May is Japan's climatological "goldilocks" zone. The weather is hot enough to feel like early summer and the rainy season of June is yet to kick in. It's also a special time for the Japanese (and the local expats) as <@Golden Week|a=article:a0001004 arrives during the first week of May@>, giving everyone some much-needed rest after a busy start to the calendar year.
Add to that, a host of new festivals, a sweet spot for trying new activities and seasonal foods, the arrival of May's distinct flora and Tokyo's Sumo season and we've got an action-packed month ahead of us. Here are the top 10 things to do in Japan in May!
1. Snap photos and enjoy the scenery at parks and flower gardens
It's the perfect time of year for a walk amongst Japan's serene nature. The aromas and visuals brought by the budding May flora is a huge draw for tourists. We've got a few recommendations for parks and gardens around the Tokyo area that should top your to-do list:
1. Showa Memorial Park – Tulips
The Showa Memorial Park is particularly renowned for the sprawling pastures of multi-colored tulips that descend upon the park every May. The tulips are joined by host of other blossoming flowers, offering up a spectrum of natural hues to combine with the distinct smells of spring. This year the annual flower festival runs from March 18 to May 28, 2023.
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Address
3173 Midoricho, Tachikawa City, Tokyo, 190-0014
View Map -
Nearest Station
Nishi-Tachikawa Station (JR Ome Line)
2 minutes on foot
- Phone Number 042-528-1751
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Address
3173 Midoricho, Tachikawa City, Tokyo, 190-0014
2. Kyu-Furukawa Gardens - Roses
Kyu-Furukawa Gardens, located in the Kita ward of Tokyo, is a stunningly beautiful park that is particularly famous for its spectacular rose gardens. In May, the park is in full bloom with thousands of vibrant and colorful roses, making it a perfect place for visitors to enjoy a springtime stroll. With its elegant landscape, Kyu-Furukawa Gardens is the ideal spot for a romantic stroll or a peaceful escape from the hustle and bustle of Tokyo city life.
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Address
1-27-39, Nishigahara, Kita-ku, Tokyo, 114-0024
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Nearest Station
Kami-Nakazato Station (JR Keihin-Tohoku Line)
7 minutes on foot
- Phone Number 03-3910-0394
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Address
1-27-39, Nishigahara, Kita-ku, Tokyo, 114-0024
3. Mount Fuji Shibazakura Festival – Pink Moss Phlox
The Mount Fuji Shibazakura Festival is an annual event that takes place in May at the Fuji Motosuko Resort in Yamanashi Prefecture. The festival is known for its breathtaking displays of pink moss phlox, covering an area of around 5 hectares at the base of Mount Fuji. The vibrant shades of pink, purple, and white create a mesmerizing carpet-like effect, making it a popular destination for photographers and nature enthusiasts. If you want to see the shibazakura in all their blooming glory, they you can do so from April 15 until May 28 this year. Details at http://www.shibazakura.jp/eng/.
2. Enjoy soothing green tea plantations
Sticking with Japan's most famous national treasure, we have the green tea plantations of the Mount Fuji foothills. The tea leaves are typically harvested sometime in May, so the window of opportunity is rather small. Early mornings at the beginning of May provide the best time to set your eyes upon these isolated vistas of emerald green. The plantations are only a couple of hours from Tokyo and closer by half to the town of Hakone—another popular tourist hangout.
3. Catch one of the May festivals
The spring season is filled with cultural celebrations and May is at the epicenter of the party. With so many festivals across the nation you're pretty spoilt for choice, but there a couple in the Tokyo area in particular which are just too good to be missed in 2023.
1. Kanda Matsuri – May 11–14, 2023
The biannual Kanda Matsuri festival takes to the streets of eastern Tokyo on May 13 this year. It involves impressive parades with giant floats, priests clad in period-style costumes on horseback, elaborate dancers and skilled musicians.
2. Sanja Matsuri – May 19–21, 2023
The Sanja Matsuri takes place in Asakusa, the district which houses Tokyo's oldest temple, Senso-ji. Traditional-themed parades are the order of the day again, with geisha, musicians and dancing troupes all coming to the fore.
4. Get frosty at the Tateyama Kurobe Alpine Route
Honshu's Tateyama Kurobe Alpine Route is one of May's top tourist activities, year in year out, particularly if you want to veer off Japan's "Golden Route". It will give you a unique sense of the scale of the nation's vast and mountainous wilderness. Running through the Northern Japanese Alps from Toyama to Nagano, the Alpine route is typically traversed using a variety of different vehicles, including bus, cable car and ropeway.
