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🏯 Attractions Guide · Updated 2026

10 Must-Visit Nagoya Attractions

A 400-year-old castle crowned with golden shachihoko fish · a 1,900-year-old shrine · a 603 km/h Maglev prototype · Toyota and Osu — Nagoya is hiding gems that most visitors walk straight past.

Quick Overview

Nagoya — Japan's 4th Largest City That'sStill Refreshingly Uncrowded

Straight talk — Nagoya has hidden gems that most travellers miss. This is the birthplace of Toyota, the home of the world's fastest maglev test train, and the city where Japan's second-most-important Shinto shrine sits wide open and free to visit. If you've ever changed Shinkansen at Nagoya and kept going — next time, step off. We've pulled together 10 top spots with subway coordinates and tips the Wherebest team has gathered from real visits.

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Golden Shachihoko Castle
Two 18-carat gold mythical fish atop the roof — a symbol found nowhere else in Japan.
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World-Class Maglev Tech
The MLX01-1 prototype that hit 603 km/h — the fastest speed humans have ever built.
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A 1,900-Year-Old Shrine
Atsuta Shrine — Japan's #2 most sacred site, easy to reach, and completely free to enter.
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Nagoya-meshi Food
Hitsumabushi · Miso Katsu · Tebasaki chicken wings — flavours you simply can't get elsewhere.
10 Top Spots

Nagoya AttractionsWorth Every Minute

Ranked by popularity — from world-famous landmarks to neighbourhood favourites. Every listing includes a subway stop, how to get there, opening hours, and practical tips.

Nagoya Castle — white-and-green tower topped with golden shachihoko fish 🏯 Castle1
Nagoya Castle
Nagoya Castle · 名古屋城 · Naka

Ever seen the golden shachihoko fish on Nagoya Castle's roof? Two mythical carp coated in 18-carat gold perch atop the main keep — and they're the symbol that makes Nagoya instantly recognisable from any other castle city in Japan. The castle was built in 1612 under Tokugawa Ieyasu. The Main Keep is closed for reconstruction into a traditional wooden structure, but Honmaru Palace — the exquisitely restored wooden residence completed in 2018 — is open and stunning, especially its gold-leaf painted interiors.

📍Location: Naka Ward — central Nagoya
Hours: 9:00–16:30 (closed Mondays) · approx. ¥500 admission
🚇Getting there: Subway Meijo Line to Shiyakusho station (出来町) · 5-min walk
💡Tip: Cherry blossom season (March–April) makes the castle gardens spectacular — arrive before 9 am for peaceful photos before the crowds build.
Nagoya City Guide →
Atsuta Shrine — Japan's second most important Shinto shrine, Nagoya
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⛩️ Shrine2
Atsuta Shrine
Atsuta Jingu · 熱田神宮 · Atsuta

If you know Ise Grand Shrine as Japan's most sacred, Atsuta Shrine ranks second — and it sits right in the middle of Nagoya, far easier to reach. Over 1,900 years old, this is where the Kusanagi-no-Tsurugi (Grass-Cutting Sword), one of Japan's three Imperial Regalia, is enshrined. The ancient pine forest grounds are quiet and cool, completely unlike the packed temples and castles elsewhere. Bonus: the Kiyomaro restaurant nearby serves what many consider the best Hitsumabushi (grilled eel over rice) in the shrine district.

📍Location: Atsuta Ward — southern Nagoya
Hours: Open 24 hours · Free entry (museum approx. ¥500)
🚇Getting there: Subway Meijo Line to Jingu-Nishi (神宮西) · 3-min walk; or JR to Atsuta station · 10-min walk
💡Tip: Go before 9 am — morning light filters through the old pines beautifully. It's the perfect calm start before heading to the markets or shopping districts later.
Nagoya City Guide →
Osu Kannon temple and covered arcade shopping street in Nagoya's Osu district
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🛍️ Old Market3
Osu Shopping District
Osu · 大須 · Naka

If you loved Tokyo's Akihabara, Osu is Nagoya's more walkable equivalent. A covered arcade stretches out with 400+ shops — vintage clothing, retro games, cosplay, street food, hot Takoyaki, and Mochi sweets. At the heart of the arcade sits Osu Kannon, a striking 700-year-old red temple that's one of the most photogenic spots in the city. On the 18th and 28th of every month, a flea market sets up on temple grounds — well worth timing your visit around.

