Nara, Nara Prefecture
Family Mart - 9 min walk / 2 min drive
Customize how property information is displayed
Your preferences are automatically saved and will be applied across all pages.
134 land for sale available · ¥100,000 – ¥140,000,000 · 25 new this month
Nara was Japan's first permanent capital (710–784 CE), before Kyoto, and its concentration of early Buddhist and Shinto culture is without parallel in the country. The Todai-ji temple contains Japan's largest bronze Buddha, 14.7 metres of seated deity inside a hall that is the world's largest wooden building — and it was built in 752 CE. Walking from the JR station to Todai-ji, you pass through Nara Deer Park, where 1,200 sika deer roam freely and accept rice-cracker offerings from visitors with an imperial boredom that matches the historical weight of the setting. The deer have been sacred since the 8th century; they were given protected status and today they simply live in the park, crossing streets when they feel like it, and occasionally entering the post office.
Nara is 35 minutes from Osaka Namba on the Kintetsu Nara Line, and 45 minutes from Kyoto by limited express. The Kintetsu also connects to Nagoya in about 2.5 hours. The city is entirely walkable from its two stations. Yoshino, in the southern mountains — famous for Japan's most celebrated cherry blossom display (some 30,000 trees covering an entire mountain in graduated bloom) — is reachable by Kintetsu in about 75 minutes from Osaka.
Nara has a quieter energy than Kyoto — fewer visitors, lower profile, more residential calm. This makes it a significantly more comfortable place to actually live, with the same quality of historical environment and the same proximity to Osaka and Kyoto. The Horyu-ji temple complex south of the city contains the world's oldest surviving wooden buildings (607 CE), a claim verified by dendrochronology and generally considered astounding when considered carefully. Naramachi — the preserved machiya merchant district south of the main tourist area — is where restaurants, craft shops, and neighbourhood life coexist in streets that have been continuously inhabited since the Edo period.
The Nara Tokae festival (August) — 7,000 lanterns lit across the deer park and temple grounds for two weeks — is one of Japan's most atmospheric summer events. The Shunie ritual at Todai-ji (March), which has been performed every year since 752 CE without a single interruption, involves monks carrying giant burning torches around the temple balcony in a ceremony of water-drawing and purification.
For property buyers, Nara is excellent value for its cultural standing. Houses in Nara city run ¥6M–¥15M. The suburban commuter towns south of the city — Kashihara, Sakurai, Tenri — offer ¥4M–¥10M with good Kintetsu access to Osaka. Yoshino and the mountain villages of southern Nara (Totsukawa, Kawakami) have akiya from ¥500,000–¥3M in landscapes of exceptional quality. Buying in Nara means living in one of Japan's most historically significant landscapes at prices that Kyoto buyers would consider generous.
Family Mart - 9 min walk / 2 min drive
Daily Yamazaki - 17 min walk / 3 min drive
Family Mart - 60 min walk / 12 min drive
Mini Stop - 10 min walk / 2 min drive
Seven Eleven - 11 min walk / 2 min drive
Family Mart - 7 min walk / 1 min drive
Lawson - 6 min walk / 1 min drive
Seven Eleven - 9 min walk / 2 min drive
Sunkus - 12 min walk / 2 min drive
Seven Eleven - 6 min walk / 1 min drive
Daily Yamazaki - 6 min walk / 1 min drive