Kaga, Ishikawa Prefecture
Sunkus - 3 min walk
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149 akiya bank listings available · ¥100 – ¥100,000,000
Kanazawa, Ishikawa's prefectural capital, is the city most often called "Little Kyoto" — but that comparison undersells it. Kanazawa was never bombed in the war (too little strategic value, too much cultural risk), which means its geisha districts, samurai neighbourhoods, and traditional machiya townhouses survived intact. But unlike Kyoto, it was never overwhelmed by mass tourism. Until the Hokuriku Shinkansen extension in 2015, reaching Kanazawa required an overnight train or a long journey; the sudden accessibility brought visitors, but the city's identity was already so well-formed that it absorbed them without transforming for them. The Higashi Chaya (tea house district) is genuinely functional, not preserved as a display; the Kenroku-en garden, one of Japan's three "great gardens", opens early and fills with local residents doing morning walks as much as with visitors.
The Hokuriku Shinkansen reaches Kanazawa from Tokyo in 2.5 hours. The extension to Tsuruga (in Fukui) opened in 2024, and the full connection to Osaka is expected in the 2040s. Komatsu Airport south of Kanazawa has connections to Tokyo, Sapporo, Okinawa, and Seoul. The Noto Peninsula to the north is served by the Noto Satoyama Airport (limited service) and more practically by car — the coastal drive around the peninsula is one of Japan's most beautiful road journeys, past fishing villages, dramatic cliff formations, and morning markets.
Wajima, on the Noto Peninsula's northern tip, has one of Japan's most famous morning markets and is the centre of Wajima lacquerware production — a technique of building up dozens of layers of lacquer over a wood base, decorated with gold and silver inlay, that produces objects of extraordinary depth and beauty. The Noto Peninsula's food culture (its satoyama and satoumi landscape has UNESCO Globally Important Agricultural Heritage designation) is centred on local seafood, preserved foods, and sake made from Noto-grown rice. The Gojinjo Daiko drum festival on the Noto coast in summer — performers in demon masks drumming at the water's edge — is unlike any other festival in Japan.
Kanazawa's cultural density extends into its contemporary scene. The 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art (Kanazawa) is one of Japan's finest contemporary art institutions. The city's restaurants, crafts shops, and artisan workshops are unusually concentrated and accessible. Gold leaf production — Kanazawa supplies 99% of Japan's gold leaf — is visible throughout the city in everything from gold-leaf ice cream to gold-dusted sake.
Property buyers find Ishikawa rewarding. Kanazawa city houses run ¥8M–¥20M in residential areas, with some remarkable traditional machiya available for renovation at ¥3M–¥10M. The Noto Peninsula — particularly after the 2024 earthquake that affected the area — has significant akiya inventory with municipal support programs, from ¥500,000–¥5M. For buyers who want a city of genuine cultural depth at prices well below Kyoto or Tokyo, Kanazawa is one of Japan's strongest arguments.
Sunkus - 3 min walk
Circle K - 6 min walk / 1 min drive
Circle K - 40 min walk / 8 min drive
Circle K - 16 min walk / 3 min drive
Circle K - 11 min walk / 2 min drive
Circle K - 32 min walk / 6 min drive
Circle K - 16 min walk / 3 min drive
Sunkus - 4 min walk / 1 min drive
Seven Eleven - 6 min walk / 1 min drive
Circle K - 4 min walk / 1 min drive
Circle K - 7 min walk / 1 min drive
Family Mart - 3 min walk
Sunkus - 2 min walk
Seven Eleven - 3 min walk
Family Mart - 2 min walk
Seven Eleven - 18 min walk / 4 min drive
Sunkus - 9 min walk / 2 min drive
Sunkus - 5 min walk / 1 min drive
Lawson - 4 min walk / 1 min drive
Family Mart - 3 min walk
Sunkus - 5 min walk / 1 min drive
Daily Yamazaki - 3 min walk
Circle K - 2 min walk