Free Entry

Free Japanese Castles

Japan's castle landscape is more accessible than many visitors expect. A substantial number of castle sites — ruins, reconstructed towers, and even historically significant grounds — charge no admission fee at all. Free entry is common at castle parks maintained by local governments, at ruins where only the stone walls and earthworks survive, and at sites where the main grounds are open but inner towers are ticketed separately. Whether you're travelling on a budget or simply want to pack more castles into a single day, these sites reward a visit without any cost at the gate.

Showing 125 castles with free entry

Edo Castle

江戸城 · Edo-jo

Ruins

📍 Tokyo — Kanto

The largest castle ever built in Japan — now the Emperor's residence — where you can walk the foundations of the tower that ruled a nation for 265 years.

A Tourism 80/100
A Defense 85/100
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Kanazawa Castle

金沢城 · Kanazawa-jo

Ruins

📍 Ishikawa — Chubu

The silver-roofed castle of Japan's wealthiest samurai clan — best experienced alongside Kenrokuen, the garden that its lords spent 300 years perfecting next door.

B Tourism 78/100
C Defense 60/100
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Sendai Castle

仙台城 · Sendai-jo

Ruins

📍 Miyagi — Tohoku

The mountain stronghold of the One-Eyed Dragon — where Date Masamune's equestrian statue surveys the city he founded, from ruins that speak of a castle that never needed a main tower.

C Tourism 65/100
B Defense 72/100
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Matsushiro Castle

松代城 · Matsushiro-jo

Ruins

📍 Nagano — Chubu

The quiet moat-island home of the Sanada clan — Japan's most beloved samurai family — set in a remarkably intact castle town that time forgot.

D Tourism 40/100
F Defense 38/100
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Kofu Castle

甲府城 · Kofu-jo

Ruins

📍 Yamanashi — Chubu

The castle Takeda Shingen never built — now a free urban park of excellent stone walls with Mount Fuji views, seconds from the train station.

D Tourism 50/100
D Defense 42/100
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Nihonmatsu Castle

二本松城 · Nihonmatsu-jo

Ruins

📍 Fukushima — Tohoku

The castle where children fought and died for a losing cause — and where chrysanthemums now bloom in their memory each autumn.

D Tourism 45/100
D Defense 55/100
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Mito Castle

水戸城 · Mito-jo

Ruins

📍 Ibaraki — Kanto

Home of Japan's most famous fictitious traveler and the intellectual dynasty that helped end the shogunate — a castle of ideas more than stone.

D Tourism 45/100
D Defense 40/100
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Yamagata Castle

山形城 · Yamagata-jo

Ruins

📍 Yamagata — Tohoku

Tohoku's largest castle in its heyday, now a peaceful city park with a beautifully reconstructed gate — and a long restoration road still ahead.

D Tourism 45/100
D Defense 48/100
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Takatori Castle

高取城 · Takatori-jo

Ruins

📍 Nara — Kansai

Japan's highest castle ruins — a 584-meter mountain fortress with some of the finest surviving stone walls in the country, for those willing to earn the view.

F Tourism 35/100
A Defense 88/100
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Tottori Castle

鳥取城 · Tottori-jo

Ruins

📍 Tottori — Chugoku

Where Hideyoshi's most ruthless siege unfolded — a dramatic mountain ruin whose history is written in starvation, not stone.

D Tourism 42/100
B Defense 72/100
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Tokushima Castle

徳島城 · Tokushima-jo

Ruins

📍 Tokushima — Shikoku

Awa Odori's ancestral castle — green schist walls and a Toyotomi-era garden in a city that dances better than it fortifies.

D Tourism 42/100
D Defense 45/100
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Kubota Castle (Akita Castle)

久保田城(秋田城) · Kubota-jo

Ruins

📍 Akita — Tohoku

The castle deliberately built without a tower — Kubota's modesty was a political survival strategy, and today the grounds are simply Akita's best park.

D Tourism 45/100
D Defense 48/100
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Kasugayama Castle

春日山城 · Kasugayama-jo

Ruins

📍 Niigata — Chubu

Uesugi Kenshin's legendary mountain fortress survives only as earthworks in the forest — the pilgrimage is for history lovers, not casual tourists.

D Tourism 40/100
A Defense 80/100
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Tsutsujigasaki Residence (Takeda Shingen's Palace)

躑躅ヶ崎館 · Tsutsujigasaki-yakata

Ruins

📍 Yamanashi — Chubu

This is where Japan's most strategically brilliant warlord worked — not a castle but a residence, because Shingen trusted people over walls.

D Tourism 42/100
F Defense 30/100
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Hachigata Castle

鉢形城 · Hachigata-jo

Ruins

📍 Saitama — Kanto

The cliff-top fortress that defeated Takeda Shingen — Hachigata's natural river defenses are among the best in the Kanto region, now preserved in an excellent earthworks park.

