Himeji Castle — the brilliant white, six-storey wooden keep of Shirasagi-jo rising above its stone ramparts against a blue sky, framed by cherry blossom. Himeji, Hyogo, Japan.

The white castle that 400 years never touched

Himeji Castle skip-the-line — Japan's most spectacular original keep, a six-storey wooden tower wrapped in white plaster that earned it the name 'White Heron'. Timed e-ticket, booked in English, paid in your own currency.

See ticket options
  • 1609 Current keep completed — never destroyed since
  • 6 storeys Original wooden keep, climbed in your socks
  • 1993 One of Japan's first UNESCO World Heritage Sites
  • White Heron Shirasagi-jo — named for its white-plastered walls

Choose your ticket

Child ticket (ages 6–17)

Reduced rate for school-age children; younger children enter free

€14

  • Skip-the-line QR e-ticket for one school-age child (6–17)
  • The six-storey wooden keep, the west bailey and the defensive gate maze
  • Children under 6 enter free — no ticket needed
  • Booked in English and paid in your own currency
  • 5-minute audio history sent before your visit
Reserve child ticket

Castle + Koko-en Garden

Himeji Castle plus the neighbouring Koko-en Japanese garden

€33

  • Skip-the-line QR e-ticket for Himeji Castle
  • Entry to Koko-en — nine walled Edo-style gardens beside the castle
  • The natural pairing: the keep first, then the gardens for the classic castle view
  • Booked in English and paid in your own currency
  • 5-minute audio history sent before your visit
Reserve castle + garden
4.9 from 68 verified travellers
Daniel R.
Toronto, Canada
“We'd seen Osaka and Nagoya castles, which are concrete inside — Himeji is the real thing, all dark old timber, and climbing the keep in our socks up those near-vertical stairs was the highlight of the whole trip. Worth the easy hop from Osaka.”
April 2026
Martina H.
Vienna, Austria
“Booking in English and paying in euros took all the stress out of it — the Japanese ticket site had defeated us. The QR code worked instantly and we walked straight past the cherry-blossom-season queue.”
April 2026
Eleanor S.
Edinburgh, United Kingdom
“Go early. We were at the gate for opening and had the lower keep almost to ourselves before the day-trippers arrived. The way the defensive paths spiral and double back is fascinating once you understand it.”
March 2026

5-minute audio guide

Your Himeji Castle 5-minute guide

Hand-written, narrated by a heritage host, sent to every customer the day before their visit. Five minutes that turns a beautiful white tower into the story of a fortress — the keep that 400 years never destroyed, the white plaster that saved it, and the maze built to trap an army.

Included with your booking — your full guide arrives with your ticket.Get your guide
  • Why Himeji is an original keep, not a concrete reconstruction like most
  • The white plaster behind the name 'White Heron Castle' — and how it saved the building
  • What to look for as you climb the six floors in your socks
  • How the spiralling baileys and gates were built to trap an attacker

Included free with every ticket. No app, no download — plays in any browser.

About Himeji Castle

Himeji Castle is the supreme surviving example of a Japanese castle — and, almost uniquely, an original one. Where most of Japan's famous castles are 20th-century concrete reconstructions, Himeji's six-storey wooden keep is the real thing, completed in 1609 under Ikeda Terumasa and standing essentially unchanged for over four hundred years. It is the largest and most visited castle in Japan, and in 1993 it became one of the country's very first UNESCO World Heritage Sites.

Its brilliant white-plastered walls and the way its roofs seem to spread like wings gave it the name Shirasagi-jo — 'White Heron Castle'. The whiteness is not just beauty: the thick fire-resistant plaster that coats the timber and tiles helped the castle survive where others burned. Remarkably, Himeji came through the air raids that flattened the surrounding city in 1945, and through the Great Hanshin earthquake of 1995, with the keep intact — a building that has never been destroyed in its entire history.

Inside, you climb the keep itself, floor by floor in your socks, up wooden stairs that grow deliberately steeper to slow any attacker. Around it spreads a brilliant defensive puzzle of spiralling baileys, gates and walls designed to confuse and trap invaders. We are an independent concierge service for international visitors: we book your timed entry in English, charge in your own currency, and send a QR e-ticket and a short audio history before you arrive — so the language barrier never stands between you and the castle.

Practical information

Opening hours
Open daily from 09:00, with last admission at 16:00 and the grounds closing at 17:00 (hours extend in summer and during the cherry-blossom season). Closed 29 and 30 December.
Address
68 Honmachi, Himeji, Hyogo 670-0012, Japan
Getting there from Osaka
≈30 minutes by JR Sanyo Shinkansen to Himeji station, then a 15-minute walk (or 5-minute bus) straight up the main avenue to the castle.
Getting there from Kyoto
≈45 minutes by JR Sanyo Shinkansen to Himeji station, then a 15-minute walk to the castle gate.
Getting there from Tokyo
≈3 hours by Tokaido/Sanyo Shinkansen to Himeji station; an easy add-on if you are travelling the Tokyo–Osaka corridor.
Time needed
Allow 2–3 hours for the keep, the west bailey and the grounds. Add about an hour for the Koko-en garden next door.
Accessibility
The grounds and lower areas are partly accessible, but the keep itself is reached by steep, narrow original wooden staircases with no lift, and shoes must be removed inside — it is not wheelchair-accessible above the ground level. Contact us before booking if mobility is a concern.
Photography
Permitted throughout for personal use. The classic shot is from the Sannomaru grounds or from Koko-en, with the white keep above cherry blossom in spring.
Food
Cafés and restaurants line the avenue between the station and the castle; the castle grounds themselves have limited food, so eat before or after on Otemae-dori.

