
Ise Grand Shrine (Naiku)
Japan's most sacred Shinto site — the inner shrine (Naiku) enshrines Amaterasu, the sun goddess and ancestor of the imperial family. The shrine buildings are rebuilt from scratch every 20 years using ancient carpentry techniques (the 2013 ceremony was the 62nd rebuilding). No photographs are allowed inside the inner compound.
1.5–2 hours
Free
Inner Shrine (Naiku): 5:00–18:00 (closes 17:00 Oct–Dec, Mar); Outer Shrine (Geku): opens 30 min before sunrise
Year-round
Bus from Iseshi Station (Kintetsu/JR) to Naiku, approx. 20–30 min
Location
Why Visit
- 1
Japan's holiest site — rebuilt completely every 20 years since 690 CE, preserving ancient carpentry unchanged
- 2
The Uji Bridge approach, rebuilt with the shrine, uses massive hinoki cypress logs
- 3
Oharai-machi and Okage Yokocho beside the shrine have 300-year-old Edo townscape and food stalls
Local Tips
Japan's most sacred site — no photography inside the inner compound. Visit Geku first (the outer shrine), then walk or take the bus to Naiku. The approach through Uji Bridge and the forested path is the experience — the inner shrine itself is modest. Arrive early; the gravel paths and ancient cedar forest are magical before crowds arrive.
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