F Tourism 38/100
C Defense 68/100
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Sunpu Castle

駿府城 · Sunpu-jo

Ruins

📍 Shizuoka — Chubu

The castle that bookended Tokugawa Ieyasu's life — hostage child at one end, retired shogun who still ran Japan at the other.

D Tourism 55/100
D Defense 42/100
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Ise-Kameyama Castle

伊勢亀山城 · Ise-Kameyama-jo

Ruins

📍 Mie — Kansai

The castle accidentally demolished on a mistaken order — Ise-Kameyama's most famous moment is a bureaucratic blunder, but one surviving turret keeps the story alive.

F Tourism 35/100
F Defense 38/100
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Tsu Castle

津城 · Tsu-jo

Ruins

📍 Mie — Kansai

Todo Takatora's prefectural capital castle — almost everything is gone, but the master builder's stone wall style still shows in what little remains.

F Tourism 35/100
F Defense 35/100
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Akashi Castle

明石城 · Akashi-jo

Ruins

📍 Hyogo — Kansai

Two original turrets visible from the train platform, a massive tower foundation that was never used, and free access — Akashi is the most accessible castle ruins in Japan.

D Tourism 55/100
D Defense 48/100
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Ako Castle

赤穂城 · Ako-jo

Ruins

📍 Hyogo — Kansai

The castle that launched Japan's most famous loyalty story — the 47 ronin began and ended their journey here, and December 14 in Ako is one of Japan's most atmospheric historical commemorations.

D Tourism 50/100
D Defense 48/100
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Bitchu-Takamatsu Castle

備中高松城 · Bitchu-Takamatsu-jo

Ruins

📍 Okayama — Chugoku

Almost nothing stands here — but this is where Hideyoshi flooded a castle and then, on learning Nobunaga was dead, sprinted 200 km in three days to seize Japan.

F Tourism 35/100
D Defense 40/100
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Fukuoka Castle

福岡城 · Fukuoka-jo

Ruins

📍 Fukuoka — Kyushu

One of Kyushu's largest castle complexes, now a cherry blossom park overlooking the bay where the Mongol armadas once appeared on the horizon.

D Tourism 58/100
D Defense 55/100
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Saga Castle

佐賀城 · Saga-jo

Ruins

📍 Saga — Kyushu

A flatland castle with minimal surviving defenses, but its reconstructed wooden palace is Japan's largest of its kind — and the Nabeshima clan's story quietly shaped modern Japan.

D Tourism 48/100
F Defense 35/100
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Kagoshima Castle

鹿児島城 · Kagoshima-jo

Ruins

📍 Kagoshima — Kyushu

The deliberately tower-less fortress of Japan's greatest samurai clan — 700 years of Shimazu rule, two Meiji Restoration leaders, and Saigo Takamori's last stand on the hill behind.

D Tourism 55/100
F Defense 35/100
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Nobeoka Castle

延岡城 · Nobeoka-jo

Ruins

📍 Miyazaki — Kyushu

A modest ruin with a dark legend — the 'thousand-person killing stone wall' castle of southern Miyazaki, rarely visited but genuinely historical.

F Tourism 35/100
D Defense 45/100
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Hitoyoshi Castle

人吉城 · Hitoyoshi-jo

Ruins

📍 Kumamoto — Kyushu

The castle with Japan's only overhang stone walls — 700 years of Sagara clan rule in a mountain valley, now recovering from devastating 2020 flood damage.

D Tourism 42/100
D Defense 55/100
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Nemuro Peninsula Chashi Ruins

根室半島チャシ跡群 · Nemuro-hanto Chashiato-gun

Ruins

📍 Hokkaido — Hokkaido

Japan's #1 on the famous castles list — remote Ainu earthwork fortresses on clifftops at the easternmost tip of Japan, newly UNESCO-designated.

F Tourism 20/100
F Defense 30/100
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Morioka Castle

盛岡城 · Morioka-jo

Ruins

📍 Iwate — Tohoku

Tohoku's most beautiful granite stone walls — no tower survives, but the Nanbu clan's extraordinary construction speaks for itself, especially under spring cherry blossoms.

D Tourism 48/100
D Defense 52/100
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Tagajo

多賀城 · Tagajo

Ruins

📍 Miyagi — Tohoku

Not a medieval castle but ancient Japan's northern frontier capital (724 AD) — earthwork ruins of the imperial outpost from which Japan conquered Tohoku.

F Tourism 35/100
F Defense 25/100
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Shirakawa Komine Castle

白河小峰城 · Shirakawa Komine-jo

Ruins

📍 Fukushima — Tohoku

Tohoku's most accessible castle — a careful wooden reconstruction twice-tested (1991 build, 2011 earthquake repair), five minutes' walk from the shinkansen corridor.

