Shiojiri, Nagano Prefecture
Seven Eleven - 5 min walk / 1 min drive
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1,259 houses for sale available · ¥100 – ¥1,600,000,000 · 303 new this month
Nagano is Japan's mountain heart. It hosted the Winter Olympics twice (1972 as Sapporo in the bidding, then as sole host in 1998), has more mountains above 3,000 metres than any other prefecture, and contains three of the Japanese Alps ranges within its borders. The mountain culture here is old and serious: the Zenkoji temple in Nagano city draws seven million pilgrims and visitors annually and has been welcoming everyone regardless of sect for over a millennium — one of Japan's most inclusive and emotionally affecting sacred sites. Matsumoto Castle, the "crow castle", is one of Japan's twelve surviving original feudal castles and is considered the finest in the Japanese Alps; its black-lacquered wood reflects in the surrounding moat in a composition that stops visitors in their tracks.
The Hokuriku Shinkansen stops at Nagano city (from Tokyo: 80 minutes). Matsumoto is reached by limited express from Shinjuku in about 2.5 hours (the Azusa). Karuizawa — the mountain resort town that has been Tokyo's summer retreat since the Meiji era — is 70 minutes from Tokyo on the Hokuriku Shinkansen, making it one of the most accessible mountain destinations in the country. Hakuba ski resort, four hours from Tokyo by car (or about 3 hours by combination of Shinkansen and bus), is Japan's premier international ski destination after Niseko.
The resort and leisure geography of Nagano is exceptional: Hakuba and Nozawa Onsen for world-class skiing; Karuizawa for summer culture and outlet shopping; the Jigokudani Monkey Park (snow monkeys bathing in hot springs) near Yamanouchi; the Matsumoto and Azumino area for cycling and alpine scenery; the Nakahechi mountain trails for serious hikers; and the wasabi farms of the Azumino plain, where the volcanic spring water and precise agricultural care produce Japan's finest wasabi, eaten fresh from a grater over soba or sashimi.
The Nagano Zenkoji Gokaicho festival — held once every seven years, when a sacred hidden Buddha image is briefly shown — draws millions over several weeks. The Suwa Grand Shrine Onbashira festival (every six years) involves felling and hauling enormous fir trees down steep slopes and erecting them at the shrine corners — a ritual that seriously injures several participants every time and continues anyway because the community considers it essential. The food culture is centred on soba (Nagano is Japan's leading soba-producing prefecture), oyaki (steamed dumplings stuffed with vegetables), and the local sake from the cold mountain spring water.
For property buyers, Nagano has a range that matches its geography. Karuizawa resort properties run ¥15M–¥80M+. Hakuba area properties start at ¥5M for older chalets and reach ¥30M+ for well-positioned ski-adjacent ones. Nagano city and Matsumoto suburban houses run ¥5M–¥15M. Nozawa Onsen, Iiyama, and the rural mountain towns offer akiya from ¥1M–¥8M. Few prefectures in Japan offer this combination of natural grandeur, cultural depth, and economic range.
Seven Eleven - 5 min walk / 1 min drive
Circle K - 10 min walk / 2 min drive
Family Mart - 4 min walk / 1 min drive
Family Mart - 5 min walk / 1 min drive
Family Mart - 5 min walk / 1 min drive
Seven Eleven - 3 min walk
Seven Eleven - 52 min walk / 10 min drive
Seven Eleven - 52 min walk / 10 min drive
Seven Eleven - 52 min walk / 10 min drive
Seven Eleven - 52 min walk / 10 min drive
Seven Eleven - 20 min walk / 4 min drive
Seven Eleven - 20 min walk / 4 min drive
Seven Eleven - 20 min walk / 4 min drive
Seven Eleven - 20 min walk / 4 min drive
Seven Eleven - 25 min walk / 5 min drive
Seven Eleven - 25 min walk / 5 min drive
Seven Eleven - 65 min walk / 13 min drive
Family Mart - 5 min walk / 1 min drive
Seven Eleven - 84 min walk / 17 min drive