Home Nikko Japan Nikko Hotels Nikko Food Guide Nikko Itinerary About
Home  ›  Asia  ›  Japan  ›  Nikko  ›  Attractions
⛩️ Nikko Attractions · 2026

First time in Nikko — where to go?
A UNESCO shrine, a hundred-metre waterfall, a mountain lake — all in one trip

There's an old Japanese saying: "Never say 'beautiful' until you've seen Nikko." A town wrapped in centuries-old cedar forest that hides Japan's most lavish shogun mausoleum, a waterfall taller than a thirty-storey building, and a lake high in the mountains — all just ninety minutes from Tokyo.

Why go

Where forest, faith and mountains become one

Nikko plays a trick on you from the moment you step off the train. You walk through a small, quiet town, cross a red bridge over a river so clear you can count the stones on the bottom, then turn into a cedar forest where the trees close over the sky. And there it is — Nikko Toshogu Shrine, the mausoleum of Tokugawa Ieyasu, the shogun who united Japan and opened the Edo era. Every surface is gold leaf, lacquer and tens of thousands of carvings. It's a place where the sacred and the ornate sit together in a way you won't find anywhere else in the country.

But Nikko is far more than its shrines. Take a bus up the mountain along the 48 hairpins of the Irohazaka road and you reach Kegon Falls, dropping 97 metres in a single thread of water, and Lake Chuzenji, sitting still at 1,269 metres above sea level. We've chosen 9 sights that tell Nikko's story most completely — from the World Heritage cluster in town to the highland nature that turns white with snow in winter.

Top sights

9 sights worth the trip

Ordered along the real route — from the World Heritage shrines in town, up the mountain to the falls and lake

Nikko Toshogu Shrine — the vermilion and gold five-storey pagoda among cedar trees, a Japanese UNESCO World Heritage Site 1
Nikko Toshogu Shrine (日光東照宮)
Tokugawa shogun mausoleum · Japan's most lavish shrine · UNESCO

Picture this: you stand before the Yomeimon gate, nicknamed "the gate you could look at all day without tiring of it." Every corner is carved into dragons, lions, sages, flowers and children — more than 500 carvings in all, painted and gilded until the wood almost disappears. Toshogu was built to enshrine the spirit of Tokugawa Ieyasu, the shogun who unified Japan. His grandson poured a fortune into expanding it into the most ornate shrine in the country — extravagant in craft, profound in meaning. Climb the stone steps past the five-storey pagoda and the Yomeimon gate to the tomb on the hill, reached by more than 200 steps.

Admission: Adults ¥1,600 (~US$11) · with museum ¥2,400
Hours: 9 am–5 pm (Apr–Oct) · 9 am–4 pm (Nov–Mar) · last entry 30 min before close
Bus: From Tobu-Nikko, World Heritage bus ~10 min to Shinkyo stop, then ~10 min walk uphill
Tip: Arrive right at the 9 am opening — after 10.30 am, tour groups create long queues at the Yomeimon gate. Please remember this is an active sacred site where Japanese visitors still come to pray: speak softly and remove your hat inside the shrine buildings.
The three wise monkeys — see no evil, speak no evil, hear no evil — painted wood carving on the sacred stable at Toshogu Shrine, Nikko 2
The Three Wise Monkeys & Sleeping Cat
三猿 · the original "see/speak/hear no evil" carving

Ever wondered where that image of three monkeys covering eyes, mouth and ears comes from? The original is right here at Toshogu, carved on the wall of the Sacred Stable (Shinkyusha) as part of an eight-panel series depicting the cycle of human life through monkeys. The three-monkeys panel carries the teaching: "see no evil, speak no evil, hear no evil." The other carving people hunt for is the "Sleeping Cat" (Nemuri-neko), a tiny work above the passage to the tomb, attributed to the legendary sculptor Hidari Jingoro — so small that many walk straight past it. Look for the sign before the steps up to the mausoleum.

