The colour rolls north to south, the opposite of cherry blossoms — starting in Hokkaido in late September and finishing in Kyoto in late November. We've boiled it down to a region-by-region timeline, the legendary spots Kyoto · Nikko · Kamikochi · Fuji-Kawaguchiko, how to read the foliage forecast accurately, and viewing etiquette, all on one page.
Ever gone to Kyoto in mid-October hoping for a temple full of red maples, only to find the leaves still green? It's a trap travellers fall into every year, because Japan's autumn leaves (which the Japanese call "koyo / 紅葉", with the red maples specifically known as "momiji") don't turn across the whole country at the same time — the colour drifts slowly southward like a wave of red, orange, and gold, doing everything the cherry blossoms do in reverse. It starts up in the Hokkaido highlands in late September, then rolls south to reach Kyoto and Tokyo around late November. The Japanese call this advancing line the "koyo zensen" (autumn-foliage front), and the whole country tracks it like a weather report.
The goal of this guide is to help you time it to the right area — we lay out the colour-change window region by region, take you to the most beautiful spots from the highland plateaus of the Japanese Alps to the old temples of Kyoto, teach you how to actually read the foliage report, and flag the etiquette and booking mistakes people tend to make.
An average framework from the annual foliage reports, ordered north (turns first) to south — "starts turning" is when the leaves begin to take colour; "peak" is when the red, orange, and gold are at their fullest and finest. Dates shift 2–7 days a year with the weather, and the highlands always turn before the lowlands.
| Area | Region | Starts turning | Recommended peak | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DaisetsuzanDaisetsuzan · Hokkaido | Far North | Mid-Sep | Sep 15–25 | Highlands — earliest in Japan |
| Towada-OiraseTowada · Tohoku | North | Early Oct | Mid–late Oct | The Oirase stream gorge |
| KamikochiKamikochi · Nagano | Highlands | Early Oct | Early–mid Oct | Japanese Alps ~1,500 m · short window |
| Nikko (Irohazaka)Nikko · Tochigi | Central | Mid-Oct | Mid–late Oct | Oku-Nikko turns first; Nikko town in early Nov |
| Fuji-KawaguchikoFuji Five Lakes · Yamanashi | Central | Late Oct | Early–mid Nov | Momiji Corridor has illuminations |
| KanazawaKanazawa · Hokuriku | Central | Early Nov | Mid–late Nov | Kenrokuen Garden |
| KorankeiKorankei · Aichi | South-Central | Early Nov | Mid–late Nov | ~4,000 maples · festival Nov 1–30 |
| TokyoTokyo · Kanto | South | Mid-Nov | Late Nov–early Dec | Ginkgo late Nov · red maples early Dec |
| KyotoKyoto · Kansai | South | Mid-Nov | Mid–late Nov | Tofukuji/Eikando into early Dec |
| OsakaOsaka · Kansai | South | Mid-Nov | Late Nov–early Dec | Minoo, Osaka Castle Park |
These are the spots travellers agree are worth the trip — each peaks at a different time depending on elevation, so match your viewing spot to that area's colour-change window and your trip lands just right.
⛩️ Kyoto1
Kyoto's two most famous autumn temples — Tofukuji's wooden Tsutenkyo bridge crosses a valley of maples that turns into a sea of red and orange, while Eikando is renowned for its night illuminations mirrored in the pond. Straight up, it gets seriously crowded at peak, so getting there right at opening is your way out.
Kyoto Attractions →On Kyoto's western edge, a whole mountainside flushes red, orange, and gold as a backdrop to the Togetsukyo bridge and the Oi River. You can take a small boat to view the foliage on the slopes, then walk on to Tenryu-ji, whose back garden frames the hills with red maples so beautifully that people just stand and photograph forever.
Kyoto Attractions →
🍁 Nikko (North-Central)3
If you want to see autumn colour a full month before Kyoto, Nikko is the answer — the Irohazaka road is a winding 48-curve climb up the mountain through forest in full colour the whole way. At the top you reach the 97-metre Kegon Falls wrapped in red leaves, the iconic image of autumn in the Kanto region.
Nikko Guide →The heart of the Japanese Alps at around 1,500 metres — the karamatsu (larch) trees turn brilliant gold against the Hotaka peaks and crystal-clear rivers. You can stroll the flat trails from Kappa Bridge with ease. Straight up, the golden-leaf window is very short: miss it by a week and it's all on the ground.
Takayama Guide →Central Japan's top autumn-leaf spot, near Nagoya — a gorge along the Tomoe River planted with over 4,000 maples (said to have been started by a monk back in the 17th century). At peak the whole valley turns red, orange, and gold, with night illuminations reflected on the water. People who go say it's well worth the multiple bus transfers.
Japan Travel Guide →
🗻 Fuji-Kawaguchiko6
The northern shore has a tunnel of red maples running along a stream (the Momiji Kairo) that, at peak, is lit up in the evening so beautifully that people queue to photograph it. On a clear day you'll still catch Mount Fuji with its first snow as a backdrop. Stay overnight by the lake and wake to Fuji in the morning — an experience you'll remember for years.
Kawaguchiko (Fuji) Guide →Leaves turn with falling temperatures, not on a whim. Understand these three things and you'll plan far more accurately — especially the "elevation" factor that so many people overlook.
Kozuki-hajime / starts turning (色づき始め) = the leaves begin to take colour · Migoro / peak (見頃) = when the colour is at its fullest and finest. The peak window lasts about one to two weeks from when it starts turning, with the colour creeping down from the branch tips and mountain summits. Plan to land inside that "peak" window.
Stick to official sources: Weathernews / tenki.jp forecast spot by spot nationwide, while japan-guide.com (Autumn Color Report) and JNTO publish easy English summaries with weekly photos of the real status — always re-check before you fly.
Highlands turn a week ahead of the lowlands; within one area, work down from the mountains (e.g. Oku-Nikko) to the lowland town. Wind and rain drop the leaves fast, so the safe move is to cover a 7–10 day window and keep a backup — if one spot has dropped, shift south or down to lower ground to a place that turns later.
Most of the famous autumn-leaf spots are old temples and Japanese gardens where the etiquette is taken seriously. Know these six and you'll enjoy it with an easy mind, without putting a foot wrong.
It's easy to see why you follow the foliage front — northern and high-elevation spots turn first, southern and lowland spots later. Plan along this line and you can catch several spots in a single trip.
This page's spring counterpart — when the sakura blooms (south to north), the legendary spots, and how to read the forecast.
Cherry Blossom Guide →An open-air bath under the autumn colour is the season's highlight — pick the right onsen town, with how to get there.
Onsen Towns →The base for autumn in Kanto — Irohazaka, Kegon Falls, Lake Chuzenji, and how to get there from Tokyo.
Nikko Guide →Tofukuji, Eikando, Arashiyama, Fushimi Inari, and the legendary temples with the finest autumn leaves in Japan.
Kyoto Attractions →The base for autumn leaves with Mount Fuji — the lakeside Momiji Corridor, Fuji-view hotels, and how to get there from Tokyo.
Kawaguchiko Guide →Visa · eSIM · IC cards · JR Pass · yen · power plugs · etiquette — everything before you fly to Japan.
Travel Prep →Pick the area that fits your travel dates, open a city guide for hotels, sights, and transport, or start searching early for accommodation near the autumn-leaf spots before prices climb — especially in Kyoto and along Lake Kawaguchiko, which fill up very fast.