The Glico sign on the canal, street food at every turn, old alleys hidden behind the skyscrapers, and neon that never sleeps — this is "Minami," the area Osakans call the heart of their city. We'll walk you through it all: what to see, what to eat, where to shop, and how to find your way out of Namba Station without getting lost.
Picture this — you're standing on Ebisubashi Bridge, the Dotonbori canal stretching out below you, the Glico running man flashing right in front of your face, the smell of takoyaki and okonomiyaki sauce drifting in from every direction, and shopkeepers shouting for customers without pause. This is Namba — the area Osakans call "Minami" (which means 'south') — the district that packs everything that makes Osaka feel like Osaka into a space you can cover entirely on foot.
This city goes by the nickname "kuidaore" (eat until you drop), and nowhere proves it better than the streets around Namba. On this page we'll take you through the sights you have to check off, the food you can't miss, the biggest shopping district in all of Kansai, right down to the old alleys hidden behind the towers — plus how to get to Namba Station without getting lost.
Osaka earned the nickname "kuidaore" — eat until you drop — and the streets around Dotonbori and Kuromon are where it's proven. Every dish below is within walking distance. Prices are rough 2026 ranges; double-check at the shop.
| Dish | Type | What it is / origin | Where to find it | Rough price |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TakoyakiTakoyaki | Snack | Round battered balls filled with octopus, topped with sauce, mayo and bonito flakes | Every corner of Dotonbori | ~¥500–700/box |
| OkonomiyakiOkonomiyaki | Main | Savoury cabbage-and-batter pancake grilled on a hot plate and sauced | Restaurants around Dotonbori | ~¥800–1,400 |
| KushikatsuKushikatsu | Skewers | Meat and veg skewered, breaded and deep-fried (no double-dipping the sauce!) | Dotonbori–Shinsekai | ~¥130–250/skewer |
| Sashimi & grilled shellfishKuromon fresh | Fresh | Raw fish, grilled scallops, wagyu skewers — straight from the market | Kuromon Market | ~¥500–2,000 |
| Kitsune UdonKitsune Udon | Noodles | Udon in clear broth with sweet fried tofu — an Osaka original | Old udon shops in Minami | ~¥600–900 |
All of these are within a 10–15 minute walk of Namba Station, ordered so you can string them together in one day — markets and shopping by day, the Glico sign and the old alleys by night.
🌃 Dotonbori1
The heart of the district and the image the whole of Osaka is known by — a canalside street packed with neon billboards and restaurants, anchored by the Glico running man that's stood here since 1935. The classic photo spot is on Ebisubashi Bridge facing the sign, and after dark, when the lights come on, is when it looks its best.
Osaka Attractions →
🛍️ Shinsaibashi2
Osaka's liveliest shopping street, a covered arcade running about 600 metres that you can walk straight into from Dotonbori. It runs the full range from UNIQLO, GU and drugstores up to the Daimaru department store and luxury-brand buildings at the southern end. Rain is no problem — the roof covers you the whole way.
Osaka City Guide →
🍢 Nipponbashi3
The fresh market Osakans call "the city's kitchen" — a covered arcade running about 600 metres, crammed with over 100 stalls selling sashimi, jumbo grilled scallops, wagyu skewers, fruit, and snacks grilled to eat on the spot. Grazing your way through, bite by bite, is the only proper way to do it.
Japanese Local Comfort Food →Osaka's youth-culture district, the city's answer to Tokyo's Harajuku — packed with vintage-clothing stores, streetwear, record shops, and graffiti on the walls. At its centre is "Triangle Park" (Sankaku Koen), where young people of every style gather to hang out. Perfect for fashion lovers and people-watchers.
Japanese Pop & Anime Culture →
🏮 Behind Dotonbori5
Walk a few steps out of the chaos of Dotonbori and you're in another world — a narrow stone-paved alley with the feel of old Osaka, lined with small restaurants and bars. Its highlight is the Mizukake Fudo statue, blanketed in lush green moss, which people splash with water when making a wish. It's a "power spot" the locals love.
Izakaya 101 Guide →Namba is a district that genuinely comes alive at night — around Dotonbori you'll find everything from tiny stand-and-drink bars (tachinomi) and multi-floor izakaya to hole-in-the-wall spots down narrow alleys, plus karaoke and stand-up comedy. If you like a buzzing scene that doesn't quit, this is your place; you can switch bars in a few steps.
Izakaya 101 Guide →"Namba" is a cluster of major stations tying together three subway lines, the Nankai line (straight to the airport), and the Kintetsu line (to Nara). Know the right exit and you won't get lost in the underground maze.
From Kansai Airport (KIX), the reserved-seat Nankai Rapi:t express runs straight to Namba Station (Nankai) in about 38 minutes (~¥1,490), or the cheaper ordinary Airport Express (~¥970) takes around 45 minutes. Step off at Namba and you can walk straight to your hotel or Dotonbori — a great start and end point for a Kansai trip (2026 fares; check the latest).
From Kyoto it's about 45–60 minutes at the quickest (Hankyu/Keihan lines, or JR to Osaka Station then the Midosuji line down to Namba). Nara connects straight to Namba on the Kintetsu line in ~40 minutes. Coming from Tokyo by Shinkansen, you'll arrive at Shin-Osaka and transfer to the Midosuji line — about 10 minutes to Namba.
The good news is you barely need to ride anything else — the Glico sign (~3 min), Shinsaibashi (~7 min), Kuromon Market (~10 min), and Amerikamura (~10 min) are all on foot from Namba. The underground has multi-level passages, so remember your exit number (e.g. Exit 14 for Dotonbori) and finding your way gets much easier.
If your trip is all about eating, shopping, and nightlife, staying around Namba-Shinsaibashi pays off — you can walk back to your hotel after a late night out instead of racing for the last train.
You can see at a glance that all the highlights cluster around Namba Station — Dotonbori, Shinsaibashi, Kuromon Market, and Amerikamura are all just a few minutes' walk apart.
The whole-city overview — where to stay, what to see, what to eat, getting around, and an Osaka itinerary, all on one page.
Osaka Guide →The city's north side — skyscrapers, observation decks, big department stores, and Osaka's rail hub. A different feel from Namba.
Umeda Guide →Retro Showa-era Osaka, the Tsutenkaku tower, and the original kushikatsu. A must for cheap-eats lovers.
Shinsekai Guide →Osaka Castle, Universal Studios, the aquarium, and the city's top sights — easy to pair with a day in Namba.
Osaka Attractions →A sample Osaka-Kyoto-Tokyo trip over 5 days, laying out what to do each day — easy to adapt to your own plans.
5-Day Itinerary →Visa · eSIM · IC card · JR Pass · yen · power plugs · Japanese etiquette — everything before you fly.
Travel Prep →Sleep around Namba-Shinsaibashi and you can walk to Dotonbori, Kuromon Market, and the late-night spots every night. Open the city guide to compare other areas, or check room availability for your dates well ahead of time.