About our service

Himeji Tickets acts as a facilitator to help international visitors purchase timed, skip-the-line tickets for Himeji Castle, which is owned and managed by the City of Himeji. We do not resell tickets — we provide a personalised booking and English-language support service, charging in your own currency, and our concierge service fee is included in the displayed price. For those who prefer to purchase directly, tickets are sold via the castle's own ticketing platform.

Frequently asked

What's included in the ticket?

Skip-the-line entry to Himeji Castle — the six-storey wooden keep, the west bailey, the defensive gate maze and the castle grounds. You receive a QR e-ticket, booked in English and paid in your own currency, that you scan at the gate. The Koko-en garden next door can be added as a combination ticket.

Is this a timed ticket?

Yes. Himeji Castle uses a timed e-ticket: you choose a date and entry window, and your QR code admits you in that slot so you skip the ticket-booth queue. Tickets are generally valid for a date around 90 days ahead.

Is Himeji Castle really original, or a reconstruction?

It is original. Unlike most famous Japanese castles, whose keeps are 20th-century concrete rebuilds, Himeji's six-storey wooden keep was completed in 1609 and has stood ever since — it has never been destroyed. It survived the 1945 bombing of Himeji and the 1995 Great Hanshin earthquake intact, which is part of why it is so revered.

Why is it called the White Heron Castle?

Its Japanese name, Shirasagi-jo, means 'White Heron Castle'. The brilliant white lime plaster that coats its walls, eaves and roof tiles — and the way the curved roofs spread like wings — make it look like a white heron taking flight. The plaster is also fire-resistant, which helped the castle survive over four centuries.

Do I have to take my shoes off inside?

Yes. As in many historic Japanese buildings, you remove your shoes to enter the keep and carry them in a bag provided at the entrance. You walk and climb the wooden floors in your socks, so wear comfortable, intact socks — the floors can be cold and the stairs are steep.

How steep are the stairs inside the keep?

Steep — deliberately so. The wooden staircases between the keep's floors grow progressively more vertical toward the top, an original defensive feature meant to slow attackers. They are narrow with handrails; many visitors come down backwards on the steepest flights. It's manageable for most people with reasonable mobility but not suitable for those who struggle with stairs.

How long does a visit take?

Allow 2 to 3 hours for the keep, the west bailey and the grounds. The route through the defensive baileys up to the keep and the climb itself take time, especially when busy. Add about an hour if you also visit the Koko-en garden next door.

Can I do Himeji as a day trip from Osaka or Kyoto?

Easily — it's one of the best day trips in the Kansai region. The JR Sanyo Shinkansen reaches Himeji station in about 30 minutes from Osaka and 45 minutes from Kyoto, and the castle is a straight 15-minute walk up the main avenue from the station. A Japan Rail Pass covers the journey.

How do I get from Himeji station to the castle?

It's a flat, well-signed 15-minute walk straight up Otemae-dori, the main avenue, with the white keep in view ahead of you almost the whole way. A loop bus or taxi covers it in about 5 minutes if you prefer not to walk.

When is the best time to visit?

Arrive at opening (09:00) to climb the keep before the crowds. Late March to early April is the famous cherry-blossom season, when the white castle above pink blossom is unforgettable — but also the busiest. Autumn is cooler and quieter; weekday mornings are calmest year-round.

When do the cherry blossoms bloom at Himeji?

Typically late March to early April, though the exact dates shift each year with the weather. The castle grounds are one of Japan's most celebrated hanami (blossom-viewing) spots, with the white keep rising above the blossom. Expect large crowds and queues at the ticket booth in this window — a QR e-ticket helps you skip them.

Should I add the Koko-en garden?

If you have the time, yes. Koko-en is a set of nine walled Edo-style Japanese gardens immediately beside the castle, built on the site of former samurai residences. It's calm, beautiful, and offers one of the best views of the white keep. Our castle-plus-garden ticket bundles both in a single booking.

Is the castle suitable for children?

Yes — children are fascinated by the keep, the armour displays and the spiralling defensive paths, and there is space in the grounds to roam. School-age children pay a reduced rate and younger children enter free; we book the whole group on one reservation so you go in together. Note the steep stairs inside the keep and the shoes-off rule.

Is Himeji Castle wheelchair accessible?

Only partly. The grounds and lower areas are partly accessible, but the keep itself is reached by steep, narrow original wooden staircases with no lift, and shoes must be removed inside — so the upper floors are not wheelchair-accessible. If mobility is a concern, contact us before booking and we'll advise on what's reachable.

Can we change the date?

Because this is a timed-entry ticket, your slot is for a specific date and time. If your plans change, reply to your confirmation email as early as you can and our concierge team will rebook you onto a new date.

Is Himeji Castle a UNESCO World Heritage site?

Yes. Himeji Castle was inscribed by UNESCO in December 1993 as one of Japan's very first World Heritage Sites, recognised as the finest surviving example of early-17th-century Japanese castle architecture, with 83 structures preserved across the complex.

Why book through a concierge instead of the official site?

The castle's own ticketing is oriented to Japanese-language booking and yen payment, which trips up many international visitors. We book your timed entry in English, charge in your own currency with no foreign-exchange surprise, send a QR e-ticket and a short audio history in advance, and answer questions in your language — the price you see includes our service fee.