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🌸 Sakura Season Guide · Updated 2026

When Do Cherry Blossoms Bloom in Japan?

The bloom rolls south to north every year, from late March into May — here are the 2026 city-by-city bloom dates, the legendary viewing spots in Tokyo · Kyoto · Fuji-Kawaguchiko · Hirosaki, how to read the forecast accurately, and the hanami etiquette that matters, all on one page.

Start Here

Cherry Blossoms Don't Bloom All at Once —They Travel South to North

Ever planned a dream sakura trip, booked flights six months out, then arrived to find every petal already on the ground? It's the trap travellers fall into every single year, because cherry blossoms don't bloom across Japan at the same time — they roll slowly northward like a pink wave, starting on the southern island of Kyushu in late March and reaching Hokkaido around early May. The Japanese call this advancing line the "sakura zensen" (cherry blossom 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 city — we lay out the 2026 bloom dates city by city, walk you through the best viewing spots in each region, teach you how to actually read the forecast, and flag the etiquette and booking mistakes that catch people out.

🌸 Straight up, before anything else: bloom dates change every year with the weather. The figures on this page are the official Japan Meteorological Corporation (JMC) forecast for 2026 — a great planning framework, but before you lock in real tickets, always double-check the latest forecast on an official source (JMC, japan-guide, and JNTO all update weekly through the early part of the year).
🌅
The South Blooms First
Fukuoka, Hiroshima, and Osaka kick off in late March to early April.
🏯
Central Japan Peaks
Tokyo, Kyoto, and Nagoya reach full bloom around late March.
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Fuji & the North Follow
Kawaguchiko, Kanazawa, and Sendai bloom early to mid-April.
❄️
The Far North Is Last
Hirosaki mid-April · Sapporo late April into May.
2026 Bloom Timeline

Which City Bloomsand When

Official JMC 2026 forecast (revised through the season) — "flowering" (kaika) is when the first blossoms open; "full bloom" (mankai) is the peak. The peak window lasts only a few days to about a week.

CityRegionFlowering (kaika)Full bloom (mankai)Best window
FukuokaKyushuSouthMar 24Apr 3Apr 1–8
HiroshimaChugokuSouthMar 19Mar 30Mar 29–Apr 4
NagoyaChubuCentralMar 17Mar 30Mar 26–Apr 1
TokyoKantoCentralMar 19Mar 27–28Mar 28–Apr 4
KyotoKansaiCentralMar 23Mar 30Mar 29–Apr 5
OsakaKansaiCentralMar 26Apr 3Apr 1–7
KanazawaHokurikuNorthMar 29Apr 3Apr 2–9
Fuji-KawaguchikoFuji Five LakesNorthApr 3Apr 8Apr 6–12
NaganoChubuNorthMar 31Apr 6Apr 5–11
SendaiTohokuNorthMar 31Apr 4Apr 4–12
Hirosaki (Aomori)TohokuNorthApr 13Apr 16Apr 16–21
SapporoHokkaidoFar NorthApr 18–20Apr 24Apr 21–28
📅 How to read the table: aim to arrive within the best window (last column), which brackets both the days just before full bloom and the early petal-fall — because if you target the exact full-bloom date and it shifts by 2–3 days, you can miss it. The 2026 season is expected to run 3–7 days earlier than average thanks to a warm February.
6 Legendary Spots

Where the Blossoms AreMost Beautiful

These are the spots travellers consistently rate as worth the trip — each peaks on a different date, so match your viewing spot to that city's bloom window and your trip falls into place.

Chureito Pagoda with cherry blossoms and Mount Fuji at Kawaguchiko 🗻 Fuji-Kawaguchiko1
Chureito Pagoda + Mount Fuji
Chureito Pagoda · Fujiyoshida

Japan's most famous cherry blossom photograph happens right here — a red five-story pagoda, pink sakura, and snow-capped Mount Fuji all lined up in one frame. You'll climb about 400 steps to reach the viewpoint, but every step is worth it. Come at first light for the best colour and the smallest crowd.

