
Kamakura — Great Buddha & Hase-dera
Japan's second-largest bronze Buddha (13.35m) has sat in the open air since its covering hall collapsed in a 1498 tsunami — and the sea salt and centuries have given it extraordinary patina. Nearby Hase-dera temple has 10,000 hydrangeas on the hillside and a sea-view cave of Kannon statues that defines Kamakura.
Half day
¥200 (Great Buddha), Hase-dera ¥400
Great Buddha: 8:00–17:30 (Apr–Sep), 8:00–17:00 (Oct–Mar); Hase-dera: 8:00–17:00, close 17:30 (Apr–Jun), 8:00–16:30, close 17:00 (Jul–Mar)
June (hydrangeas), March–April (cherry), Year-round
Hase Station on Enoden Line (about 5 min from Kamakura Station)
Location
Why Visit
- 1
The Great Buddha has sat outdoors since 1498 when the tsunami washed away his hall — still serene
- 2
Hase-dera's 10,000 hydrangeas bloom June–July along the hillside path overlooking the Pacific
- 3
You can enter the Buddha's hollow body for ¥50 — see the rivets and ventilation windows inside
Local Tips
The Great Buddha interior (¥20 extra) is surprisingly spacious — worth entering. Hase-dera's hillside garden and the view of Kamakura bay from the garden path are underrated. Avoid summer weekends when crowds are extreme. The beach at Yuigahama (10 min walk from Hase Station) is a good reward after the temples.
Add to your AI itinerary
Let AI build a multi-day trip around this spot.
Advertisement
More in Kanagawa

Enoshima Island
A tidal island connected to the mainland by a 600-metre bridge, sacred to Benzaiten (the goddess of everything that flows — music, water, time). The island rises 60 metres with a pagoda, sea caves, and a lighthouse park offering Mt Fuji views on clear days. The approach street (Benzaiten Nakamise) is lined with shirasu (whitebait) restaurants.

Hakone Onsen
Japan's most popular weekend escape from Tokyo — 17 distinct hot spring areas around Lake Ashi and Mt Hakone with 100+ ryokan ranging from budget minshuku to legendary kaiseki establishments. The Hakone Free Pass covers the romance car train, ropeway, pirate ship on the lake, and open-air museum — all with Mt Fuji visible on clear days.

Hakone Open Air Museum
Japan's first open-air art museum — 120 sculptures by Moore, Rodin, Picasso, and Miro displayed across 7 hectares of mountain landscape, with Mt Hakone visible behind. The Picasso Pavilion houses the world's largest Picasso collection outside Spain. An outdoor foot spa of volcanic hot spring water flows through the centre of the grounds.