📍Location: Naka Ward — central Nagoya
Hours: Most shops 11:00–20:00 (temple open 24 hrs)
🚇Getting there: Subway Tsurumai Line to Osu Kannon (大須観音) · 3-min walk
💡Tip: If you're hungry mid-browse, try Dotayaki (offal simmered in miso broth) from one of the small stalls inside the arcade — under ¥500 and unique to Nagoya.
Nagoya City Guide →
SCMaglev and Railway Park — Maglev and Shinkansen museum in Nagoya
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🚄 Railway Museum4
SCMaglev and Railway Park
リニア・麵道&#館 · Rinia Tetsudokan · Minato

Honest admission — even if you're not a train person, this place is worth the trip. The museum displays 39 real trains end-to-end, from the original 1964 Series 0 Shinkansen all the way to the MLX01-1 Maglev prototype that reached 603 km/h — the fastest land speed ever recorded. You can sit inside many of them, not just look through glass. The Shinkansen driving simulator is genuinely fun and great for families or anyone curious about what the future of rail looks like.

📍Location: Minato Ward — Nagoya Port area
Hours: 10:00–17:30 (closed Tuesdays) · approx. ¥1,000 adult
🚆Getting there: JR from Nagoya Station to Kinjofuto (金城ふ頭) · 25 min · approx. ¥400 — exit from Platform 2 lower level
💡Tip: Simulator slots are booked on the day of your visit — arrive at opening time to claim one. Additional simulator cost approx. ¥100–500.
Nagoya City Guide →
Toyota Commemorative Museum of Industry and Technology — textile and automobile pavilions, Nagoya
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🚗 Museum5
Toyota Commemorative Museum
Toyota Industry & Technology Museum · トヨタ盗業技術記念候 · Nishi

Before Toyota made cars, it made looms — and this museum tells both stories through machines that still actually run. Walk through two large halls: the Textile Pavilion (stunning Jacquard looms in action) and the Automobile Pavilion (Toyota history from the first Corolla to the present day). You see firsthand how a loom company became the world's top-selling car brand. Allow 90 minutes to 3 hours; admission is very reasonable.

📍Location: Nishi Ward — northwest of the main station
Hours: 9:30–17:00 (closed Mondays) · approx. ¥500 adult
🚆Getting there: Meitetsu Nagoya Line to Sako (栄生) · 3-min walk; or Subway Higashiyama Line to Kamejima · 10-min walk
💡Tip: Free English tours run daily at 14:00 (Textile Pavilion) and 15:15 (Automobile Pavilion) — no booking needed.
Nagoya City Guide →
MIRAI Tower — Japan's oldest TV tower overlooking Hisaya-odori Park, Nagoya
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🗼 Observation Tower6
MIRAI Tower / Hisaya-odori Park
Chubu Electric Power MIRAI Tower · 名古屋テレビ塔 · Naka

Japan's oldest TV tower (built 1954) was fully renovated in 2020 and rebranded as MIRAI Tower — Tower of the Future. At 100 metres, the open-air Sky Balcony gives a 360-degree panorama of Nagoya. Below it, the 2.4 km Hisaya-odori Park has been revitalised with cafes, fountain plazas, and cycling paths. It's an ideal evening stop before or after shopping in Sakae, just a few minutes' walk away.

📍Location: Naka Ward — centre of Hisaya-odori Boulevard
Hours: 10:00–22:00 · Sky Deck approx. ¥1,300 adult
🚇Getting there: Subway Sakura-Dori Line to Hisaya-odori · 1-min walk; or Meijo Line to Sakae · 3-min walk
💡Tip: The 3rd floor is free — there's a cafe and MIRAI Tower original goods shop. Worth stopping in even if you don't go up to the Sky Deck.
Nagoya City Guide →
FUJI Nagoya Science Museum — world's largest planetarium dome
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🔭 Science Museum7
FUJI Nagoya Science Museum
Nagoya City Science Museum · 名古屋市科学館 · Naka

The world's largest planetarium dome — 35 metres in diameter, certified by Guinness World Records — opened in 2011 and projects the galaxy in extraordinary clarity. Beyond the planetarium, the museum features a full-scale 9-metre tornado chamber (you can stand inside it) and a -30°C chamber with Northern Lights projections. Great for kids and adults who like science. Note: the museum was renamed FUJI Nagoya Science Museum in April 2026.

