
Fushimi Sake District
Southern Kyoto's Fushimi has brewed sake for over 400 years, fed by the exceptionally soft underground water from the Momoyama Hills. While tourists crowd Fushimi Inari's gates to the north, the old sake breweries along the willow-lined Fushimi canal remain remarkably peaceful and locals still visit sakagura for morning sake.
2–3 hours
Free (museum ¥600)
Area always accessible; breweries: typically 9:30–16:30 (varies); Gekkeikan Okura Sake Museum: 9:30–16:30 (last entry 16:00), closed Obon and year-end / New Year.
March–May, September–November
3 min walk from Chushojima Station (Keihan Main Line)
Location
Why Visit
- 1
Row boat tours through the willow-lined canals past 400-year-old sake warehouse walls
- 2
Gekkeikan Okura Sake Museum offers ¥600 tasting flights of premium nihonshu in Edo-era cellars
- 3
Ten minutes from tourist-choked Fushimi Inari yet almost entirely undiscovered
Local Tips
Fushimi's underground water (fushimizu) is what makes the sake famous and is still drawn from wells throughout the district. The Gekkeikan Okura Sake Museum is the most visitor-friendly brewery for English speakers. Fushimi Inari Shrine is 10 minutes away by Kintetsu line — combine both in one afternoon.
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