One of the quietest corners of Kyoto — a canal-side walk under the trees from Ginkaku-ji (the Silver Pavilion), past ancient Zen temples, ending at Nanzen-ji's Roman-style brick aqueduct and Heian Shrine. Cherry blossom and autumn-leaf season are the prettiest windows, but honestly it's a lovely walk in any season.
If you've been to Kyoto and felt that Kiyomizu and Gion were so packed you could barely get a clear photo, picture the other side of the very same hillside, just a few kilometres further north — the traffic noise fades away and all that's left is the sound of water in a little canal and leaves rustling overhead. This is Northern Higashiyama, the district whose lifeline is the Philosopher's Path, threading together ancient Zen temples, the Silver Pavilion, and a great shrine into a half-day walk that a lot of people end up calling the favourite part of their whole trip.
This page walks you through the entire district as a single line — starting from Ginkaku-ji (the Silver Pavilion) at the very north, heading down the ~2-kilometre canal, calling in at Eikan-do and Nanzen-ji with its Roman-style brick aqueduct, then finishing at Heian Shrine and the Okazaki museum district. Straight up: if we've got a free half-day in Kyoto, this is the route we choose to walk every single time.
Northern Higashiyama is a temple-and-residential district, not a dense food-and-drink quarter, but there are good things tucked along the way — and staying central, then catching a bus over to start the walk, is perfectly easy.
Well-located stays across Kyoto with real prices and booking links. Pick a central base and it's an easy bus ride to start the walk at Ginkaku-ji.
See Kyoto Hotels →An overview of where to stay, getting around, and what to see citywide — including how to pick a neighbourhood that makes Higashiyama easy to reach.
Open the Kyoto Guide →Kaiseki, soba, yuba, matcha, and Kyoto's local specialities — know what to eat and where before you set out.
Kyoto Food Guide →Listed north to south, the way you'll walk it — start at the Silver Pavilion, head down the canal, call in at the autumn-leaf temple and the Zen temple, then finish at the great shrine. They connect as one continuous line in half a day.
🍵 Starting Point1
The northernmost starting point. Despite the name "Silver Pavilion," it was never actually coated in silver — its charm lies in restrained Zen beauty: the white sand cone known as the "Sea of Silver Sand," a moss garden, and a hillside path that opens onto a view across all of Kyoto's rooftops.
Kyoto Attractions →
🚶 Main Route2
The lifeline of this district — a roughly 2-kilometre stone walkway following a small canal, named after the philosopher Nishida Kitaro, who liked to walk it each morning while he thought. Hundreds of cherry trees line both sides; it's at its loveliest in cherry-blossom and autumn-leaf season, but the other seasons are every bit as shaded and peaceful.
Kyoto Attractions →A grand Zen temple at the southern end of the canal. The highlights are the enormous wooden Sanmon gate (built in 1628 by the Tokugawa family — you can climb it for a view over the city) and the Meiji-era Suirokaku brick aqueduct, which carried water from Lake Biwa — a photo spot that looks nothing like Japan.
Kyoto Attractions →
🍁 Autumn Leaves4
Kyoto locals have long said "for momiji (autumn leaves), it has to be Eikan-do" — this is one of the city's premier autumn-leaf temples, with thousands of maples around a pond and a hilltop pagoda. At peak it lights up in the evening (light-up), so stunning you'll queue to get in. It's just a few minutes' walk from Nanzen-ji.
Kyoto Attractions →Built in 1895 to mark 1,100 years since Kyoto became the capital, its bright orange-and-green halls are a scaled-down replica of the ancient Heian Palace. The highlight is the giant orange torii gate, roughly 24 metres tall — one of the tallest in Japan — and the Japanese garden behind, beautiful in every season.
Kyoto Attractions →Two extra stops that round out the route — Honen-in, tucked away behind the early stretch of the canal, with a thatched gateway and two cones of raked sand so quiet you'll barely see another tourist · the Okazaki district near Heian Shrine, home to the municipal art museum, galleries, and Kyoto's zoo — a relaxed way to finish the day.
Kyoto Attractions →Kyoto doesn't have a subway running straight to every temple, but the city buses and the Tozai line get you to both ends of the walk easily. The trick is to enter one way and walk straight out the other.
Take city bus 5, 17, or 100 from Kyoto Station/downtown and get off at Ginkakuji-michi, walk up to the Silver Pavilion in 5–10 minutes, then start walking south down the Philosopher's Path — this is the most popular route with visitors.
Take the Tozai subway line to Keage Station, then walk ~10 minutes to Nanzen-ji (through the old Nejirimanpo brick tunnel) · or get off at Higashiyama and walk to Heian Shrine — ideal if you'd rather start at the southern end and walk north.
The trick is to not retrace your steps — enter via Ginkaku-ji (bus), walk down the canal and out at Nanzen-ji/Heian, then take the subway back. It saves your legs and you catch every stop. Total walking with temple stops is around 3–4 hours.
Know these few things in advance and your half-day in Northern Higashiyama runs far more smoothly — from timing and footwear to dodging the crowds.
You can clearly see how the 4 main stops line up north to south — Ginkaku-ji at the top, down the canal to Nanzen-ji, with Heian Shrine just to the west. The whole thing connects on foot.
Northern Higashiyama takes only a half-day, which pairs neatly with a neighbouring area for the other half — pick whatever suits the rhythm of your day.
The old quarter that picks up right where this route ends — Kiyomizu-dera, the Ninenzaka–Sannenzaka lanes, and Yasaka Shrine.
Southern Higashiyama Guide →Kyoto's west side — the bamboo grove, Tenryu-ji temple, the Togetsukyo Bridge, and the Sagano scenic railway.
Arashiyama Guide →The Golden Pavilion Kinkaku-ji, the Ryoan-ji rock garden, and Ninna-ji — a full day of World Heritage temples.
NW Temples →The geisha district, Hanamikoji Lane, the Kamo riverside, and the old-Kyoto photo spots you shouldn't miss.
Gion Guide →A deep dive on the golden temple mirrored in its pond — fees, hours, how to get there, and Kyoto's most famous photo angle.
Kinkaku-ji Guide →Where to stay, what to see, getting around, and how to pick a neighbourhood that makes Kyoto easiest to explore.
Kyoto Guide →Open the Kyoto city guide for hotels, sights, and getting around — or start looking for a central stay with an easy bus over to begin the Northern Higashiyama walk. Rooms vanish fast in autumn-leaf and cherry-blossom season, so booking early pays off.