
Chiran Peace Museum for Kamikaze Pilots
The most humanizing war museum in Japan. Chiran was a major kamikaze base — 1,036 young pilots departed from here for their final missions in 1945. The museum preserves their handwritten farewell letters (many expressing love for family, not ideology), personal photographs, and the Zero fighters they flew. Profoundly moving regardless of background.
2 hours
¥500 adults
9:00–17:00 (last entry 16:30); open year-round
Year-round
Bus from Kagoshima-Chuo Station to Chiran (about 1 hr 20 min), then 3–5 min walk to museum
Location
Why Visit
- 1
Allow 2+ hours — rushing through diminishes the weight of what you are witnessing
- 2
The farewell letters — many written the night before departure — reveal 20-year-olds thinking about their mothers and younger siblings
- 3
A Zero fighter and a restored Hayabusa are preserved outdoors and can be viewed up close
Local Tips
One of Japan's most sobering museums — the farewell letters from teenage pilots are deeply affecting. Allow 90 minutes minimum. Combine with Chiran Samurai District (15 min walk) to understand the town's full history from feudal era through WWII.
Add to your AI itinerary
Let AI build a multi-day trip around this spot.
Advertisement
More in Kagoshima

Amami Oshima
A subtropical island midway between Kyushu and Okinawa with UNESCO World Heritage rainforest, mangrove kayaking, and some of the clearest sea in Japan. Amami has its own distinct culture — different music, food, and weaving tradition (Oshima Tsumugi silk) — and far fewer foreign visitors than Okinawa.

Chiran Samurai Residence District
Seven perfectly preserved samurai residences with stone-walled gardens in the "Little Kyoto of Satsuma." Each garden is a distinct masterwork of Japanese landscape design — rock arrangements, clipped hedges, and borrowed scenery using Chiran's forested mountains. The moss-covered stone walls along the approach lane are among the most photogenic in all of Japan.

Ibusuki Sand Baths
The world's only natural geothermal sand bath. Attendants bury you in volcanic black sand heated by underground hot springs to 50°C as the ocean laps a few metres away.