Location: Inside the Toshogu grounds (included in admission)
Three monkeys: On the Sacred Stable, near the rear entrance
Sleeping Cat: Above the Sakashitamon gate, before the steps to Ieyasu's tomb
Shinkyo Bridge, Nikko — an arched vermilion wooden bridge over the Daiya River with mountains and forest behind 3
Shinkyo Bridge (神橋)
Vermilion bridge over the Daiya River · gateway to the sacred mountains

This is the first image most people see as they enter the shrine precinct — an arched wooden bridge painted bright vermilion, spanning the Daiya River where clear green water runs over the rocks. Legend says the monk Shodo Shonin, who founded Nikko's religious sites in the 8th century, couldn't cross the raging river, until the gods sent two serpents that coiled into a bridge for him. Shinkyo is counted among Japan's three finest bridges. Photographing it from the riverbank is free; to actually walk across costs around ¥300. Late October, when the mountains behind it turn, is the loveliest window.

Cost: Free to photograph from the bank · ~¥300 to walk across
Bus: Shinkyo stop (~10 min from Tobu-Nikko) is where the shrine walk begins
Best time: Soft morning light, or late October for the autumn colour
Rinnoji Temple, Nikko — a stone path lined with stone lanterns leading to a hall in green forest, a UNESCO site 4
Rinnoji Temple (輪王寺)
The Sanbutsudo hall · three gilded Buddhas · Shoyoen garden

Long before Toshogu existed, Nikko was a centre of mountain Buddhism for over a thousand years — and Rinnoji is the heart of that older era. The highlight is the Sanbutsudo, the largest wooden hall in Nikko, which enshrines three gilded Buddha statues more than 7 metres tall, representing the deities of Nikko's three sacred mountains. They stand in a dim, incense-scented hall — the kind of space that makes people fall quiet without being asked. Nearby is the Japanese garden Shoyoen, laid out around a pond for a gentle stroll, especially beautiful in autumn.

Admission: Sanbutsudo + Taiyuin ¥900 · set with Treasure Hall ¥1,000
Hours: 8 am–5 pm (Apr–Oct) · until 4 pm (Nov–Mar)
Location: ~5 min walk from Toshogu (same UNESCO cluster)
Futarasan Shrine, Nikko — a small vermilion thatched-roof shrine with a stone torii gate, set in cedar forest 5
Futarasan Shrine (二荒山神社)
Mountain-worship shrine · older than Toshogu by over a thousand years

Honestly, most people see Toshogu and hurry back, never realising that a few minutes' walk further on stands Futarasan Shrine — the oldest shrine in Nikko, founded around the year 767. It's dedicated to the deities of the three sacred mountains (Nantai, Nyoho, Taro) that give this whole area its holiness. The mood is clearly different from Toshogu: quiet, shaded, not grand but deeply atmospheric, with giant cedars, a sacred spring, and stone paths softened by moss. Japanese visitors come here especially to pray for love and good fortune. Entry to the main precinct is free (some inner sections charge a small fee).

Cost: Main precinct free · inner garden and some areas ~¥300
Hours: 8 am–5 pm (Nov–Mar until 4 pm)
Location: ~7 min walk from Toshogu through the cedar forest
Kanmangafuchi Abyss, Nikko — a long row of stone Jizo statues in red caps and bibs lining a forested riverside gorge 6
Kanmangafuchi Abyss (憾満ヶ淵)
A row of stone "bake-jizo" · free

A quiet secret: if you want to escape the crowds around the shrines, this is the answer. Kanmangafuchi is a small gorge where the Daiya River runs over volcanic rock, and along a riverside trail of about 100 metres stand nearly 70 stone Jizo statues in a row, each dressed in a knitted red cap and bib offered by locals. Jizo is the bodhisattva who protects children and travellers. People call this row the "bake-jizo" (phantom statues), because legend says you'll get a different number every time you try to count them. The mood is calm and solemn, especially when red maple leaves meet the green moss on the stone — and there's no admission fee.

