Land for Sale in Nagasaki
1,358 land for sale available · ¥10,000 – ¥2,100,000,000 · 89 new this month
Nagasaki has a character unlike anywhere else in Japan, shaped by four centuries of being the only place in the country permitted to trade with the outside world during the Edo period. The Dutch trading post of Dejima — a fan-shaped artificial island in the harbour where Dutch merchants lived in contractual isolation, their only contact with Japan through appointed interpreters — was Japan's single window to Western knowledge for 200 years. The legacy of this extraordinary arrangement is a city that has always been more international, more syncretic, and more curious about the outside world than the rest of Japan. Chinese merchants were also permitted to trade from a designated quarter; the Chinatown in Nagasaki is the oldest in Japan, and champon noodles — a rich, seafood-laden soup that developed from Chinese cooking adapted to Japanese taste — is the city's defining dish.
Getting There
The Nishi-Kyushu Shinkansen, which opened in 2022, connects Nagasaki to Takeo-Onsen in 23 minutes, where relay services to Fukuoka bring the journey to under 90 minutes. Nagasaki Airport has connections to Seoul, Shanghai, and domestic routes. The city's electric tram network is one of Japan's oldest still operating and serves the main sites efficiently. The prefecture's 140+ islands — Tsushima (close to South Korea), Goto Islands (UNESCO Christian heritage), Hirado, and dozens of smaller ones — are reached by ferry from Nagasaki port, Sasebo, and Matsuura.
Daily Life
Nagasaki city is built on hillsides above the harbour, with residential streets that climb at angles requiring the ropeway or steep stone steps. The view from the Inasayama cable car at night — the harbour lights below, the islands in the harbour mouth, the bridge lights of the port — is one of Japan's three great night views (alongside Hakodate and Kobe). The city's historical layers accumulate visibly: the Dutch Slope (Oranda-zaka) with its cobblestones and preserved European-style merchants' houses; the Urakami Cathedral rebuilt on the site of the atomic bomb's second Japan target; the Confucian Shrine built by the Chinese community in 1893; and the Peace Park and memorial, a counterpart to Hiroshima's with its own distinct character of resolution rather than grief.
Festivals & Culture
The Nagasaki Kunchi festival (October) is one of Kyushu's great annual events — Chinese-influenced dragon dances, Dutch-period ships reproduced as festival floats, and performances that directly reference the city's international history are paraded through the streets in a uniquely Nagasaki celebration of what made the city unusual. Tsushima in the north is particularly interesting: visible from Korea on clear days (50km from Busan), with a growing profile as a Korean tourism destination (the island has more Korean than Japanese signage in its commercial areas), and properties at prices that predate any tourism influx.
Buying Property Here
For property buyers, Nagasaki is the most affordable top-10 prefecture by listing volume. Houses in Nagasaki city's hillside districts run ¥3M–¥10M with harbour views. Sasebo (home to Japan's largest US naval base and an English-speaking community infrastructure) offers ¥3M–¥10M. Island properties on Tsushima, Goto, and Hirado start from ¥500,000–¥4M. The Shinkansen connection has started to change the city's accessibility calculus; property prices have not yet caught up with this shift.
Nagasaki, Nagasaki Prefecture
Daily Yamazaki - 4 min walk / 1 min drive
Isahaya, Nagasaki Prefecture
Every One - 4 min walk / 1 min drive
Isahaya, Nagasaki Prefecture
Seven Eleven - 8 min walk / 2 min drive