D Tourism 55/100
D Defense 52/100
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Bannaji (Ashikaga Clan Manor)

足利氏館(鑁阿寺) · Bannaji (Ashikaga-shi Yakata)

Ruins

📍 Tochigi — Kanto

The birthplace of the Ashikaga Shogunate — a living temple inside a perfectly preserved 12th-century warrior manor moat, where Japan's second shogunate had its origin.

D Tourism 40/100
F Defense 25/100
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Minowa Castle

箕輪城 · Minowa-jo

Ruins

📍 Gunma — Kanto

The castle that resisted Takeda Shingen and Uesugi Kenshin — a vast earthwork system in Gunma preserving the memory of the Nagano clan's remarkable defense.

F Tourism 35/100
D Defense 58/100
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Kanayama Castle

金山城 · Kanayama-jo

Ruins

📍 Gunma — Kanto

The Kanto mountain castle that shouldn't have stone walls but does — an unexpected masonry fortress with water cisterns at the summit of a Gunma mountain.

D Tourism 42/100
C Defense 65/100
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Takaoka Castle

高岡城 · Takaoka-jo

Ruins

📍 Toyama — Chubu

A castle that existed for only 6 years before demolition — but its spectacular water moats survived and are now one of Japan's most beautiful castle parks.

D Tourism 42/100
F Defense 38/100
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Nanao Castle

七尾城 · Nanao-jo

Ruins

📍 Ishikawa — Chubu

Uesugi Kenshin's two-year siege objective — a mountain castle that resisted Japan's greatest commander and fell only to disease and treachery, not military assault.

F Tourism 38/100
B Defense 72/100
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Iwamura Castle

岩村城 · Iwamura-jo

Ruins

📍 Gifu — Chubu

Japan's highest mountain castle at 717 meters — dramatic stone wall ruins, the story of a remarkable female lord, and one of the finest preserved castle towns in inland Japan.

D Tourism 40/100
A Defense 85/100
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Nagashino Castle

長篠城 · Nagashino-jo

Ruins

📍 Aichi — Chubu

Modest earthwork ruins at the site of the most historically significant battle of the Sengoku period — the castle where 500 men held out against 15,000 and changed Japanese warfare.

D Tourism 40/100
D Defense 45/100
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Matsuzaka Castle

松阪城 · Matsuzaka-jo

Ruins

📍 Mie — Kansai

Impressive Momoyama-era stone walls in a pleasant hilltop park — and the finest beef in Japan is waiting in the restaurants below.

D Tourism 42/100
D Defense 52/100
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Tsuwano Castle

津和野城 · Tsuwano-jo

Ruins

📍 Shimane — Chugoku

Mountain ruins above one of western Japan's most charming preserved castle towns — the chairlift ride and town stroll are as memorable as the ruins themselves.

D Tourism 42/100
C Defense 68/100
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Yoshida-Koriyama Castle

吉田郡山城 · Yoshida-Koriyama-jo

Ruins

📍 Hiroshima — Chugoku

The remote mountain headquarters of Mori Motonari — Japan's most brilliant Sengoku warlord — where 3,000 defenders defeated 20,000 attackers and the 'three arrows' lesson was born.

F Tourism 32/100
A Defense 80/100
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Yonago Castle

米子城 · Yonago-jo

Ruins

📍 Tottori — Chugoku

Solid stone walls on a rocky hill with an outstanding view of Mount Daisen — an easy and rewarding stop in Yonago.

D Tourism 42/100
D Defense 55/100
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Yamato-Koriyama Castle

大和郡山城 · Yamato-Koriyama-jo

Ruins

📍 Nara — Kansai

The castle where Buddhist gravestones became wall filler — and where goldfish became the local industry because samurai needed a respectable side job.

D Tourism 45/100
D Defense 48/100
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Chihaya Castle

千早城 · Chihaya-jo

Ruins

📍 Osaka — Kansai

Japan's most legendary siege defense — the mountain castle where one genius held an empire at bay, and where you still feel the terrain that made it possible.

F Tourism 30/100
A Defense 82/100
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Shibata Castle

新発田城 · Shibata-jo

Ruins

📍 Niigata — Chubu

The castle on an army base — three original Edo turrets preserved by the unlikely protector of military bureaucracy, including Japan's only three-headed shachihoko.

D Tourism 48/100
D Defense 45/100
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Takiyama Castle

滝山城 · Takiyama-jo

Ruins

📍 Tokyo — Kanto

Tokyo's forgotten mountain fortress — the Hojo clan's earthwork masterpiece held off Takeda Shingen, and its ridge-cut moats remain dramatic 450 years after abandonment.

F Tourism 35/100
C Defense 62/100
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Yamanaka Castle

山中城 · Yamanaka-jo

Ruins

📍 Shizuoka — Chubu

The castle with the waffle moats — Japan's most ingenious earthwork defense, where the Hojo clan's engineering genius met Hideyoshi's unstoppable force for half a day in 1590.

