Shirahama, Wakayama Prefecture
Family Mart - 18 min walk / 4 min drive
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1,393 houses for sale available · ¥100 – ¥4,804,800,000 · 475 new this month
Wakayama is the peninsula that hangs below Osaka into the Kii Channel, and it contains some of Japan's most spiritually charged and most naturally beautiful landscapes in a combination that makes it genuinely difficult to choose where to start. Koyasan — the monastery mountain town founded by the Buddhist monk Kobo Daishi in 816 CE as the headquarters of Shingon esoteric Buddhism — sits in a mountain bowl 900 metres above the surrounding forest and contains 117 temples, many of which offer shukubo (temple lodging) and the most contemplative nights available anywhere in Japan. The Oku-no-in cemetery, with 200,000 stone lanterns and mossy grave markers stretching for 2km under ancient cedar trees, is one of the most affecting places in the country regardless of religious affiliation.
Koyasan is reached by Nankai Railway from Osaka Namba to Gokurakubashi, then cable car to the top — about 90 minutes total. The broader Wakayama Prefecture is accessed from Osaka by the Kintetsu Yoshino Line, the JR Kisei Line (for the Pacific coast), and by car via the Hanwa Expressway. Wakayama city is 45 minutes from Osaka Tennoji. The Kumano Kodo pilgrimage routes — UNESCO World Heritage, the world's only pilgrimage network to share that status with the Camino de Santiago — crisscross the southern Kii Peninsula through deep forest and fishing villages.
Shirahama, on the Pacific coast, is western Japan's premier beach resort — white sand unusually fine for a Japan coast, panda-themed theme parks, and year-round hot spring activity giving it a resort character quite different from the quieter temple pilgrimages nearby. The Katsuura tuna market has a legitimate claim to being Japan's finest source of fresh tuna; boats deliver overnight and the morning auction is open to visitors. Mikan oranges — satsuma mandarin, the global variety, originated in Wakayama — are the prefecture's agricultural signature from October to February.
The Nachi Taisha shrine and waterfall (Japan's tallest at 133m, considered a sacred object in itself), the Kumano Hongu Taisha set in an ancient river bend, and the hidden Christian village heritage of the Otoyo area give Wakayama a layered religious landscape that rewards slow exploration far more than a day trip allows.
For property buyers, Wakayama is significantly underpriced for its cultural and natural assets. Wakayama city houses run ¥4M–¥12M with direct train access to Osaka. The Shirahama resort area has properties from ¥5M–¥20M. The Kumano coast — isolated but extraordinarily beautiful — has akiya from ¥500,000–¥4M. Koyasan itself has occasional properties that represent the rarest possible combination: a UNESCO religious mountain community with monastic neighbours, at prices that would not buy a parking space in central Tokyo.
Family Mart - 18 min walk / 4 min drive
Seven Eleven - 10 min walk / 2 min drive
Family Mart - 8 min walk / 2 min drive
Circle K - 4 min drive
Family Mart - 8 min walk / 2 min drive
Family Mart - 8 min walk / 2 min drive
Lawson - 13 min walk / 3 min drive
Circle K - 10 min walk / 2 min drive
Daily Yamazaki - 4 min walk / 1 min drive
Circle K - 4 min walk / 1 min drive
Seven Eleven - 4 min walk / 1 min drive
Wakayama has 1,393+ 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 Wakayama regardless of nationality or residency status.
Current listings in Wakayama start from ¥100, with an average asking price of ¥16,716,662. 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.
Yes. Japan has no restrictions on foreign property ownership, including in Wakayama. 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.