
Iya Valley
Japan's deepest gorge — a remote mountain valley where the Iya River has cut 200m through limestone. Samurai from the defeated Heike clan fled here in 1185 and rebuilt a civilization in the cliffs.
Location
Location available to Pro members
Upgrade to ProPro Spot
Upgrade to Pro to access local tips, secret timing, and insider highlights for this spot.
Upgrade to Pro — $4.99/moLocal Tips
The vine suspension bridges (kazurabashi) bounce noticeably as you cross — hold the handrails. The valley is so steep and narrow that sunlight only reaches the river for a few hours each day. Combine the vine bridge with the Ochiai Village viewpoint (one of Japan's most dramatic traditional settlements on a near-vertical slope) and Oboke Gorge boat tour for a full day.
Add to your AI itinerary
Let AI build a multi-day trip around this spot.
Advertisement
More in Tokushima

Awa Jurobe Yashiki
This former residence and puppet-theater complex is one of Tokushima's flagship places to experience Awa ningyo joruri, the prefecture's signature traditional performing art. Daily performances and strong cultural recognition make it a long-established sightseeing stop.

Awa Odori Hall
Year-round performances of Awa Odori — Japan's most energetic traditional dance festival. Originally improvised by drunken celebrants 400 years ago, it evolved into a form so precise that practitioners train for decades.

Kazurabashi Vine Bridge
A 45m suspension bridge made entirely of wild vine stems (shirakuchi kazura), rebuilt every three years. Originally built by Heike clan refugees to enable cutting if pursued — you feel the vine gaps underfoot.