D Tourism 45/100
B Defense 78/100
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Oita Funai Castle

大分府内城 · Oita Funai-jo

Ruins

📍 Oita — Kyushu

Where Francis Xavier met Japan's first Christian daimyo — Funai Castle's four surviving turrets guard a site where medieval Japan and European Catholicism collided most dramatically.

F Tourism 38/100
F Defense 35/100
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Yonezawa Castle

米沢城 · Yonezawa-jo

Ruins

📍 Yamagata — Tohoku

A shrine stands where the Uesugi clan's great castle once rose — the ghost of one of Japan's most celebrated samurai dynasties, preserved in cherry blossoms and spiritual memory.

D Tourism 50/100
F Defense 35/100
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Murakami Castle

村上城 · Murakami-jo

Ruins

📍 Niigata — Chubu

Beautiful mountain stone walls — overgrown, mossy, and utterly authentic — above one of the best-preserved castle towns in the Echigo region.

D Tourism 40/100
C Defense 62/100
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Takada Castle

高田城 · Takada-jo

Ruins

📍 Niigata — Chubu

No tower, flat defenses, and built in four months — but those moat-reflected cherry blossoms at night are among Japan's great seasonal spectacles.

D Tourism 48/100
F Defense 35/100
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Oshi Castle

忍城 · Oshi-jo

Ruins

📍 Saitama — Kanto

The Floating Castle that refused to sink — Oshi's 1590 water siege is one of the great underdog stories in Japanese military history.

D Tourism 48/100
D Defense 52/100
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Sugiyama Castle

杉山城 · Sugiyama-jo

Ruins

📍 Saitama — Kanto

Zero visual drama, maximum scholarly significance — Sugiyama is the 'textbook castle' that only the most serious castle enthusiast will truly appreciate.

F Tourism 30/100
B Defense 72/100
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Tsuchiura Castle

土浦城 · Tsuchiura-jo

Ruins

📍 Ibaraki — Kanto

A lake-floating castle with two genuine Edo-period survivors — modest ruins, but the Lake Kasumigaura setting tells the whole defensive story.

F Tourism 35/100
F Defense 30/100
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Karasawayama Castle

唐沢山城 · Karasawayama-jo

Ruins

📍 Tochigi — Kanto

The castle that beat Uesugi Kenshin nine times — and now hosts dozens of cats among its mossy stone walls and mountain shrine.

F Tourism 38/100
C Defense 60/100
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Shinpu Castle

新府城 · Shinpu-jo

Ruins

📍 Yamanashi — Chubu

The Takeda clan's last desperate gamble — burned unfinished by its own builder as a dynasty collapsed around a mountain bluff of pink peach blossoms.

F Tourism 30/100
D Defense 55/100
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Hachioji Castle

八王子城 · Hachioji-jo

Ruins

📍 Tokyo — Kanto

Tokyo's forgotten mountain fortress — where thousands died in a single day when Hideyoshi came for the last holdouts of the Hojo clan.

F Tourism 38/100
B Defense 72/100
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Odani Castle

小谷城 · Odani-jo

Ruins

📍 Shiga — Kansai

Where Nobunaga's sister lived, loved, and lost — the mountain castle of the doomed Azai clan, with one of the great tragic stories of the Sengoku era.

F Tourism 35/100
B Defense 75/100
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Kannonji Castle

観音寺城 · Kannonji-jo

Ruins

📍 Shiga — Kansai

The largest mountain castle ever built in Japan — 200+ compounds covering an entire mountain, abandoned to the forest when Nobunaga arrived and no one had the will to fight.

F Tourism 30/100
B Defense 70/100
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Yoshida Castle

吉田城 · Yoshida-jo

Ruins

📍 Aichi — Chubu

Ieyasu's riverside checkpoint castle — the fortress that guarded the Tokaido's most important river crossing, now a pleasant park above the Toyokawa.

F Tourism 38/100
D Defense 42/100
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Takatenjin Castle

高天神城 · Takatenjin-jo

Ruins

📍 Shizuoka — Chubu

The impregnable mountain fortress that fell to hunger, not swords — the siege that ended the Takeda clan and demonstrated that the most powerful fortresses can be defeated by patience.

F Tourism 35/100
B Defense 75/100
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Fukui Castle

福井城 · Fukui-jo

Ruins

📍 Fukui — Chubu

A government inside a castle — the original Edo-period moats and stone walls of Fukui domain's capital, now surrounding a modern prefectural government office.

D Tourism 40/100
F Defense 38/100
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Tamaru Castle

田丸城 · Tamaru-jo

Ruins

📍 Mie — Kansai

Nobunaga's son rebuilt it on the road to Ise — a modest but well-preserved ruin controlling the pilgrimage route to Japan's most sacred shrine.

