
Oga Peninsula & Namahage
A rugged peninsula jutting into the Sea of Japan — home to the fearsome Namahage demon tradition listed as UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage. On New Year's Eve, costumed demons visit homes to scare lazy children into virtue.
Half day
Museum (Namahagekan) ¥660
Peninsula: always accessible; Namahagekan Museum: 8:30–17:00; Shinzan Shrine: open during daylight.
Year-round; December 31 (traditional household rite); February (Namahage Sedo Matsuri festival)
70-min bus from Akita Station
Location
Why Visit
- 1
The Namahage Museum shows 150 regional variations of the demon mask — each village had its own design
- 2
Oga Shinzan Folklore Museum stages a live Namahage visit drama year-round for visitors
- 3
The Oga coastline has dramatic sea cliff views including the mushroom-shaped Kanpuzan rock
- 4
Fresh seafood from the Sea of Japan — hatahata (sailfin sandfish) is Akita's signature winter ingredient
Local Tips
The Namahage (demon-ogre) New Year tradition — where men in terrifying masks visit homes to discipline lazy children — is one of Japan's most dramatic folk traditions. The museum has excellent costumes and demonstrations. The actual Namahage Sedo Festival at Shinzan Shrine (second Friday–Saturday of February) is one of Japan's most intense ritual events. The Oga Peninsula coastline is dramatic year-round.
Add to your AI itinerary
Let AI build a multi-day trip around this spot.
Advertisement
More in Akita

Akita Kanto Festival
The Akita Kanto Festival, held every August, is one of the great summer festivals of Tohoku and a designated Important Intangible Folk Cultural Property of Japan. Performers balance towering bamboo poles hung with dozens of glowing paper lanterns — some poles reaching 12 metres and weighing 50 kilograms — on their foreheads, shoulders, lower backs, and even hips. The sight of thousands of lanterns swaying against the night sky is genuinely breathtaking. Each evening, the main boulevard fills with performers and spectators, and the collective skill on display has been refined over 270 years.

Dakigaeri Gorge
"Hold me and turn around" gorge — a narrow granite canyon so tight that hikers must press against the rockface to pass. The emerald river reflects maple, beech and Japanese cedar creating tunnels of colour in autumn.

Inaniwa Udon — Silken Noodles of Akita
Inaniwa udon, produced in the small village of Inaniwa in southern Akita, is one of Japan's three great udon styles and has been made by hand using the same technique for over 350 years. Unlike the thick, chewy udon of Kagawa, Inaniwa noodles are thin, flat, and silky smooth, with a delicate bite that feels almost refined. The noodles are hand-stretched and dried over several days without machines. Eating them in their home region — hot in a light dashi broth or chilled in summer — is a markedly different experience from packaged versions sold elsewhere in Japan.