📍Location: Naka Ward — across from Shikemichi garden
Hours: 9:30–17:00 (closed Mondays) · Museum approx. ¥400 · with Planetarium ¥800
🚇Getting there: Subway Tsurumai Line to Fushimi (伏見) · 5-min walk
💡Tip: Planetarium tickets are limited per day — buy at opening or book online in advance. Weekend and holiday slots sell out fast.
Nagoya City Guide →
Tokugawa Art Museum — Shogunate treasures and Japanese garden, Nagoya
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🏛️ Art Museum8
Tokugawa Art Museum
徳川美術館 · Tokugawa Bijutsukan · Higashi

Four hundred years of Tokugawa Shogunate treasures live here — exquisite samurai swords, armour, formal court dress, tea ceremony ware, and scroll paintings including the Genji Monogatari picture scroll (among the oldest narrative illustrated manuscripts in the world, with the original kept on site). The museum sits right next to Tokugawa Garden, a beautiful Edo-style Japanese garden. Half a day covers both comfortably — perfect for anyone who loves deep Japanese history.

📍Location: Higashi Ward — eastern Nagoya
Hours: 10:00–17:00 (closed Mondays) · Museum approx. ¥1,600 · Garden ¥300
🚆Getting there: JR Chuo Line / Meitetsu Seto Line to Ozone (大曽根) · 10-min walk; or Subway Meijo Line to Ozone
💡Tip: Pair it with Tokugawa Garden in a single afternoon. The garden is most beautiful in November for autumn foliage. The tearoom serves matcha with wagashi sweets — don't skip it.
Nagoya City Guide →
Sakae shopping and nightlife district in central Nagoya
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🛒 Shopping District9
Sakae Shopping District
Sakae · 栄 · Naka — City Centre

Sakae is Nagoya's liveliest shopping and nightlife hub — think Shibuya or Shinjuku, Nagoya-scale. It has the country's longest underground shopping mall connecting the entire district underfoot, while above ground the Matsuzakaya and Mitsukoshi department stores and global brand boutiques line the streets. The Sakae neon glow at night is worth seeing on its own. Sakae is also the ideal starting point for the short walk to MIRAI Tower and Hisaya-odori Park.

📍Location: Naka Ward — midway between Nagoya Station and Ozone
Hours: Most shops 10:00–21:00 · Bars and restaurants open late
🚇Getting there: Subway Meijo / Higashiyama Line to Sakae (栄) — Nagoya's busiest station
💡Tip: From Sakae it's just a 5-minute walk north to MIRAI Tower — plan a half-day combo (morning shopping in Sakae + sunset from the tower) with no stress.
Nagoya City Guide →
Port of Nagoya Public Aquarium — Orca and Beluga whale shows
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🐋 Marine Park10
Port of Nagoya Public Aquarium
名古屋港水族館 · Nagoyako Suizokukan · Minato

One of the few aquariums in Japan where you can watch Orca and Beluga whales in large pools — with Orca training sessions open to viewing. Dolphin shows run 3–4 times daily, and the Antarctic Exhibition brings penguins parading through every day. Five zones trace a path from Japanese coastal waters all the way to the South Pole. Budget 2–3 hours; especially great for families with children.

📍Location: Minato Ward — Nagoya Port, near SCMaglev Museum
Hours: 9:30–17:30 (closed Mondays) · approx. ¥2,030 adult
🚇Getting there: Subway Meiko Line to Nagoyako (名古屋港) · Exit 3 · 5-min walk — from Sakae Station take Meijo/Meiko Line via Kanayama · 15 min · approx. ¥270
💡Tip: Pair it with SCMaglev Museum in the same day — both are in Minato Ward's port area, just 15 minutes apart by subway.
Nagoya City Guide →
Map

All 10 Nagoya Attractionson One Map

See how the sights spread across the city — the city centre clusters spots 1, 3, 6, 7, and 9 into half a day; the port area pairs spots 4 and 10 neatly into one trip.

