Ito, Shizuoka Prefecture
Seven Eleven - 1 min walk
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1,062 houses for sale available · ¥100 – ¥298,000,000 · 51 new this month
Shizuoka holds one of Japan's most enviable geographic positions: the Pacific coast between Tokyo and Nagoya, the Southern Alps rising to the north, and Mount Fuji — visible from almost anywhere in the prefecture on clear days — dominating the northwest. The Izu Peninsula curls into the Pacific from Shizuoka's eastern coast, a 60km finger of dramatic geography: volcanic cliffs, black-sand beaches, hot spring towns, and a warm Kuroshio Current climate that gives it subtropical vegetation unusual for Honshu. Atami, at the base of the peninsula, is 40 minutes from Shinjuku by Shinkansen — it has been Tokyo's nearest coastal resort since the Meiji era, and its current revival (after decades of post-bubble stagnation) reflects a rediscovery of exactly that convenience.
The Tokaido Shinkansen runs the full length of the prefecture, with stops at Atami, Mishima, Shizuoka, and Hamamatsu — making Shizuoka one of Japan's best-served prefectures by fast rail. From Tokyo: Atami 40 minutes, Shizuoka city 60 minutes, Hamamatsu 80 minutes. Shizuoka Airport connects to Seoul, Shanghai, and domestic routes. The Izu Peninsula itself is served by the Izu Kyuko Line to Shimoda and by road.
The Izu Peninsula's food culture is centred on the sea: fresh wasabi from mountain streams, abalone and ise lobster from the Sagami and Suruga bays, dried fish (himono) as a morning culture that goes back centuries, and the famed Amagi region mushrooms from the interior highlands. The towns of Ito, Shimoda, and Izu-Kogen have developed a genuine restaurant and craft culture around restoration tourism. Shimoda itself carries significant international history — it was where the first US consul Townsend Harris spent two years waiting to be received, and where the first US-Japan treaties were signed; the town's awareness of this history is worn lightly but is genuinely felt.
Hamamatsu, at the prefecture's western end, is Japan's musical instrument capital — both Yamaha and Roland have their origins here — and a major manufacturing city with a large Brazilian-Japanese community, giving it a multicultural character unlike anywhere else in Shizuoka. The Hamamatsu Kite Festival (May) is the city's great annual event. Shizuoka city itself has Japan's highest annual green tea production and a shu-yu culture around high-quality local sake.
For property buyers, the Izu Peninsula leads: small houses near the water in Ito or Atami from ¥5M–¥10M for older renovation properties, substantial ocean-view houses at ¥15M–¥35M. Shizuoka city and Hamamatsu offer solid urban housing at ¥8M–¥18M. Agricultural towns in the central plain — Fujieda, Yaizu, Kikugawa — offer ¥4M–¥10M. Rural mountain akiya in the Izu highlands or the Oi River valley start from ¥1M–¥5M.
Seven Eleven - 1 min walk
Family Mart - 2 min walk
Seven Eleven - 5 min walk / 1 min drive
Seven Eleven - 5 min walk / 1 min drive
Seven Eleven - 8 min walk / 2 min drive
Lawson - 2 min walk
Lawson - 2 min walk
Family Mart - 9 min walk / 2 min drive
Circle K - 12 min walk / 2 min drive
Seven Eleven - 7 min walk / 1 min drive
Seven Eleven - 4 min walk / 1 min drive
Family Mart - 12 min walk / 2 min drive
Seven Eleven - 10 min walk / 2 min drive