Takatsuki, Osaka Prefecture
Seven Eleven - 5 min walk / 1 min drive
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6,368 houses for sale available · ¥50,000 – ¥500,000,000 · 3257 new this month
Osaka is Japan's second city in everything except official designation, and by several measures — food culture, commercial energy, spontaneous humour, human warmth — it might be the first. The city's defining qualities are opposites that somehow coexist: ancient and relentlessly modern, high-design and deeply street-level, refined and aggressively informal. Dotonbori, the canal-side entertainment strip that is simultaneously Osaka's tourist cliché and its genuine evening heart, is still a place where locals eat late, argue loudly, and feel entirely at home. This is what major-city life looks like when it belongs to the people who actually live there rather than the brands that have paid to be associated with it.
Osaka's rail connectivity is among Japan's best. Shin-Osaka is on the Tokaido Shinkansen (from Tokyo: 2.5 hours; from Hiroshima: 50 minutes). The city is also connected by JR, Kintetsu, Hankyu, Hanshin, and Nankai private railways to Kyoto (15 minutes), Kobe (20 minutes), Nara (35 minutes), and Wakayama (60 minutes) — the Hanshin corridor is one of the densest and most well-served urban rail networks in the world. Kansai International Airport, built on an artificial island in Osaka Bay, has the widest range of international routes in western Japan including many long-haul routes.
The food culture is not a tourism slogan — it is genuinely embedded at every level of daily life. The concept of kuidaore (eating until you drop) is Osaka's self-declared operating principle. Takoyaki (octopus balls cooked in a specialized iron pan), okonomiyaki (savoury pancake with everything), kushikatsu (deep-fried skewers — with the famous rule that double-dipping in the communal sauce results in expulsion), and the early-morning tuna auction at Osaka's Toyosu-linked markets are specific, non-transferable experiences. The depachika (department store basement food halls) in Umeda and Shinsaibashi are national institutions.
The Tenjin Matsuri (July 25) is one of Japan's three great festivals — 3,000 people in ancient court costume parading to the river, followed by a fireworks show on the water. Osaka's Special Economic Zone status allows unlimited short-term rental days in qualifying central areas, making it Japan's most viable city for property-based tourism income strategies.
For property buyers, Osaka offers major-city life at 30–40% below Tokyo prices. Houses in residential wards (Abeno, Sumiyoshi, Higashiosaka) run ¥10M–¥22M. The northern districts of Toyonaka, Suita, and Ibaraki (not to be confused with Ibaraki Prefecture) offer family-oriented housing at ¥10M–¥25M. Central apartment inventory from ¥8M–¥20M for 2LDK. Investment buyers find rental yields of 4–6% in the tourist zones around Namba and Shinsaibashi.
Seven Eleven - 5 min walk / 1 min drive
Seven Eleven - 10 min walk / 2 min drive
Seven Eleven - 7 min walk / 1 min drive
Mini Stop - 1 min walk
Lawson Store 100 - 2 min walk
Lawson - 3 min walk
Lawson - 10 min walk / 2 min drive
Lawson Store 100 - 2 min walk
Seven Eleven - 14 min walk / 3 min drive
Seven Eleven - 15 min walk / 3 min drive
Lawson - 6 min walk / 1 min drive
Seven Eleven - 7 min walk / 1 min drive
Seven Eleven - 3 min walk
Seven Eleven - 1 min walk
Mini Stop - 4 min walk / 1 min drive
Seven Eleven - 7 min walk / 1 min drive
Lawson - 9 min walk / 2 min drive
Daily Yamazaki - 4 min walk / 1 min drive
Seven Eleven - 3 min walk
Daily Yamazaki - 4 min walk / 1 min drive
Circle K - 2 min walk
Seven Eleven - 6 min walk / 1 min drive