Land for Sale in Aichi
509 land for sale available · ¥39,300 – ¥750,000,000 · 47 new this month
Aichi is Japan's manufacturing heart, and it wears this identity without apology. Toyota City, in the prefecture's interior, is the headquarters of the automotive group that is by most measures the world's largest car company; the Toyota Commemorative Museum of Industry and Technology in Nagoya traces the full arc from Sakichi Toyoda's automatic loom to the current hybrid drivetrain, and is one of the finest industrial museums in the world. But Aichi is not only cars. Nagoya, the prefectural capital and Japan's fourth-largest city, has a commercial and cultural identity that is its own — neither Tokyo's sophistication nor Osaka's informality, but a Nagoya pragmatism that is blunt, effective, and surprisingly creative.
Getting There
Nagoya is exceptionally well-connected. The Tokaido Shinkansen places it 100 minutes from Tokyo and 50 minutes from Osaka/Kyoto — it sits precisely at the centre of Japan's main population corridor. Nagoya's Chubu Centrair International Airport, on an artificial island in Ise Bay, has direct international routes to multiple Asian, European, and North American cities. The city's subway system covers the urban area comprehensively. The planned Chuo Maglev Shinkansen will eventually halve the journey to Tokyo to around 40 minutes.
Daily Life
Nagoya's food culture is proudly regional and stubbornly local: miso katsu (pork cutlet with red miso sauce), kishimen (flat broad noodles), hitsumabushi (eel over rice, served in a sequence of preparations from plain to broth-doused), ogura toast (sweet red bean paste on buttered toast, a serious morning ritual), and tebasaki chicken wings are dishes that Nagoya has made nationally famous. The morning coffee culture here — where cafes serve eggs and toast with your coffee order as an included set — is one of the city's most genuinely pleasant everyday institutions.
Festivals & Culture
Nagoya Castle — currently undergoing restoration of its original wooden main tower, the most ambitious historical reconstruction project in postwar Japan — anchors the city's historical identity. The Atsuta Shrine, one of Japan's most important (it houses the sacred sword, one of the three Imperial treasures), draws millions of visitors annually. Okazaki, birthplace of Tokugawa Ieyasu (the shogun who unified Japan in 1600), and the ceramic towns of the Tokoname and Seto areas add layers of history and craft that reward extended exploration.
Buying Property Here
For property buyers, Nagoya offers a major-city lifestyle at distinctly non-Tokyo prices. Houses in established Nagoya residential wards run ¥10M–¥25M. Suburban towns around the city — Toyota, Okazaki, Kasugai — offer ¥6M–¥15M. The rural areas north and east of the city, toward the Kiso Valley, have akiya from ¥1M–¥6M in traditional mountain-town settings. Aichi's manufacturing economy creates stable employment demand and a rental market that rewards investment.
Toyota, Aichi Prefecture
Seven Eleven - 6 min walk / 1 min drive
Toyota, Aichi Prefecture
Family Mart - 59 min walk / 12 min drive
Kariya, Aichi Prefecture
Daily Yamazaki - 6 min walk / 1 min drive
Toyota, Aichi Prefecture
Family Mart - 59 min walk / 12 min drive
Taketoyo, Aichi Prefecture
Lawson - 5 min walk / 1 min drive
Inuyama, Aichi Prefecture
Circle K - 9 min walk / 2 min drive
Nisshin, Aichi Prefecture
Mini Stop - 10 min walk / 2 min drive
Toyohashi, Aichi Prefecture
Circle K - 4 min walk / 1 min drive
Takahama, Aichi Prefecture
Seven Eleven - 8 min walk / 2 min drive
Ichinomiya, Aichi Prefecture
Circle K - 6 min walk / 1 min drive
Togo, Aichi Prefecture
Seven Eleven - 11 min walk / 2 min drive