Castle Hopping: Inuyama Castle

見上げる犬山城の天守 Castle Hopping
見上げる犬山城の天守

A castle keep perched on a hill above the Kiso River, with a presence you can feel from far away. This — Inuyama Castle — is in which my whole castle-hopping journey began. And, as always, today was the best.

Inuyama Castle seen across the Kiso River
Inuyama Castle seen across the Kiso River

My Castle Debut: A Few Things Just Lined Up

It all started with some business in Nagoya. It wasn’t going to take long, so I figured — if I’m going all the way to Nagoya, why not sightsee somewhere on the way home?
While I was vaguely mulling this over, I happened to be watching NHK’s taiga drama (a year-long historical series) “Toyotomi Brothers!”, which I look forward to every weekend. The closing segment introduces places connected to the Toyotomi brothers — and there it was, Inuyama Castle. “That’s the one!” I thought, instantly.

Since I was going anyway, I started reading up on it — the types of stone walls, the structure of the keep, the castle layout (nawabari)… the more I learned, the more fascinating it got. And above all, it just looks incredibly cool. Before I knew it, I’d decided “Castles are way too interesting!” and made my castle debut. ✌️

So, What Kind of Castle Is Inuyama?

Inuyama Castle stands on a small hill by the Kiso River. Its keep (tenshu) is a boro-style tower — picture a sturdy building with a little watchtower perched on top — and it’s said to be the oldest of its kind still standing. It’s also one of Japan’s five “National Treasure” castles (kokuho).

Here’s the really interesting part: until 2004, it was the only privately owned castle in Japan. The Naruse family, lords here since the Edo period, looked after it all that time. What must it be like to own a castle…?

The nearest stations are Inuyama-yuen or Inuyama. Early March was a little chilly, but it was beautifully sunny — just walking around felt great. And Inuyama Castle right there in view the whole time… almost too luxurious.

Looking Up at the Keep, and That Scary Balcony

Since it sits on a small hill, you climb gently — with the odd steep stretch — until the ticket office comes into view.
Pass through the gate and you’re suddenly in the honmaru (the central compound), in which the keep appears — boom! For such a compact honmaru, there’s so much to see that I could barely move forward (laugh).

Looking up at the keep of Inuyama Castle
Looking up at the keep of Inuyama Castle

Anyway, I went inside and climbed the stairs. The top floor is a calm space lined with red carpet — though the floor up there is really small. Outside, there’s a kaien (an open balcony that wraps all the way around the top), and the railing is low. On top of that, the wind was strong that day, and I found myself wanting to press my back against the wall. The view is amazing, but my feet kept inching backward (laugh). Pretty scary, honestly.

Warning: You’ll Buy Too Much Castle Merch

My best find this time was the Famous Castles bookmark (300 yen), bought at the ticket office. It lists famous castles all over Japan, and just completing it would make a worthy goal. There’s a stamp page at the back, too, and having it makes me go, “Okay, in which to next?”

The Famous Castles bookmark (official guidebook)
The Famous Castles bookmark (official guidebook)

By the way, I don’t stamp the bookmark directly. I stamp a separate sheet of paper and only paste in the ones that come out clean. Because — I really don’t want to mess it up (laugh).

Japan-100-Famous-Castles stamp on separate paper
Japan-100-Famous-Castles stamp on separate paper

I also completed the full set of 10 castle cards. At 100 yen each, you get to enjoy Inuyama Castle through the four seasons, and it doubles as a donation toward preserving the castle. How generous… so naturally, all ten. ✌️ I picked up the gojoin (a commemorative castle seal on washi paper) too — yay!

And these are all sold in different places, so do your homework before you go — or you’ll regret it…!

Famous Castles bookmark → ticket office
Castle cards & Japan-100-Famous-Castles stamp → management office (2nd floor of the Honmaru gate)
Gojoin → Inuyama Castle-mae Tourist Information Office (outside the entry gate — no ticket needed to get there!)

Castle merch really is scattered all over.

The Castle Town, and the View from Inuyama Bridge

After soaking up the castle, I headed down to the castle town (jokamachi). I peeked into the history museum and saw the diorama, too — very satisfying.
Everyone in town was enjoying street food and looked like they were having a blast ⭐️ But I was short on time and basically breezed through, so the street food is homework for next time.

A street in the castle town
A street in the castle town

Walking through the town with the keep behind me, the nearest station becomes Inuyama. But having come all this way, it felt like a waste not to see the castle across the Kiso River — so I walked back to Inuyama Bridge (one minute from Inuyama-yuen Station; I really should have come this way first, laugh).

The keep seen from the road to Inuyama Bridge
The keep seen from the road to Inuyama Bridge

On the bridge, the wind was fierce again — scarier than the keep!

The pillar of Inuyama Bridge
The pillar of Inuyama Bridge

And the view from the bridge: the Kiso River sparkling, and through that fresh breeze (more like a gust strong enough to blow you away), the keep standing tall and proud… So glad I went back!

Wrapping Up

And that’s how my castle hopping began, with Inuyama Castle. The more I learn, the more fascinating it is; the more I look, the cooler it gets. I hope to make my way through the 12 surviving original keeps (genson juni tenshu), little by little. For now — obviously — Inuyama is number one! Maybe I’ll start my own little castle ranking.

🗺️ See the route I walked → Inuyama Castle Route Map

Inuyama Castle (National Treasure) Basic Information
Address65-2 Inuyama-Kitakoken, Inuyama City, Aichi
AdmissionAdults 1,000 yen / Elementary & junior high students 200 yen
Hours9:00-17:00 (last entry 16:30)
ClosedDecember 29-31
AccessAbout a 20-minute walk from Meitetsu Inuyama Station
HighlightsThe National Treasure keep, balcony views over the Kiso River, the honmaru, and the castle town
Castle sealsGojoin is sold at the Castle-mae Tourist Information Office; the 100 Famous Castles stamp and castle cards are at the management office on the 2nd floor of the Honmaru gate.

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