Cost: Free · trail open year-round
Access: ~20–30 min walk from the shrine cluster, or a short taxi ride
Best time: Morning or late afternoon for fewer people · late October for autumn colour
Kegon Falls, Nikko — a single thread of water dropping 97 metres down a cliff framed by autumn foliage 7
Kegon Falls (華厳の滝)
97 metres tall · one of Japan's three most beautiful waterfalls

Ever stood by a waterfall so loud you had to shout to be heard? Kegon is one of those. Water from Lake Chuzenji plunges 97 metres down a volcanic cliff in a single column, hitting the bottom in a mist that fills the gorge. The upper viewpoint is free, but to see the full drop, ride the elevator nearly 100 metres down to the lower observation deck at the base of the falls — about ¥570 to ¥600, and well worth it to stand directly in front and feel the force of the water. The most beautiful window is mid to late October, when the foliage around the cliff blazes red, and winter, when parts of the falls freeze into ice.

Elevator: ~¥570–600/person (upper viewpoint free)
Bus: Chuzenji-line bus from Tobu-Nikko ~45–50 min to Chuzenji Onsen, then ~5 min walk
Best time: Mid–late October (autumn colour), or after rain/snowmelt when flow is strong
Lake Chuzenji, Nikko — a blue mountain lake at 1,269 metres ringed by green peaks under clear sky 8
Lake Chuzenji + Irohazaka Road
A mountain lake at 1,269 m · 48 autumn hairpins

Lake Chuzenji was formed when lava from Mount Nantai dammed a valley around 20,000 years ago, leaving a lake at 1,269 metres above sea level. The air up here is several degrees cooler than the town of Nikko — in summer people come to escape the heat, and in autumn the whole basin turns red and gold. Getting up means tackling the Irohazaka road, a switchback of 48 curves (named after the 48 characters of the old Japanese syllabary), climbing 440 metres — each curve numbered, with separate one-way roads for going up and coming down. Near the lake, the Akechidaira Ropeway rises to a viewpoint that frames both Kegon Falls and the lake in a single shot.

Bus: Tobu-Nikko → Chuzenji Onsen ~45–50 min (~¥1,250 one way)
Akechidaira Ropeway: ~¥1,000 round trip · falls + lake in one view
Best time: Autumn colour early–mid October (higher up, it turns before the town)
Tip: In autumn the Irohazaka jams badly on weekends — take an early-morning bus up and come down in the afternoon, since the up and down roads are separate and timing is easier to predict. For the mountain, the Nikko All Area Pass covers all these buses.
Ryuzu Falls and Senjogahara plateau, Nikko — water cascading over rocks amid highland autumn foliage 9
Senjogahara Marsh + Ryuzu Falls
戦場ヶ原 · highland wetland + boardwalk trails

If you'd rather walk than queue for photos, head a little beyond Lake Chuzenji to Senjogahara, a broad highland marsh at around 1,400 metres. The name means "battlefield," from a legend of two mountain gods who fought here. A raised wooden boardwalk cuts across the grassland and bog — flat, easy walking, with Mount Nantai as a backdrop. On the way up from Chuzenji you'll pass Ryuzu Falls, where the water splits over the rocks into the shape of a dragon's head — especially beautiful in early October. This route suits travellers staying overnight in Nikko who want a full day in the mountains.

Bus: Continue from Chuzenji Onsen toward Yumoto Onsen, get off at Ryuzu no Taki / Sanbonmatsu
Trail: Flat boardwalk ~2–3 hrs (Ryuzu → Senjogahara → Yumoto)
Best time: Autumn colour early October, or summer for cool, comfortable air
Plan your visit

How to fit it all in

Nikko splits clearly into two zones — the shrines in town, and the nature up the mountain

UNESCO shrine cluster (in town)
First half-day · World Heritage bus

Toshogu, Rinnoji, Futarasan and the Shinkyo Bridge are all within walking distance of each other. Take the bus from Tobu-Nikko (~10 min) to the Shinkyo stop, then walk up through the cedar forest. The whole cluster takes 3–4 hours, including time to study the carvings at Toshogu in detail.

Time needed: Half a day · Bus: World Heritage Loop
Kanmangafuchi Abyss (town edge)
Add after the shrines · walkable

The row of Jizo statues along the Daiya River is about a 20–30 minute walk from the shrine cluster — a peaceful spot to escape the crowds. If you're tired, a short taxi works. Pairing it with the shrines makes a comfortable single-day plan.

