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Nikko Tosho-gu
HistorySpiritual
Tochigi, Kanto

Nikko Tosho-gu

Japan's most ornate shrine — built by the third Tokugawa shogun in 1634 to enshrine the deified Ieyasu. Every surface is covered in lacquer, gold leaf, and carved animals in dazzling profusion — the antithesis of Japanese minimalism. A UNESCO World Heritage site with 103 buildings in a cedar forest, including the famous sleeping cat (Nemuri-neko) carving.

Duration

2–3 hours

Admission

¥1,600 (adult), ¥550 (child)

Hours

9:00–17:00 (Apr–Oct); 9:00–16:00 (Nov–Mar); last entry 30 min before closing

Best Season

Year-round (autumn foliage October–November exceptional)

Access

2 hours from Asakusa by Tobu Nikko Line Limited Express

Location

Why Visit

  • 1

    Japan's most extravagant shrine — every surface carved and gilded by 15,000 craftsmen over 2 years

  • 2

    The Nemuri-neko (sleeping cat) carving above the gate is Japan's most famous woodcarving

  • 3

    103 buildings in a 400-year-old cedar forest — a UNESCO World Heritage site since 1999

Local Tips

Tosho-gu is the most ornate shrine in Japan — every surface is carved, gilded, or lacquered. The three wise monkeys carving and the sleeping cat (Nemuri-neko) are the most famous details. The 207-step cedar avenue staircase to Okusha (Ieyasu's mausoleum) beyond the main complex is the most atmospheric section. Buy a combined ticket covering all areas.

UNESCOtokugawagold leafornate shrine

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