The famous torii gate tunnel at Fushimi Inari Taisha

Fushimi Inari: The Complete Visitor's Guide to Kyoto's 10,000 Torii Gates

What is Fushimi Inari Taisha? Fushimi Inari Taisha is a Shinto shrine located in southern Kyoto, dedicated to Inari, the deity of rice, sake, foxes, and prosperity. Founded in 711 AD — predating the city of Kyoto itself — it sits at the base of Mount Inari and is famous worldwide for its thousands of vermilion torii gates that form winding tunnels up the mountainside. It’s free to enter, open 24 hours, and consistently ranks as Japan’s most visited attraction. Yet most tourists only see the lower section. If you’re willing to hike, you can leave the crowds behind and experience something genuinely magical. ...

May 21, 2026 · 5 min · Japan Insider Team
Cherry blossoms in full bloom over a Japanese canal

Cherry Blossom Season in Japan: The Complete Planning Guide (2026)

Japan’s Most Anticipated Season Every year, an event unlike any other sweeps across Japan from south to north: sakura season (cherry blossom season). For roughly two weeks, the country transforms into a living painting — pink and white blossoms cascade over parks, rivers, castle moats, and mountain paths. The Japanese have celebrated hanami (flower viewing) for over a thousand years. Today it draws millions of domestic and international visitors and represents one of the most breathtaking natural spectacles on earth. ...

May 19, 2026 · 5 min · Japan Insider Team
A traditional outdoor onsen bath surrounded by autumn leaves

Onsen: The Complete Guide to Japan's Hot Spring Culture

What is Onsen? Onsen (温泉, literally “hot spring”) refers to naturally occurring geothermal water heated by volcanic activity underground. Japan sits on the Pacific Ring of Fire and has over 3,000 onsen towns across the country, making it the world’s preeminent hot spring culture. But onsen is far more than just a bath. It’s a cultural ritual, a social institution, and for many Japanese people, an essential part of life. Bathing in natural mineral waters together — in its traditional form, without swimwear — represents a moment of pure equality and communal relaxation that has no real equivalent in Western culture. ...

May 18, 2026 · 6 min · Japan Insider Team
Tokyo skyline at night with the Tokyo Skytree in the background

Tokyo's Best Neighborhoods: Where to Stay, Eat, and Explore in 2026

Tokyo is Not One City — It’s Fifty With 14 million people in the city proper and 38 million in greater Tokyo, the metropolis can feel overwhelming. But here’s the key to navigating it: Tokyo is a collection of village-like neighborhoods, each with its own character, rhythm, and identity. Mastering a few key areas will transform your experience from tourist to traveler. This guide covers the neighborhoods every visitor should know — and the hidden gems worth discovering beyond the tourist circuit. ...

May 14, 2026 · 5 min · Japan Insider Team
A sleek white Shinkansen bullet train at a Japanese station

The Shinkansen: Japan's Bullet Train — Everything You Need to Know

The World’s Most Reliable Train On October 1, 1964 — timed precisely to coincide with the opening of the Tokyo Olympics — Japan launched the world’s first high-speed rail service: the Tokaido Shinkansen between Tokyo and Osaka. Running at up to 210km/h on its debut, it was unlike anything the world had seen. Six decades later, the Shinkansen network spans 3,000+ kilometers, connects Hokkaido to southern Kyushu, and carries over 150 million passengers per year. Its average delay? Under 54 seconds — measured across all delays, including weather events and accidents. For pure operational precision, nothing in the world matches it. ...

May 12, 2026 · 5 min · Japan Insider Team