Aomori, Aomori Prefecture
Sunkus - 3 min walk
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168 rental properties available · ¥4,000 – ¥6,200,000 · 10 new this month
Aomori is Japan's northernmost mainland prefecture, and it has a character defined by intensity — intense cold, intense festivals, and landscapes of extraordinary drama. It is the home of the Nebuta Matsuri, one of Japan's three great summer festivals: for a week each August, giant illuminated paper floats depicting warriors and mythological figures parade through the city while thousands of dancers in costume surge through the streets to taiko drums and flute. The energy is unlike any other Japanese festival. It is also home to the Hirosaki Sakura Festival — 2,600 cherry trees around a feudal castle create one of Japan's most photographed hanami scenes in late April, when pink blossoms and white castle walls reflect in the moat.
The Tohoku Shinkansen reaches Shin-Aomori in about 3 hours 15 minutes from Tokyo. Aomori Airport connects to Tokyo and Sapporo. By sea, the Tsugaru Strait Ferry links Aomori to Hokkaido in about 3 hours 40 minutes; the Seikan Tunnel under the strait carries rail traffic. Within the prefecture, a car opens up the Tsugaru Peninsula, the Shimokita Peninsula (the most remote corner of Honshu), and the spectacular Oirase Gorge near Towada-ko lake.
Aomori is Japan's snowiest city by volume — up to 8 meters accumulates through winter, the most of any comparably sized city on earth. The winters are long and serious. But the summers are glorious: warm, green, and productive. Aomori produces over half of Japan's apple harvest; the orchards fill with blossom in May and the apple roadside stalls appear in October. The Shirakami-Sanchi forest on the western border — a UNESCO World Heritage site — is one of the last intact beech forests in the world. The Sea of Japan and Pacific coasts provide superb fresh fish; Aomori's morning tuna auction in Oma is internationally known.
The local character — known in the dialect as "joppari" (stubborn, independent) — is direct and loyal. Once you have been accepted into a community, the warmth is genuine. Local sake from the Tsugaru region, the Gonohe area's garlic, and Aomori's apple cider culture are all part of a food identity the prefecture is rightly proud of. The Tsugaru shamisen (a particularly aggressive regional style of three-string lute playing) is Aomori's musical signature.
For buyers, Aomori is among the most affordable prefectures in Japan. Houses in the cities of Aomori, Hirosaki, and Hachinohe run ¥3M–¥10M. Rural akiya in the apple country of the Tsugaru plain, or in the quieter towns of the Shimokita Peninsula, go for ¥500,000–¥3M. The investment in good insulation and a modern heating system is essential and should be budgeted alongside the purchase price, but the result — a traditional home in a landscape of genuine drama, at a price that startles most Western buyers — is hard to argue with.
Sunkus - 3 min walk
Lawson - 4 min walk / 1 min drive
Family Mart - 2 min walk
Circle K - 4 min walk / 1 min drive
Sunkus - 8 min walk / 2 min drive
Sunkus - 8 min walk / 2 min drive
Lawson - 4 min walk / 1 min drive
Sunkus - 3 min walk
Family Mart - 2 min walk
Lawson - 3 min walk
Circle K - 6 min walk / 1 min drive
Circle K - 7 min walk / 1 min drive
Family Mart - 2 min walk
Family Mart - 2 min walk
Mini Stop - 3 min walk
Sunkus - 3 min walk
Lawson - 8 min walk / 2 min drive
Sunkus - 1 min walk
Sunkus - 3 min walk