Tagawa, Fukuoka Prefecture
Seven Eleven - 4 min walk / 1 min drive
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440 rental properties available · ¥5,000 – ¥70,000,000 · 4 new this month
Fukuoka is Japan's cheapest major city, its most liveable by repeated survey, and — for anyone who travels to Asia regularly — its most strategically positioned. The city is compact and walkable in a way that most Japanese cities of its size (1.6 million people) are not: from Hakata Station to the Tenjin shopping district is 15 minutes on foot. The airport is 5 minutes from the city centre by subway — the closest airport-to-CBD in Japan, and one of the closest in Asia. Direct flights to Seoul take 50 minutes, to Shanghai 90 minutes, to Hong Kong 3 hours, to Singapore, Bangkok, and Taipei on regular schedule. For people with business or family ties in East and Southeast Asia, Fukuoka is the one Japanese city that makes those trips genuinely casual.
The Hakata Shinkansen station connects to Osaka in 2.5 hours, to Hiroshima in 45 minutes, to Tokyo in 5 hours. The Kyushu Shinkansen runs south to Kumamoto (35 minutes) and Kagoshima (1.5 hours), effectively making the entire island of Kyushu accessible as a day trip from Fukuoka. The JR Camellia Ferry connects Hakata Port to Osaka overnight. Itoshima, Fukuoka's coastal peninsula to the west (30 minutes by car), has become the preferred lifestyle destination for young professionals seeking sea views and a surf culture within commuting distance.
Hakata ramen — tonkotsu broth (pork bone, simmered until opaque and intensely flavoured), thin straight noodles, served in a style that encourages kaedama (ordering extra noodles to drop into the remaining broth) — is one of Japan's great regional ramen styles and is completely specific to Fukuoka in the way that no other city's ramen is. The yatai street food stalls — temporary canvas-covered carts that appear along Nakasu and Tenjin waterways at dusk, serving ramen, mentaiko (spicy cod roe), yakitori, and beer to mix of salarymen, tourists, and locals — are Fukuoka's most distinctive evening institution and one of the few examples in modern Japan of functional outdoor street food culture.
The Hakata Dontaku festival (May — 2 million participants, Japan's largest by attendance) fills the city's streets with processions, dance groups, and improvised performances. The Yamakasa festival (July) involves teams carrying enormous 1-tonne decorated floats through the city at a competitive run, with a 5am final race through Hakata's old streets. Fukuoka's startup visa for entrepreneurs, its Digital Nomad-friendly infrastructure, and its emerging reputation as a gateway for international businesses entering the Japanese market add a professional dimension to the lifestyle appeal.
For property buyers, Fukuoka's numbers consistently surprise. Suburban detached houses in residential wards (Higashi-ku, Minami-ku, Nishi-ku) run ¥10M–¥18M. Central apartments (Tenjin, Hakata walking area) from ¥6M–¥15M. Itoshima houses from ¥5M–¥12M on larger plots with coastal proximity. Kitakyushu (Fukuoka's northern industrial neighbour) drops to ¥3M–¥8M. Few cities anywhere in the developed world offer this combination of connectivity, culture, food, and price.
Seven Eleven - 4 min walk / 1 min drive
Lawson - 1 min walk
Lawson - 5 min walk / 1 min drive
Seven Eleven - 2 min walk
Seven Eleven - 40 min walk / 8 min drive
Family Mart - 1 min walk
Seven Eleven - 40 min walk / 8 min drive
Family Mart - 1 min walk
Seven Eleven - 4 min walk / 1 min drive