F Tourism 35/100
D Defense 42/100
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Sumoto Castle

洲本城 · Sumoto-jo

Ruins

📍 Hyogo — Kansai

Japan's first concrete castle keep watches over Awaji Island from a ridge of historically significant early stone walls.

D Tourism 40/100
D Defense 52/100
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Iwatsuki Castle

岩槻城 · Iwatsuki-jo

Ruins

📍 Saitama — Kanto

Ota Dokan's swamp fortress — a water-island defense on the flat Kanto Plain that held Hideyoshi's army at bay longer than most.

F Tourism 32/100
F Defense 28/100
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Numata Castle

沼田城 · Numata-jo

Ruins

📍 Gunma — Kanto

Sanada clan cliff fortress above three river gorges — one of Sengoku Japan's most dramatic natural defensive positions, destroyed by Tokugawa political fiat in 1681.

D Tourism 42/100
D Defense 55/100
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Iwabitsu Castle

岩櫃城 · Iwabitsu-jo

Ruins

📍 Gunma — Kanto

The Sanada clan's ultimate mountain refuge — one of Sengoku Japan's most dramatically positioned castles, now famous for sea-of-clouds autumn photography.

F Tourism 32/100
C Defense 68/100
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Kaneda Castle

金田城 · Kaneda-jo

Ruins

📍 Nagasaki — Kyushu

Japan's oldest major fortress — 667 AD stone walls on a remote island in the Korea Strait, built by imperial order after Japan's first recorded naval defeat.

F Tourism 30/100
B Defense 72/100
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Zakimi Castle

座喜味城 · Zakimi-jo

Ruins

📍 Okinawa — Kyushu

The finest gusuku walls in Okinawa — Gosamaru's masterwork of curved limestone and a double-arched gate, free and open around the clock.

D Tourism 48/100
C Defense 62/100
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Toba Castle

鳥羽城 · Toba-jo

Ruins

📍 Mie — Kansai

Kuki Yoshitaka's sea-castle — where Japan's greatest naval commander built his base above the iron warships that changed maritime warfare.

F Tourism 38/100
D Defense 52/100
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Naegi Castle

苗木城 · Naegi-jo

Ruins

📍 Gifu — Chubu

The castle on a boulder — Japan's most dramatic integration of natural granite and human fortification, floating above the Kiso River gorge.

D Tourism 42/100
B Defense 72/100
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Mino-Kaneyama Castle

美濃金山城 · Mino-Kaneyama-jo

Ruins

📍 Gifu — Chubu

Mori Nagayoshi's mountain stronghold and birthplace of Fukushima Masanori — well-preserved Sengoku stone walls in the Kiso Valley forest.

F Tourism 35/100
D Defense 58/100
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Uto Castle

宇土城 · Uto-jo

Ruins

📍 Kumamoto — Kyushu

Konishi Yukinaga's coastal stronghold — whose stone was stolen for Kumamoto Castle and whose Christian lord chose execution over apostasy.

F Tourism 35/100
D Defense 45/100
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Yatsushiro Castle

八代城 · Yatsushiro-jo

Ruins

📍 Kumamoto — Kyushu

The Hosokawa clan's southern Kyushu stronghold — with the best water-moat stone wall combination in the region and spectacular cherry blossoms.

F Tourism 38/100
D Defense 45/100
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Hara Castle

原城 · Hara-jo

Ruins

📍 Nagasaki — Kyushu

Where 37,000 rebels made Japan's last Christian stand in 1638 — a UNESCO World Heritage site of faith, fire, and the birth of sakoku isolation.

D Tourism 45/100
D Defense 55/100
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Hamada Castle

浜田城 · Hamada-jo

Ruins

📍 Shimane — Chugoku

The castle that was blown up to stop an army — a dramatic end in 1866, and some of San'in's most intact stone walls remain to tell the story.

F Tourism 32/100
D Defense 48/100
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Mihara Castle

三原城 · Mihara-jo

Ruins

📍 Hiroshima — Chugoku

The only castle in Japan with a bullet train running through it — look down from the platform and you are looking at 16th-century stone walls.

F Tourism 38/100
F Defense 35/100
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Niiyama Castle

新高山城 · Niiyama-jo

Ruins

📍 Hiroshima — Chugoku

The Kobayakawa clan's mountain fortress — 30+ compounds on a 280-meter peak, one of western Japan's most complex yamajiro ruins.

F Tourism 30/100
D Defense 55/100
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Torigoe Castle

鳥越城 · Torigoe-jo

Ruins

📍 Ishikawa — Chubu

The last stronghold of the Ikko-ikki — where Japan's century of Buddhist peasant rule ended in 1580 under Shibata Katsuie's brutal suppression.

F Tourism 32/100
C Defense 60/100
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Masuyama Castle

増山城 · Masuyama-jo

Ruins

📍 Toyama — Chubu

One of Ecchu's three great mountain castles — the Jinbo clan's ridge fortress that resisted Uesugi Kenshin until it could resist no longer.

