Autumn Festivals in Japan: Fall Foliage, Harvest Celebrations & Cultural Events
Discover Japan's best autumn festivals from September to November, especially the strongest October routes. Combine fall foliage with Takayama Autumn Festival, Jidai Matsuri, Nagoya Matsuri, and more.
September to November in Japan: 4-tonne floats drifting corners at full sprint in Osaka, 5-meter torches blazing through mountain villages in October, and lantern floats under fireworks on December 3. This guide pairs each must-see autumn festival with koyo (fall foliage) timing so you can see two cultural peaks in one trip.
Why Autumn Is the Best Time for Japanese Festivals
Autumn in Japan (September through November) offers a rare combination: spectacular fall foliage, comfortable weather, and some of the country's most dramatic festivals. While summer gets attention for its sheer volume of events, autumn festivals tend to be more intense, more atmospheric, and less swelteringly hot. The harvest season also brings a grateful energy to celebrations that feels different from the exuberance of summer.
This guide covers the must-see autumn festivals and how to combine them with Japan's famous koyo (fall foliage) season. Check the festival directory, October calendar, or November calendar for exact dates. Pair with the matsuri attendance guide.
If you are specifically searching for festivals in Japan in October, focus on three clusters: Kyoto on October 22 for Jidai Matsuri plus Kurama, central Japan on October 9-10 for Takayama Autumn Festival, and Tokyo / Kanto for urban events mixed with easy day trips. The October calendar gives the raw date grid; this guide tells you which combinations are actually worth the travel time.
September: The Season Opens
Kishiwada Danjiri Matsuri (Osaka, mid-September)
If you want pure adrenaline, Kishiwada Danjiri is unmatched. Thirty-five wooden floats, each weighing about 4 tonnes, are pulled through narrow streets at breakneck speed. The most thrilling moment is yarimawashi — when the danjiri are swung around street corners at full speed while young men dance on the rooftops. This is widely considered one of Japan's most dangerous festivals, and the energy of the participants and crowd is electric.
Getting there: Kishiwada is 20 minutes south of central Osaka on the Nankai Line. Arrive early morning for the best viewing spots along the main route.
Tsukimi: Moon Viewing (nationwide, mid-September)
Tsukimi (moon viewing) is a gentle autumn tradition. Temples and shrines set up viewing areas with offerings of tsukimi dango (round rice dumplings) and susuki (pampas grass). While not a large festival, the atmosphere at venues like Shimogamo Shrine in Kyoto and Sumiyoshi Taisha in Osaka is magical on clear autumn nights.
October: Peak Festival Season
Takayama Autumn Festival (Takayama, October 9-10)
The Takayama Autumn Festival (Hachiman Matsuri) is a UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage event. Eleven ornate yatai (festival floats) with intricate mechanical puppet performances (karakuri) are paraded through the streets of this beautifully preserved Edo-period town in the Japanese Alps. The evening procession, with floats illuminated by hundreds of lanterns, is unforgettable.
Pro tip: Combine with a visit to the historic Sanmachi Suji district and nearby Shirakawa-go (UNESCO World Heritage thatched-roof village). Book accommodation months in advance — Takayama has limited hotel capacity.
Jidai Matsuri (Kyoto, October 22)
One of Kyoto's three great festivals, the Jidai Matsuri (Festival of the Ages) features a 2,000-person procession in costumes spanning 1,200 years of Japanese history, from the Meiji era back to the Heian period. The procession stretches for 2 kilometers from the Imperial Palace to Heian Shrine. It is a living museum of Japanese costume and culture.
Kurama Fire Festival (Kyoto, October 22)
On the same evening as Jidai Matsuri, the mountain village of Kurama (30 minutes north of Kyoto by train) hosts one of Japan's most dramatic fire festivals. Massive pine torches — some up to 5 meters long — are carried through narrow streets as bonfires blaze at every house. The heat and smoke create an otherworldly atmosphere. Arrive by early evening as access to the village is restricted once capacity is reached.
Nagoya Matsuri (Nagoya, mid-October)
The Nagoya Matsuri features a grand parade with floats, marching bands, and historical reenactments of the three great feudal lords who came from the region: Oda Nobunaga, Toyotomi Hideyoshi, and Tokugawa Ieyasu. The parade runs along Hisaya Odori Park in central Nagoya.
Where to Go in Japan in October
If your flight dates are fixed to October, choose one region and go deep rather than trying to zigzag across the country.
- Kyoto - Best for classical history and spectacle: Jidai Matsuri in the afternoon, then Kurama Fire Festival at night.
- Takayama / Chubu - Best for compact old-town atmosphere and early foliage: Takayama Autumn Festival plus Shirakawa-go or nearby mountain koyo.