Time needed: 1 hour · Free: No admission
Lake Chuzenji + Kegon Falls (mountain)
Full day · bus up the Irohazaka

Take the bus from town up the 48-curve Irohazaka road (~45–50 min) to Chuzenji Onsen. From there you can walk to Kegon Falls, ride the Akechidaira Ropeway for the view, and stroll the lakeshore. Best for those staying overnight, since getting up and back takes a while.

Time needed: Half to full day · Bus: Chuzenji Line
Senjogahara + Yumoto (highest up)
For walkers · beyond Chuzenji

Ryuzu Falls, the Senjogahara marsh and Yumoto Onsen sit higher than the lake, linked by raised boardwalks. The full walk takes 2–3 hours, ideal for travellers staying two nights who want a full day with nature. See the full Nikko itinerary →

Time needed: Half to full day · Bus: Yumoto Onsen Line
Frequently asked

FAQ · before you set out

Can you visit Nikko as a day trip from Tokyo?
Yes, if you focus on the UNESCO shrine-and-temple cluster. The Tobu Limited Express Spacia X / Spacia Kegon from Asakusa Station to Tobu-Nikko takes about 1 hour 50 minutes. Leave early, around 7 to 8 am, spend the morning on Toshogu, Rinnoji and Futarasan, then add Kanmangafuchi or the Shinkyo Bridge in the afternoon and head back in the evening. But if you also want Kegon Falls and Lake Chuzenji, stay one night — the bus up the mountain and back eats a lot of time. See the Nikko itinerary →
How much is admission to Toshogu Shrine, and what are the hours?
Adult admission to Nikko Toshogu Shrine is ¥1,600 (about US$11); a combined ticket with the Toshogu Museum is ¥2,400. Open 9 am to 5 pm (April to October) and 9 am to 4 pm (November to March), with last entry 30 minutes before closing. Arrive right at the 9 am opening — from around 10.30 am, tour groups pack the site, especially the queue at the Yomeimon gate.
Is the Nikko Pass worth it, and which one should I get?
If you only see the UNESCO shrines and temples over one or two days, the Nikko World Heritage Area Pass (around ¥3,000) covers the round-trip train between Asakusa and Tobu-Nikko plus buses inside the heritage area. If you plan to head up to Kegon Falls, Lake Chuzenji and Senjogahara, you need the Nikko All Area Pass (around ¥8,000, valid four days), which covers all the mountain buses — the Chuzenji bus alone is around ¥2,500 round trip. Neither pass includes the Limited Express seat surcharge. More in the Nikko travel tips →
Is there an elevator fee at Kegon Falls, and when is it best to visit?
The upper viewpoint is free. To reach the lower observation deck at the base of the falls, you ride an elevator nearly 100 metres down for about ¥570 to ¥600 per person — well worth it, because you stand directly in front of the full cascade. The most beautiful window is mid to late October, when the foliage around the cliff turns. For a single frame with both the falls and Lake Chuzenji, ride the Akechidaira Ropeway (around ¥1,000 round trip).
When do the autumn leaves peak in Nikko, and what should I watch out for?
The highlands around Lake Chuzenji and Senjogahara turn first, roughly early to mid October, while the town and shrines peak later, late October into early November. That's the most beautiful — and most crowded — time, especially on the Irohazaka switchbacks, which jam on weekends. The trick is to take an early-morning bus up and come down in the afternoon: the up and down roads are separate, so timing is easier to predict.
Klook · Nikko Tours

Nikko day tours from Tokyo — transport, guide and tickets in one package

A day tour from Tokyo covers Toshogu Shrine, Kegon Falls and Lake Chuzenji without juggling buses yourself — or just book shrine admission and individual activities separately. Reserve on Klook in advance and skip the ticket window.

See Nikko tours & tickets on Klook →
Wherebest is a Klook affiliate partner — we may earn a commission when you book through our links, at no extra cost to you.