📍Location: Arakurayama Sengen Park, Fujiyoshida · Fuji Five Lakes area
🌸Peak: roughly Apr 6–12 (later than Tokyo due to altitude)
🚆Getting there: Shimoyoshida Station (Fujikyu Line), 10-min walk to the base of the steps
💡Tip: Check the weather first — if the sky isn't clear, Fuji won't show. Arriving before 8 am gets you both the light and a place to stand.
Kawaguchiko (Fuji) Guide →
Philosopher's Path lined with cherry blossoms along a canal in Kyoto ⛩️ Kyoto2
Philosopher's Path
Philosopher's Path · Kyoto

A roughly 2-kilometre stone walkway following a small canal, flanked on both sides by hundreds of cherry trees. At peak, fallen petals drift along the surface of the water — the scene that stops everyone in their tracks. It connects Ginkaku-ji to the old temple district, an easy half-day on foot.

📍Location: Higashiyama, Kyoto · between Ginkaku-ji and Nanzen-ji
🌸Peak: roughly Mar 29–Apr 5 (in line with Kyoto)
🚆Getting there: City Bus 5/17 to Ginkakuji-michi, then a 5-min walk
💡Tip: Come early for genuine quiet. Pair it with Nanzen-ji temple and Maruyama Park in the same day.
Kyoto Attractions →
Maruyama Park in Kyoto with its giant weeping cherry tree 🌸 Kyoto3
Maruyama Park
Maruyama Park · Kyoto

Kyoto's most celebrated hanami park, anchored by a giant "shidarezakura" (weeping cherry) at its centre. After dark the trees are lit up (yozakura) for a completely different mood, and locals spread out across the lawns for picnics — this is hanami at its most authentic.

📍Location: Higashiyama, Kyoto · next to Yasaka Shrine
🌸Peak: roughly Mar 29–Apr 5 · evening illuminations
🚆Getting there: Gion-Shijo Station (Keihan Line), 10-min walk through Yasaka Shrine
💡Tip: Walk straight here from Gion. The illuminated giant weeping cherry at night is the unmissable highlight.
Kyoto Attractions →
Shinjuku Gyoen garden in Tokyo with cherry blossoms across wide lawns 🗼 Tokyo4
Shinjuku Gyoen
Shinjuku Gyoen · Tokyo

Tokyo's number-one spot if you want to sit and soak it in. Around 1,000 cherry trees across more than 65 varieties means a longer overall season than most parks — the late bloomers carry on after the main variety has dropped. Wide lawns make it ideal for a relaxed picnic.

📍Location: Shinjuku, Tokyo · south of Shinjuku Station
🌸Peak: roughly Mar 28–Apr 4 · late varieties into mid-April
🚆Getting there: Shinjuku-gyoemmae Station (Marunouchi Line), or a 10-min walk from Shinjuku
💡Tip: There's a ¥500 entry fee (check the latest on the official site), but it's worth it — far more orderly than the free parks. Note that alcohol is not allowed inside this garden.
Tokyo Attractions →
Hirosaki Castle in Aomori with cherry blossoms and a petal-covered moat 🏯 Aomori (North)5
Hirosaki Castle
Hirosaki Castle · Aomori

Missed the blossoms in central Japan? This is your second chance. The Hirosaki Cherry Blossom Festival runs in mid-April with over 2,500 cherry trees, and the legendary sight here is the moat carpeted with fallen petals (hanaikada) until the water itself turns pink — one of the most beautiful in the country.