F Tourism 30/100
D Defense 55/100
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Kunohe Castle

九戸城 · Kunohe-jo

Ruins

📍 Iwate — Tohoku

Where Japan's unification was completed — the last Tohoku rebellion ended here in 1591 when Hideyoshi's 60,000-man army forced the final surrender.

F Tourism 32/100
D Defense 52/100
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Wakasa Onigajo Castle

若桜鬼ヶ城 · Wakasa Onigajo

Ruins

📍 Tottori — Chugoku

The Yamana clan's 'Demon's Castle' — impressive stone walls on steep mountain slopes above a remarkably preserved Edo-period castle town.

F Tourism 30/100
D Defense 58/100
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Gassan-Toda Castle

月山富田城 · Gassan-Toda-jo

Ruins

📍 Shimane — Chugoku

Japan's most impregnable mountain fortress — the Amago clan's stronghold that Mori Motonari besieged twice (failing the first time entirely), and the birthplace of Yamanaka Shikanosuke's legendary loyalty.

F Tourism 38/100
A Defense 82/100
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Nirayama Castle

韮山城 · Nirayama-jo

Ruins

📍 Shizuoka — Chubu

Where the Later Hojo dynasty began in 1493 and ended in 1590 — the only castle in Japan that bookends an entire century of dynastic power.

F Tourism 38/100
C Defense 62/100
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Yokote Castle

横手城 · Yokote-jo

Ruins

📍 Akita — Tohoku

A modest hilltop with a concrete turret that becomes the heart of Japan's most magical snow festival every February.

D Tourism 40/100
F Defense 38/100
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Miharu Castle

三春城 · Miharu-jo

Ruins

📍 Fukushima — Tohoku

The castle hill of Japan's most famous cherry tree town — where a 1,000-year-old weeping sakura makes the entire region bloom in late April.

D Tourism 42/100
D Defense 40/100
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Ishigaki-yama Castle

石垣山城 · Ishigakiyama-jo

Ruins

📍 Kanagawa — Kanto

Where Hideyoshi built a complete fortress in secret behind a mountain, then revealed it overnight to psychologically break the last castle that had never been conquered.

D Tourism 42/100
D Defense 52/100
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Kokokuji Castle

興国寺城 · Kokokuji-jo

Ruins

📍 Shizuoka — Chubu

The obscure first castle of Hojo Soun — where one of Japan's most dramatic feudal dynasties took its very first step in 1487.

F Tourism 30/100
F Defense 38/100
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Omura Castle

大村城 · Omura-jo

Ruins

📍 Nagasaki — Kyushu

The castle of Japan's first Christian daimyo — the man who gave a tiny fishing village called Nagasaki to the Portuguese and changed the country's history.

F Tourism 38/100
D Defense 42/100
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Sadowara Castle

佐土原城 · Sadowara-jo

Ruins

📍 Miyazaki — Kyushu

A Shimazu branch castle guarding the northeastern frontier of the most formidable samurai clan in Kyushu, with views to the Pacific from the mountain summit.

F Tourism 32/100
D Defense 48/100
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Sannohe Castle

三戸城 · Sannohe-jo

Ruins

📍 Aomori — Tohoku

The ancestral headquarters of the Nanbu clan — Tohoku's most powerful northern daimyo — before they moved to Morioka.

F Tourism 30/100
F Defense 35/100
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Iimori Castle

飯盛城 · Iimori-jo

Ruins

📍 Osaka — Kansai

The forgotten mountain fortress from which Miyoshi Nagayoshi ruled Japan's political heartland a decade before Oda Nobunaga.

F Tourism 35/100
D Defense 55/100
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Akutagawasan Castle

芥川山城 · Akutagawasan-jo

Ruins

📍 Osaka — Kansai

The mountain that controlled the Osaka-Kyoto corridor — Miyoshi Nagayoshi's northern stronghold and Oda Nobunaga's first base in the Kinai.

F Tourism 30/100
D Defense 58/100
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Hizen-Nagoya Castle

肥前名護屋城 · Hizen-Nagoya-jo

Ruins

📍 Saga — Kyushu

The vanished capital of Hideyoshi's Korean invasion — briefly the second-largest castle in Japan, then deliberately demolished, now one of the most historically haunting ruins in Kyushu.

D Tourism 50/100
C Defense 62/100
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Izushi Castle

出石城 · Izushi-jo

Ruins

📍 Hyogo — Kansai

A charming castle town famous for its sara soba, cherry-blossom moat, and Meiji clock tower — northern Hyogo's most enjoyable historical day trip.

D Tourism 48/100
D Defense 42/100
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Matsukura Castle

松倉城 · Matsukura-jo

Ruins

📍 Toyama — Chubu

An alpine mountain fortress with stunning views over the Toyama Plain and Japan Alps — one of Hokuriku's most scenically spectacular ruins.

