Houses for Sale in Kochi
955 houses for sale available · ¥200,000 – ¥1,324,980,000 · 282 new this month
Kochi is Japan's most individual prefecture, and the people will tell you so themselves. The Tosa domain (as it was historically known) produced Sakamoto Ryoma — the 19th-century activist and revolutionary who brokered the alliance that ended the shogunate and opened Japan to the world, assassinated at 31, and still the most beloved historical figure in a country with many candidates. His independent spirit is considered a fundamental Kochi characteristic: the people here are louder, more direct, more drinking-oriented, and more proudly themselves than almost any other regional Japanese culture. The Yosakoi festival (August) — 20,000 dancers performing to a combination of traditional Kochi folk melody and any genre the group chooses — is the model for every Yosakoi festival held elsewhere in Japan (there are hundreds) but the Kochi original remains definitively itself.
Getting There
Kochi is reached from Osaka by the JR Nanko Express (about 2.5 hours), by high-speed ferry from Osaka Port, or by air via Kochi Ryoma Airport (Tokyo 70 minutes, Osaka 45 minutes). The prefecture's road network covers its mountain terrain well, but a car is essential for reaching the Shimanto River area and the remote Cape Ashizuri.
Daily Life
The Shimanto River — Japan's last major undammed river, running 196km through a landscape of extraordinary unspoiled beauty — is a spiritual centre for Japanese who value the country's diminishing natural rivers. Drift fishing, kayaking, and house-boating on the Shimanto are specific to Kochi in a way that nothing else is. Cape Ashizuri, the southernmost point of Shikoku, has Pacific Ocean views and lighthouse walks with a dramatic isolation. The hot dry summers of the Kochi basin are extreme for a Pacific coast — temperatures regularly reach 40°C in summer, Japan's highest — but the produce grown in this heat is exceptional: Kochi produces most of Japan's out-of-season vegetables (bell peppers, ginger, eggplant) through high-tech greenhouses.
Festivals & Culture
Katsurei katsuo (bonito) — caught in Kochi waters, seared over rice straw at high temperature, sliced thick, and served with garlic and ginger rather than wasabi — is the most specific and most definitive food expression of Kochi's identity. The tosa-kuro breed of fighting cock is bred here for a cockfighting tradition that continues legally (bird versus bird, natural spurs only). Kochi has embraced its eccentricities with the confidence of a place that knows the people who belong here will find it, and has no particular desire to attract anyone who won't.
Buying Property Here
For property buyers, Kochi has extraordinary value at the cost of relative remoteness. Kochi city houses run ¥3M–¥10M. The Shimanto River towns — Shimanto-shi, Nakamura — offer ¥1M–¥5M in one of Japan's most cherished natural settings. Coastal towns on the Pacific south coast — Tosa, Kuroshio, Tosashimizu — have akiya from ¥300,000–¥3M with Pacific Ocean access. Kochi selects for its residents; the buyers who choose it consistently find they chose correctly.
Kochi, Kochi Prefecture
Lawson - 7 min walk / 1 min drive
Kochi, Kochi Prefecture
Lawson - 9 min walk / 2 min drive
Kochi, Kochi Prefecture
Circle K - 8 min walk / 2 min drive
Kochi, Kochi Prefecture
Circle K - 4 min walk / 1 min drive
Kochi, Kochi Prefecture
Family Mart - 4 min walk / 1 min drive
Kochi, Kochi Prefecture
Lawson - 4 min walk / 1 min drive
Tosa, Kochi Prefecture
Family Mart - 4 min walk / 1 min drive
Houses for Sale in Kochi
Kochi has 955+ houses listed for sale across its residential areas — detached homes, traditional farmhouses, renovation-ready akiya, and new builds. As with all of Japan, there are no restrictions on foreign ownership: any buyer can purchase a house in Kochi regardless of nationality or residency status.
How Much Does a House Cost in Kochi?
Current listings in Kochi start from ¥200,000, with an average asking price of ¥20,045,191. Prices vary considerably by location within the prefecture, building age, and condition. The most affordable properties are typically akiya — vacant homes requiring renovation — often listed at the lower end of the price range.
Can Foreigners Buy a House in Kochi?
Yes. Japan has no restrictions on foreign property ownership, including in Kochi. Any buyer can purchase a house regardless of nationality, visa status, or residency. You will need a Japanese Individual Number (My Number), obtainable at the local ward office. The purchase follows standard Japanese conveyancing: offer, purchase agreement, optional building inspection, and title transfer through a judicial scrivener. Total transaction costs are typically 7–10% of the purchase price.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What types of houses are available in Kochi?
- Houses in Kochi include standalone detached homes (ikkodate), traditional wooden townhouses, old farmhouses (kominka), and akiya — vacant homes registered for sale. New builds are also listed alongside used properties.
- How long does it take to buy a house in Kochi?
- A typical purchase in Kochi takes 1–3 months from accepted offer to title transfer. Key stages: offer negotiation (1–2 weeks), purchase agreement with a judicial scrivener (1–2 weeks), optional building inspection (1–2 weeks), and settlement and registration (1 day).