why go?
Koyasan (Mount Koya) is a high mountain basin at around 800 metres in Wakayama Prefecture, the centre of Shingon Buddhism, founded by the monk Kobo Daishi (Kukai) in 816 CE and now a UNESCO World Heritage Site with more than 110 temples. People come for the deep calm, to walk the haunting Okunoin cemetery, to stay overnight in a shukubo temple lodging, to eat Buddhist vegetarian food, and to join the morning prayer service — it's the trip to take if you want something spiritual and far removed from the big cities.
How do you get to Koyasan from Osaka?
From Nankai Namba Station in Osaka, take the Nankai Koya Line to the end of the line at Gokurakubashi (the Limited Express takes about 80 minutes, or a regular express with a change at Hashimoto takes about 100 minutes, roughly 930–2,030 yen). From there, ride the cable car up the mountain for 5 minutes (about 390 yen), then take a bus into the centre of Koyasan, about 10 minutes (about 460 yen). The whole journey takes roughly 2 hours. The Koyasan World Heritage Ticket bundles the train, cable car and bus and works out cheaper than buying separately — check 2026 prices before you travel.
What is a shukubo temple stay like, and where do you book?
A shukubo is staying overnight in a working temple — tatami-mat rooms with futon bedding, a shojin-ryori vegetarian dinner and breakfast, and often an onsen bath or shared bathing room. You can join the morning prayer service and the goma fire ceremony on a voluntary basis. Book ahead through the Koyasan Shukubo Association, Agoda/Booking, or the temple directly. Rates are usually per person and include both meals, and you should reserve well in advance, especially during the autumn-leaf season and long holidays.
What is shojin-ryori, and is it vegetarian or halal-friendly?
Shojin-ryori is the Buddhist vegetarian cuisine of the Zen and Shingon traditions — no meat, fish, or animal products at all. It leans on seasonal mountain vegetables, tofu (especially koya-dofu, the local freeze-dried tofu), lotus root, pickles, and miso soup, so it's very friendly to vegetarians and vegans. Some temples may use seaweed- or fish-based dashi, so strictly halal travellers should ask in advance — you can flag any dietary restrictions when you book.
Can you walk through Okunoin cemetery at night?
Yes — the Okunoin cemetery path is open 24 hours and free to enter. Dusk into the evening is the most atmospheric time, when the stone lanterns along the path and the more than ten thousand lanterns inside the Torodo (Lantern Hall) are lit. Many shukubo run guided night walks with a monk telling the stories. Bring a torch or your phone, wear comfortable shoes, and stay respectful in the sacred zone — no photos are allowed beyond the final bridge before Kobo Daishi's mausoleum.
How many nights should you stay at Koyasan — is a day trip possible?
A day trip from Osaka is doable if you leave early, but it's rushed and you'll miss the best of the place — the early-morning and late-evening hours when the crowds have gone and the atmosphere is at its most powerful. One night in a shukubo is the main recommendation, because it gives you the vegetarian meals, the morning ceremony, and the Okunoin walk after dark. With two nights you can take your time over Danjo Garan, Kongobu-ji, the Daimon Gate, and the Reihokan Museum without rushing.
Ready to Climb the Mountain?

Book a Shukubo for One Night
and Let Time Slow Down

Koyasan rewards those who stay over — early morning and late evening are when it's most haunting and least crowded. Start by opening the Osaka guide to plan your Nankai route, or lock in lodging up the mountain before it fills.

🔴 Search Koyasan Lodging Osaka Attractions