Nagoya Travel Tips

6 Things That Make Your Nagoya TripSmoother and Better Value

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Use manaca or Suica
An IC card works on all 6 subway lines, JR, Meitetsu, Kintetsu, and convenience stores. Buy a manaca at any station or at Nagoya (NGO) airport.
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Subway Covers Everything
Nagoya's 6 subway lines connect every attraction in the city. Fares are approx. ¥210–270 per ride — no rental car needed.
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Don't Miss Honmaru Palace
The Main Keep is closed, but Honmaru Palace (the new wooden palace completed in 2018) is even more beautiful — gold-leaf painted walls included in the ¥500 entry fee.
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Eat Hitsumabushi Three Ways
Nagoya's signature grilled-eel-over-rice dish is eaten in three rounds: plain, seasoned, then in dashi broth. Don't leave the city without trying it — top spot is near Atsuta Shrine.
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Get an eSIM Before You Fly
Mobile data is essential for real-time subway directions. Download Google Maps offline as a backup too.
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Best Season: March–May
Cherry blossoms in the castle grounds peak March–April. Autumn foliage in November is equally gorgeous. Avoid July–August — hot and humid.
Frequently Asked Questions

FAQ —Nagoya Travel

How many days do I need in Nagoya?
1–2 days covers the city highlights — Castle, Osu, Hitsumabushi, and SCMaglev or Atsuta Shrine. 3–4 days if you want to add day trips to Inuyama Castle (30 min), Ise Grand Shrine (80 min), or the post-town trail at Magome-Tsumago (2 hours). Short on time? A 4–6 hour Shinkansen stopover still gets you the main highlights.
Which transit pass should I use in Nagoya?
An IC card (manaca, Suica, or ICOCA) is the most convenient option — it works on all 6 subway lines, JR, Meitetsu, Kintetsu, and convenience stores. Buy a manaca card at any station ticket machine, or bring your existing Suica from Tokyo and use it straight away. No need to buy a new card.
Is Nagoya Castle's interior open to visitors?
Yes, though the Main Keep has been closed for reconstruction since 2018 — the plan is to rebuild it entirely in traditional wood. It is expected to reopen around 2032. What you can visit now is Honmaru Palace (the beautifully restored wooden palace completed in 2018), which is magnificent, plus the castle gardens — especially lovely during cherry blossom season. Admission approx. ¥500.
What makes Atsuta Shrine special?
Atsuta Shrine is Japan's second most important Shinto shrine, after Ise Grand Shrine, and has stood for over 1,900 years. It enshrines the Kusanagi-no-Tsurugi (Grass-Cutting Sword), one of Japan's three Imperial Regalia. Entry is free. The old pine forest surrounding the grounds is serene and ideal for an early morning walk before the day's other sightseeing.
Is SCMaglev and Railway Park worth visiting if I'm not a train fan?
Absolutely — you get to see real Shinkansen trains and the MLX01-1 Maglev prototype that hit 603 km/h (the fastest land speed ever recorded) up close, not behind glass. The Shinkansen driving simulator is genuinely fun. Open 10:00–17:30, closed Tuesdays, admission approx. ¥1,000. Take JR from Nagoya Station to Kinjofuto in 25 minutes.
When is the best time to visit Nagoya?
Spring (March–May) is ideal — cherry blossoms in the castle grounds are spectacular, temperatures hover around 15–22°C, and the city is very walkable. Autumn (November) is equally beautiful, especially at Tokugawa Garden. Avoid July–August (hot and humid) and early May Golden Week (very crowded).
Plan Further

Add These Spotsto Your Nagoya Itinerary

Read the full city guide, find accommodation, or extend your trip to another Japanese city.

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Inuyama — Clifftop Castle, 30 Minutes Away

Inuyama Castle (1537) is Japan's oldest surviving original castle, perched on a cliff above the Kiso River — the classic day trip from Nagoya, just 30 minutes by Meitetsu train.

Japan Guide →
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Ise Grand Shrine — Japan's Most Sacred

Take the Kintetsu Limited Express for 80 minutes from Nagoya Station — Naiku & Geku are the two main precincts, with the Okage Yokocho historic food street worth a stop too.

Japan Guide →
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Tokyo — 1 hr 40 min by Shinkansen

The Nozomi Shinkansen connects Nagoya to Tokyo in under two hours — the perfect extension for a trip heading east. Open the Tokyo attractions guide to plan the next leg.

Tokyo Attractions →
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Kyoto — Just 50 Minutes Away

The Nozomi Shinkansen reaches Kyoto in 50 minutes — Nijo Castle, Fushimi Inari, and the Arashiyama bamboo grove are all waiting. Open the Kyoto guide to plan ahead.

Kyoto Attractions →
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Full Nagoya City Guide

The complete Nagoya overview — accommodation, dining, sightseeing, and 1–3 day itineraries all in one place.

Open Nagoya Guide →
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Japan Travel Guide 2026

30-day visa-free entry · eSIM · JR Pass · 7 major cities — the complete Japan guide for international travellers.

Japan Guide →
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