📍Location: Hirosaki Park, Aomori Prefecture · far north of Honshu
🌸Peak: roughly Apr 16–21 · during the Hirosaki festival
🚆Getting there: Shinkansen to Shin-Aomori, transfer to JR for Hirosaki, then a 15-min bus
💡Tip: The castle is illuminated at night with stunning moat reflections. Pack a warm jacket — the north is still chilly in mid-April.
Japan Travel Guide →
Lake Kawaguchiko with Mount Fuji and lakeside blossoms 🌊 Fuji-Kawaguchiko6
Lake Kawaguchiko Shore
Lake Kawaguchiko shore · Yamanashi

The northern shore has a lakeside line of cherry trees (the Cherry Blossom Corridor) with Mount Fuji rising behind, mirrored on the lake's surface — the classic image that lands on Japanese calendars more than almost any other. Stay overnight nearby and wake up to Fuji in the morning; it's an experience you'll remember for years.

📍Location: Northern shore of Lake Kawaguchiko · around Oishi Park
🌸Peak: roughly Apr 6–12 (higher elevation, later than the cities)
🚆Getting there: Fuji Excursion bus / Fujikyu train from Tokyo (~2 hrs), then the lakeside loop bus
💡Tip: Fuji is clearest at dawn. Book lakeside accommodation months ahead — this stretch fills up fast in season.
Kawaguchiko (Fuji) Guide →
Read the Forecast Like a Pro

3 Steps toNailing Your Timing

The sakura forecast isn't guesswork — it's calculated from accumulated temperatures and bud development. Understand these three things and you'll plan far more accurately.

STEP 1
Learn the Two Key Words

Kaika (開花) = the first-flowering date · Mankai (満開) = the full-bloom date. Mankai usually follows kaika by about one week, and the most beautiful window runs "from just before mankai until petals start to fall" — roughly 4–7 days. Plan to land inside that window.

STEP 2
Use a Reliable Source

Stick to official sources: JMC (n-kishou) forecasts around 1,000 locations nationwide, while japan-guide.com and JNTO publish easy English summaries. They all update weekly from late in the year through the early season — always re-check just before you fly.

STEP 3
Build in Flexibility

Warm weather speeds the bloom; rain and wind drop petals fast. A warm year like 2026 can run 3–7 days earlier than average. The safe move is to cover a 7–10 day window and keep a backup plan — if one city is past peak, shift north to a city that blooms later.

Hanami Etiquette

How to Picnic Under the Blossomsthe Right Way

"Hanami" (花見) — picnicking under the cherry trees — is the heart of the season. But there's etiquette the Japanese take seriously. Know it and you'll relax into it without putting a foot wrong.

📐
Reserve Only What You Need
Lay out a mat the size of your group, don't claim large areas and leave them empty for hours, and never block park paths.
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Keep Off the Roots
Placing mats or belongings over a tree's roots can damage or even kill it — always keep some distance from the trunk.
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Don't Climb or Pull Branches
Never climb trees or pull branches down for photos, and don't shake branches to make petals fall — it's disrespectful to the tree and to others.
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Carry Your Rubbish Home
Bins fill up fast or are scarce in season. Bring bags, separate your waste, and take it with you or use only designated points.
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Check the Alcohol Rules
Many parks allow drinking by tradition, but some have started banning it due to overtourism. Check the signs, and never overdo it.
🤫
Keep the Noise Down
Hanami is a mellow affair, not a loud party. Keep your volume in check and leave room for others to photograph and pass through.
Map

Sakura Spots Across Japanon One Map

It's easy to see why you chase the front — southern spots bloom first, northern spots later. Plan along this line and you can catch several cities in a single trip.

Prep + Booking

6 Things That Keep Your Sakura TripOn Track

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Book 3–5 Months Ahead
Tokyo and Kyoto sell out fast and hit their highest prices of the year in late March–early April. Book late and you'll pay more or find nothing.
🏙️
Stay Nearby If You're Late
If Kyoto is full, stay in Osaka and take the train in (~15 min) — cheaper, with far more rooms available.
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Choose Free Cancellation
Real bloom dates can land 2–3 days off your booking. Pick refundable rooms so you can adjust once the forecast firms up.
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Catch the Yozakura
Many parks light the trees at night — Maruyama, Hirosaki Castle, the Meguro River. The evening mood is completely different from daytime.
📶
Get an eSIM Before You Fly
The forecast shifts daily in season — you'll want live bloom updates and Google Maps to the park that's peaking right now.
🧥
Pack a Warm Layer
Late March–April is still cool, especially in the north (Hirosaki, Sapporo) and at night. Bring a jacket.
Related Guides

Keep Planning Your Japan Trip — Cities, Sights, and Prep

🗻

Kawaguchiko (Fuji) Guide

The base for sakura framed with Mount Fuji — Chureito Pagoda, the lakeside, Fuji-view hotels, and how to get there from Tokyo.

