Imizu, Toyama Prefecture
Seven Eleven - 4 min walk / 1 min drive
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873 houses for sale available · ¥20,000 – ¥70,000,000 · 38 new this month
Toyama is a prefecture that reveals itself slowly and then astonishes. Its signature product is its seafood: Toyama Bay, shaped like a vast natural fish trap with depths plunging to 1,000 metres just offshore, concentrates some of Japan's most prized marine life. Shiro ebi (white shrimp, so translucent they glow), hotaru-ika (firefly squid, which migrate to the surface in spring and can be seen bioluminescing in the pre-dawn waters), and buri (yellowtail, whose winter migration through the bay is a seasonal event marked by fishing competitions and restaurant menus) are the three pillars of a seafood culture that Toyama takes extremely seriously. The fish markets in Toyama city and Himi are worth a detour from anywhere.
The Hokuriku Shinkansen connects Toyama to Tokyo in about 2 hours 10 minutes, and to Kanazawa in 10 minutes — making Toyama part of the same accessible corridor as its more famous neighbour. Toyama Airport serves domestic routes. The Tateyama-Kurobe Alpine Route, arguably Japan's most dramatic mountain crossing, begins in Toyama city and climbs through seven different modes of transport — including a trolleybus through a mountain, a ropeway above snowfields 3,000 metres high, and a cable car through sheer gorge walls — to emerge at Nagano's Omachi on the other side. The route is only open April to November; the snow walls in the Murodo corridor in April reach up to 20 metres, creating canyon walls of white that visitors walk through in disbelief.
Toyama city itself has undergone a quiet urban renaissance. A tram network was extended and expanded, the riverbank areas were redeveloped with public spaces and a museum of art, and the city developed a compact, walkable urban philosophy that has been studied by urban planners internationally. The Toyama Glass Art Museum (designed by Kengo Kuma) is a genuinely excellent contemporary museum in a city that could be forgiven for coasting on its seafood reputation.
The traditional medicine trade is also a defining Toyama characteristic. The Toyama baiyaku (door-to-door medicine salesmen system, operating for 300 years) shaped the prefecture's commercial culture; Toyama is still Japan's centre of pharmaceutical manufacturing, and the legacy of the medicine merchants — travelling, trusting, keeping accounts — is part of the regional identity.
For property buyers, Toyama offers a compelling case. Toyama city houses run ¥4M–¥12M. The surrounding towns — Takaoka, Himi, Uozu — offer ¥2M–¥8M. Rural akiya in the mountain valleys cost ¥300,000–¥3M. The Shinkansen connection to Tokyo, the extraordinary seafood, the Alpine Route, and a city that is rethinking urban living give Toyama a quality-of-life argument that its property prices do not yet reflect.
Seven Eleven - 4 min walk / 1 min drive
Seven Eleven - 6 min walk / 1 min drive
Lawson - 8 min walk / 2 min drive
Lawson - 3 min walk
Lawson - 11 min walk / 2 min drive
Family Mart - 15 min walk / 3 min drive