Tateyama holds a place of historical significance as one of Japan's three sacred mountains and, more recently, it has been dubbed the "Roof of Japan". It is renowned for its walls of ice and snow which cushion the roads snaking through the mountain. Following May, said walls begin to thaw and melt, so next month is arguably peak season for the Kurobe Alpine Route!
5. Visit the rice paddies
Recent figures suggest that the average Japanese person consumes 55kg of rice per person per year. So it's fairly safe to make the claim that they absolutely love the stuff. As a result, the rice paddies of Japan are indeed plentiful and, more often than not, there are equally picturesque.
Once you venture into the rural reaches of the country, where the soil underfoot is commensurate with perfect growing conditions, you are often greeted with exceptional vistas of mirrored water sitting atop layered fields of rice growing paddies. Famous areas include Niigata, Fukushima, and the Noto Peninsula. Closer to Tokyo include Chichibu and around Chiba Prefecture, where you can catch a glimpse of these gorgeous landscapes.
6. Visit Hokkaido post-snow
In May, the rising temperature up north opens up some new activities for the spring and summer season. As Hokkaido's snow disappears it unleashes some delightful patches of scenic wilderness around the country's largest prefecture.
Hokkaido's famous "blue pond" in Biei is said to be at its best in May. On a clear day the pond takes on a fairy-tale-like quality with thin-stalked trees rising up from the glassy, turquoise waters. In spite of its popularity, the surrounding areas are still imbued with the ever-present sense of isolation for which Hokkaido's nature reserves are so acclaimed.
Otaru is a quaint port-town neighbouring the prefecture capital, Sapporo. In May you'll be able to take a boat ride along the town's canal, visit local sake brewers and eat some fresh Pacific Ocean produce from the local fish market.
You can also still catch the cherry blossoms up north at this time of year. Full bloom in Hokkaido is expected to be around April 26, 2023.
7. Tokyo Sumo Season
Sumo is the national sport of Japan. A sport which is claimed to have been handed down to the denizens of the nation by the Shinto Gods themselves. Watching sumo is a cultural masterclass, fusing various elements of Japanese tradition into one unique experience.
The sumo season is sporadic both in its timing and location, but every May it makes a welcome return to Tokyo. There's a reason it's a bucket-list activity for many Japanophiles, so if you've got the time, be sure to check it out.
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Address
1-3-28, Yokoami, Sumida-ku, Tokyo, 130-0015
View Map -
Nearest Station
Ryogoku Station (Toei Oedo Line / JR Sobu Line)
2 minutes on foot
- Phone Number 03-3623-5111
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Address
1-3-28, Yokoami, Sumida-ku, Tokyo, 130-0015
8. Hit the Beach
Particularly down south, the waters around the Japanese coastline become warm enough for a dip in May. On the tropical island of Okinawa, and in the neighbouring archipelagos, there are tons of beaches depending on what takes your fancy. Isolated? Well-provisioned? Near the cities? Accessible by public transport? Big waves? There's a beach (or several) to fit every kind of traveller.
Further up the country around Japan's main islands, the waters will be warmer as well. Coastal areas of Honshu like Zushi, Chiba and Izu will also start to become more popular with bathers as the month of May goes on.
9. Dig into matcha desserts
May is green tea season in Japan, which naturally results in a range of matcha inspired products. There are even hotels and restaurants which put on match-themed dessert buffets throughout May, utilising various different strands of the green tea leaf from nearly every prefecture under the rising sun.
10. Go west - visit Naoshima Art Island
Naoshima Art Island is like an open-air museum of contemporary and alternative art located in the still waters of Japan's Seto Inland Sea. It’s a fusion of the natural environment with sculptural and architectural creations by some of the nation's finest artists. It's a great way to veer of the more trodden paths of Japan's standard tourist routes, and to get a unique insight into the quirky and distinct styles of some Japan's visual art virtuosos.
Main image credit: Blanscape / Shutterstock.com
David is a Northern Irish freelance writer living in Tokyo. He loves living in Japan, reading about Japan, writing about Japan and eating Japanese food. He also spends a lot of time exercising, playing rugby and risking a litany of muscle-related injuries in yoga class.
*Prices and options mentioned are subject to change.
*Unless stated otherwise, all prices include tax.
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