Morioka, Iwate Prefecture
Lawson - 2 min walk
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95 apartments for sale available · ¥700,000 – ¥58,300,000 · 19 new this month
Iwate is Japan's second-largest prefecture by area — only Hokkaido is bigger — and its scale gives it a character of quiet grandeur. The Kitakami Mountains run down the centre, volcanic peaks dot the interior, and the Sanriku coast to the east is one of the most dramatic ria coastlines in the world: deep inlets, fishing villages, and cliffs that drop into the Pacific. The prefecture holds its history carefully. Hiraizumi, in the south, was the northern capital of a 12th-century culture that briefly rivalled Kyoto in wealth and artistic achievement; the gilded Konjikido hall at Chuson-ji temple is a UNESCO World Heritage site and one of the most affecting historical structures in Japan.
Tohoku Shinkansen service reaches Shin-Hanamaki and Morioka from Tokyo in about 2 hours 20 minutes — Morioka is one of the fastest Shinkansen connections from the capital. From Morioka, local rail and buses reach the major areas. The Sanriku Railway runs along the spectacular Pacific coast. A car significantly expands access to rural areas and is effectively necessary for daily life outside the main cities.
Morioka, the prefectural capital, is a city with strong food identity: wanko soba (a relay-style eating challenge involving dozens of small bowls of buckwheat noodles, served one after another until you put the lid on the bowl) and reimen (cold noodles served with fruit and kimchi, a Korean-Tohoku fusion) are the city's culinary landmarks. The Morioka Sansa Odori festival in August is one of Tohoku's great street events — 10,000 dancers and drummers parade through the city centre. Winters are cold and snowy; summers in the highlands are cool and clear, good walking country.
The Tohoku character — stoic, warm in private, deeply community-oriented — is particularly strong in Iwate. The prefecture's response to the 2011 tsunami, which devastated parts of its coast, demonstrated a resilience and collective spirit that drew respect across the country. The rebuilt Sanriku coast communities are worth visiting as a demonstration of what Japan does when it reconstructs — thoroughly, thoughtfully, and with a concern for liveability that short-term crisis response elsewhere in the world often misses.
Property in Iwate offers genuine value. Morioka houses run ¥4M–¥12M for detached homes in established neighbourhoods. The interior farming areas — Hienuki, Esashi, Ninohe — have akiya at ¥500,000–¥3M with substantial land. Coastal towns post-reconstruction have mostly new housing stock. For buyers who want scale, quiet, and a part of Japan that has barely been discovered by foreign buyers, Iwate is one of the most compelling options in the country.
Lawson - 2 min walk
Lawson - 5 min walk / 1 min drive
Sunkus - 4 min walk / 1 min drive
Sunkus - 4 min walk / 1 min drive
Seven Eleven - 1 min walk
Family Mart - 6 min walk / 1 min drive
Seven Eleven - 3 min walk
Seven Eleven - 1 min walk
Seven Eleven - 1 min walk
Lawson - 4 min walk / 1 min drive
Lawson - 11 min walk / 2 min drive
Family Mart - 1 min walk
Seven Eleven - 1 min walk