- Tokyo / Kanto - Best for easy logistics: use the Tokyo festivals guide, mix a city event such as Tokyo Ramen Show with a shrine weekend, then add a day trip from the Yokohama & Kamakura guide.
- Nagoya - Best for historical parade energy with lighter international crowds: Nagoya Matsuri is straightforward to watch and easy to combine with Chubu rail routes.
November-December: Late Autumn
Shichi-Go-San (nationwide, November 15)
Shichi-Go-San (Seven-Five-Three) is a heartwarming ceremony where families bring children aged 3, 5, and 7 to shrines to pray for health and growth. Children dress in beautiful kimono, and major shrines like Meiji Shrine in Tokyo and Kitano Tenmangu in Kyoto are filled with adorable family photos being taken.
Chichibu Night Festival (Chichibu, December 2-3)
The Chichibu Yomatsuri is one of Japan's three great float festivals and a UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage. Six elaborate floats with ornate carvings and embroidered curtains are pulled through the streets of Chichibu, climaxing with a spectacular fireworks display on the evening of December 3. The combination of illuminated floats and winter fireworks against the night sky is breathtaking.
Getting there: Chichibu is 80 minutes from Ikebukuro (Tokyo) on the Seibu Railway. Return trains run late on festival nights.
Combining Festivals with Fall Foliage
Japan's autumn foliage (koyo) season overlaps perfectly with the festival calendar. Here are the best combinations:
- Kyoto (mid-November) — Temple illuminations at Eikando, Tofukuji, and Kiyomizu-dera during peak foliage. Combine with Jidai Matsuri if visiting in late October.
- Nikko (late October) — Stunning foliage at Toshogu Shrine and around Lake Chuzenji. The Nikko Autumn Festival features a procession of samurai warriors.
- Takayama (early October) — The autumn festival coincides with early foliage in the surrounding mountains.
- Kawaguchiko (late October-November) — Autumn Leaves Festival at the base of Mount Fuji, with illuminated maple corridors reflected in the lake.
Practical Tips for Autumn Festivals
- Weather — Autumn temperatures range from 10-22°C. Bring layers, as mornings and evenings can be chilly while afternoons remain warm. Rain is less common than in summer but pack a light rain jacket.
- Accommodation — November in Kyoto is as competitive as cherry blossom season. Book 3-6 months ahead for any Kyoto visit in November.
- Foliage forecasts — Japanese weather services publish koyo forecasts starting in September. Peak foliage varies by region: early October in Hokkaido, late November in Kyushu.
- Crowds — Autumn is increasingly popular with international visitors. Weekday visits to major foliage spots are strongly recommended.
- Photography — Autumn light in Japan is exceptional. Golden hour (late afternoon) creates stunning conditions for both festivals and foliage. See our festival photography guide.
FAQ
Is autumn actually better than summer for festivals?
Different, not strictly better. Summer has the volume (July-August alone contains most of Japan's flagship matsuri) and heat; autumn trades volume for intensity — Kishiwada Danjiri's danger-level energy, Takayama Autumn's night procession, Chichibu's fireworks-meets-lantern spectacle. Autumn also avoids the 35°C summer crush.
Can I see foliage and festivals in the same trip?
Yes, and autumn is the best season for it. Target Takayama early October (festival + early alpine koyo), Kyoto late October (Jidai Matsuri + arashiyama foliage just starting), or Chichibu/Nikko early December (festival + late-peak koyo at lower elevations).
What should I wear to autumn matsuri?
Layers. Mornings and evenings dip to 10°C in mountain towns like Takayama and Chichibu; afternoons in Kyoto and Nagoya can still hit 22°C. Comfortable walking shoes are mandatory for cobblestone old-town routes. Full breakdown in our what-to-wear guide.
How strict are entry controls at autumn fire festivals?
At Kurama, when the village hits capacity (usually by early evening), train arrivals are restricted. Plan to arrive by 15:00 and expect return trains to be extremely crowded until midnight. For Chichibu Yomatsuri fireworks, reserved paid seating is available but street viewing is free and generally better for photography.
Which autumn festival is best for a weekend from Tokyo?
Chichibu Yomatsuri (December 2-3) is ideal — 80 min train from Ikebukuro, back to Tokyo late the same night, pairs with northern Saitama foliage. Kanda Matsuri's autumn shrine events also stay within Tokyo.
Which festivals in Japan are best in October?
For pure impact: Takayama Autumn Festival, Jidai Matsuri, and Nagoya Matsuri. Choose Takayama for scenery, Kyoto for historical depth, and Nagoya for an easier city-parade format. Tokyo works best when you use it as a flexible base rather than chasing a single flagship event.
Ready to plan? Browse the directory, the October / November calendars, or pair the Tokyo festivals guide with winter illuminations for what comes after foliage ends.