Kawaguchiko Guide →
⛩️

Kyoto Attractions

The Philosopher's Path, Maruyama Park, Fushimi Inari, Arashiyama, and the legendary temples of the old capital.

Kyoto Attractions →
🗼

Tokyo Attractions

Shinjuku Gyoen, the Meguro River, Ueno, and the best spots to catch cherry blossoms across the city.

Tokyo Attractions →
🇯🇵

Full Japan Travel Guide

Every region and city, with links into city guides, hotels, and attractions across Japan.

Japan Guide →
🍜

Osaka Attractions

Osaka Castle (a top sakura spot), Dotonbori, and the best of Kansai in a day.

Osaka Attractions →
ℹ️

Japan Travel Prep

Visa · eSIM · IC cards · JR Pass · yen · power plugs · etiquette — everything before you fly to Japan.

Travel Prep →
Frequently Asked Questions

FAQ —Japan Cherry Blossoms

When do cherry blossoms bloom in Japan?
Cherry blossoms bloom from south to north, generally from late March to early May. Tokyo, Kyoto, and Osaka peak in late March to early April; the Fuji-Kawaguchiko area in early to mid-April; Hirosaki (Aomori) in mid-April; and Sapporo in late April to early May. The exact dates shift every year with the weather, so always check the latest forecast before you plan.
According to the 2026 forecast, when will cherry blossoms bloom in Tokyo?
The official Japan Meteorological Corporation (JMC) forecast expects Tokyo to start flowering (kaika) around March 19 and reach full bloom (mankai) around March 27–28, 2026. Kyoto flowers on March 23 with full bloom on March 30, and Osaka flowers on March 26 with full bloom on April 3. These are forecasts revised throughout the season — always check the latest figures before you travel.
How long do cherry blossoms last at full bloom?
It typically takes about one week from first flowering to full bloom, and the peak — the most beautiful window — lasts only a few days to about a week. Heavy rain or strong wind makes petals fall faster, though the falling-petal phase (hanafubuki) is beautiful in its own way. In total you have roughly one to two weeks of viewing at any single location.
Where are the best cherry blossom viewing spots in Japan?
Top spots include the Chureito Pagoda framed with Mount Fuji at Kawaguchiko, the Philosopher's Path and Maruyama Park in Kyoto, Shinjuku Gyoen and the Meguro River in Tokyo, Hirosaki Castle in Aomori, and Osaka Castle. Each location peaks on a different date, so match your viewing spot to that city's bloom window.
What is the etiquette for hanami (cherry blossom picnics)?
Key rules: reserve only the space you actually need and don't hold a spot unused for long periods; never climb trees or pull branches for photos; don't place mats or belongings over the tree roots, which can damage or kill the tree; carry your rubbish home because bins are scarce; and check whether the park allows alcohol or picnics, as some have started to restrict them.
How far ahead should I book accommodation for cherry blossom season?
Book at least three to five months ahead, especially in Tokyo and Kyoto, which sell out fast and hit their highest prices of the year in late March to early April. If you book late, consider staying in Osaka or a nearby city and taking the train to the viewing spots, and choose free-cancellation rooms because the actual bloom dates can land two to three days off your booked window.
Ready to Chase the Blossoms?

Time It to the Right City
and Book Before It Fills Up

Pick the city that fits your travel dates, open a city guide for hotels, sights, and transport, or start searching for accommodation near the viewing spots before prices climb.

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