F Tourism 30/100
D Defense 58/100
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Saiki Castle

佐伯城 · Saiki-jo

Ruins

📍 Oita — Kyushu

A well-preserved mountain castle above the Saiki Bay rias coast, with excellent stone walls and panoramic views over one of southern Oita's most scenic inlets.

F Tourism 32/100
D Defense 52/100
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Suwarahara Castle

諏訪原城 · Suwarahara-jo

Ruins

📍 Shizuoka — Chubu

The finest surviving example of Takeda military earthwork engineering — famous for the unique crescent-shaped maruyama moats found almost nowhere else in Japan.

F Tourism 32/100
D Defense 55/100
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Kasama Castle

笠間城 · Kasama-jo

Ruins

📍 Ibaraki — Kanto

A medieval mountain castle above one of Japan's three great Inari shrines, with boulder-integrated stone walls and a famous spring azalea garden.

F Tourism 35/100
D Defense 58/100
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Zeze Castle

膳所城 · Zeze-jo

Ruins

📍 Shiga — Kansai

Japan's original lake castle — built by Tokugawa Ieyasu on a Lake Biwa promontory, using Japan's largest lake as a three-sided natural moat.

F Tourism 35/100
D Defense 42/100
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Shiwa Castle

志波城 · Shiwa-jo

Ruins

📍 Iwate — Tohoku

Japan's northernmost ancient imperial frontier fort — built in 803 AD to project Yamato power into the Emishi heartland of what is now Iwate.

F Tourism 28/100
F Defense 22/100
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Akita Castle

秋田城 · Akita-jo

Ruins

📍 Akita — Tohoku

Japan's oldest castle by date — an 8th-century Nara imperial frontier garrison on the Japan Sea coast, 700 years older than any samurai-era castle.

F Tourism 30/100
F Defense 25/100
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Nagurumi Castle

名胡桃城 · Nagurumi-jo

Ruins

📍 Gunma — Kanto

The tiny castle whose seizure triggered Hideyoshi's Odawara campaign — Japan's unification started here on a narrow Gunma ridgeline in 1589.

F Tourism 30/100
D Defense 42/100
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Kanagasaki Castle

金ヶ崎城 · Kanagasaki-jo

Ruins

📍 Fukui — Chubu

The hilltop where Nobunaga made his most desperate retreat in 1570 — and where Hideyoshi first proved himself as a battlefield commander.

F Tourism 35/100
D Defense 48/100
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Kano Castle

加納城 · Kano-jo

Ruins

📍 Gifu — Chubu

The castle Tokugawa Ieyasu built to assert dominance over Nobunaga's former heartland — early Edo period political architecture in Gifu's southern suburbs.

F Tourism 32/100
F Defense 35/100
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Shingu Castle

新宮城 · Shingu-jo

Ruins

📍 Wakayama — Kansai

Stone walls above the sacred Kumano River mouth — early Edo period masonry in excellent condition at the gateway to Japan's ancient pilgrimage country.

F Tourism 38/100
D Defense 48/100
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Uda-Matsuyama Castle

宇陀松山城 · Uda-Matsuyama-jo

Ruins

📍 Nara — Kansai

The finest preserved castle town in the Kinki region — Uda-Matsuyama's Edo period merchant district below the mountain ruins is a time capsule of Japanese urban history.

F Tourism 35/100
D Defense 48/100
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Arikoyama Castle

有子山城 · Arikoyama-jo

Ruins

📍 Hyogo — Kansai

High-altitude stone walls above 'Tajima's Little Kyoto' — the mountain fortress looming over one of Japan's most perfectly preserved castle towns.

F Tourism 35/100
C Defense 62/100
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Tanabe Castle

田辺城 · Tanabe-jo

Ruins

📍 Kyoto — Kansai

Where a besieging army of 15,000 stood down because the Emperor wanted to save the defender's classical literary knowledge — Japan's most culturally remarkable castle siege.

F Tourism 38/100
D Defense 40/100
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Hiketa Castle

引田城 · Hiketa-jo

Ruins

📍 Kagawa — Shikoku

Coastal promontory castle above the Seto Inland Sea — natural rock integrated into stone walls at Shikoku's eastern maritime gateway.

F Tourism 35/100
D Defense 45/100
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Kawanoe Castle

河後森城 · Kawanoe-jo

Ruins

📍 Ehime — Shikoku

Shikoku's finest earthwork mountain castle — twelve compounds and extensive horikiri networks in exceptional preservation in western Ehime's mountains.

F Tourism 30/100
D Defense 52/100
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Oko Castle

岡豊城 · Oko-jo

Ruins

📍 Kochi — Shikoku

Where Chosokabe Motochika began his conquest of all Shikoku — one of the Sengoku period's greatest stories starts at this modest mountain castle above Kochi.

F Tourism 38/100
D Defense 52/100
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Tomioka Castle

富岡城 · Tomioka-jo

Ruins

📍 Kumamoto — Kyushu

Where Japan's last Christian rebellion besieged the island fortress — Tomioka Castle at the heart of the Shimabara Rebellion and Japan's 'Hidden Christian' heritage.

F Tourism 38/100
D Defense 45/100
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Suemori Castle

末森城 · Suemori-jo

Ruins

📍 Ishikawa — Chubu

Where Maeda Toshiie's 3,000 men routed 8,000 besiegers in a dramatic night relief — the battle that secured Maeda dominance in Hokuriku Sengoku history.

F Tourism 30/100
D Defense 52/100
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Yanagawa Castle

柳川城 · Yanagawa-jo

Ruins

📍 Fukuoka — Kyushu

Where the moats became the tourist attraction — Yanagawa's 470 km of castle canals now carry donkobune sightseeing boats through the same water-fortress that once protected the Tachibana clan.

D Tourism 52/100
D Defense 45/100
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Yuzuki Castle

湯築城 · Yuzuki-jo

Ruins

📍 Ehime — Shikoku

The castle that sits invisible beside Japan's most famous hot spring — Yuzuki's 250-year history is walked past by thousands of Dogo Onsen visitors who never know it exists.

F Tourism 42/100
F Defense 35/100
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Tamba-Kameyama Castle

亀山城(丹波) · Tamba-Kameyama-jo

Ruins

📍 Kyoto — Kansai

Where Akechi Mitsuhide set out to assassinate Nobunaga — and where a bureaucratic error later demolished the wrong castle, erasing the main tower forever.

F Tourism 38/100
D Defense 42/100
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Miki Castle

三木城 · Miki-jo

Ruins

📍 Hyogo — Kansai

Where Hideyoshi invented the starvation siege — 22 months of blockade ending in Bessho Nagaharu's seppuku, one of Japanese history's most celebrated acts of sacrifice.

F Tourism 35/100
D Defense 52/100
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Sakura Castle

佐倉城 · Sakura-jo

Ruins

📍 Chiba — Kanto

The castle that hosts Japan's largest history museum — walk ancient earthwork moats, then explore 10,000 years of Japanese history without leaving the castle grounds.

D Tourism 48/100
D Defense 48/100
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Setagaya Castle

世田谷城 · Setagaya-jo

Ruins

📍 Tokyo — Kanto

A 14th-century medieval castle ruin hidden in a central Tokyo residential neighborhood — five minutes from a tram stop, a world away from modern urban reality.

F Tourism 30/100
F Defense 25/100
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Obama Castle

小浜城 · Obama-jo

Ruins

📍 Fukui — Chubu

The sea castle that controlled Kyoto's fish supply — perched on a Wakasa Bay promontory with rivers and sea as moats, and stone walls that never got their tower.

F Tourism 35/100
F Defense 38/100
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Tsuruoka Castle (Shonai Castle)

鶴ヶ岡城(庄内城) · Tsurugaoka-jo

Ruins

📍 Yamagata — Tohoku

10,000 cherry trees over Boshin War stone walls — Tohoku's most atmospheric spring castle, seat of the Shonai samurai who earned leniency from the Meiji forces who defeated them.

F Tourism 40/100
F Defense 35/100
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Onogajo (Demon's Castle)

鬼ノ城 · Onogajo

Ruins

📍 Okayama — Chugoku

Japan's most mysterious fortress — 1,400-year-old stone walls on a mountain summit, no known builder, and a legendary connection to the Momotaro demon-slaying story.

F Tourism 40/100
C Defense 65/100
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Urasoe Castle (Urasoe Youdore)

浦添城 · Urasoe-jo

Ruins

📍 Okinawa — Kyushu

The royal seat before Shuri — Ryukyu's original capital, where kings ruled for 200 years and carved their tombs into the limestone cliff below their castle.

F Tourism 35/100
D Defense 52/100
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Kurume Castle

久留米城 · Kurume-jo

Ruins

📍 Fukuoka — Kyushu

Where Kyushu's largest river was the western moat — the Arima clan's domain seat is now a famous shrine, hiding good stone walls and 270 years of Chikugo history.

F Tourism 35/100
D Defense 40/100
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Tonokori Castle (Miyakonojo Castle)

都之城 · Tonokori-jo

Ruins

📍 Miyazaki — Kyushu

Where the Ito clan's Sengoku domain collapsed in 1578 — the castle at the center of southern Kyushu's most dramatic feudal reversal, now a quiet park above the Kirishima volcanoes.

F Tourism 30/100
D Defense 45/100
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A note on "free entry"

Free entry means the main grounds or primary visiting area is accessible at no charge. Some free-entry castles have optional paid sections — for example, a ticketed museum inside the castle grounds or a fee to enter a reconstructed tower. Always check the individual castle page for the most current admission details, as fees can change with seasonal events or renovations.