Apr 8 (Wed) – Apr 13 (Mon) 2026
May 3 (Sun) – May 8 (Fri) 2026
The Nakasendo: An Inland Road Through Living History
Weaving through the mountains of central Japan, the Nakasendo linked Kyoto and Edo along an inland route of roughly 534 km.
During the Edo period it became one of the five official highways, lined with 69 post towns that fed and housed everyone from daimyo processions to merchants on foot. Parts of that road still thread through cedar forest, farm hamlets, and along clear streams.
In a handful of towns—most famously Magome, Tsumago, and Narai—traditional streetscapes survive thanks to strict local preservation, giving a clear window into everyday travel in an earlier Japan.
Our guided itinerary walks the best-kept sections, pairs them with small inns and regional food, and adds hands-on culture in places that still shape the story of the road today.
Highlights
- Walk the iconic Kisoji section of the Nakasendō on beautifully maintained heritage trails and quiet village lanes.
- Tsumago-juku: stroll one of Japan’s earliest, best-preserved post towns, where power lines are hidden and streetscapes evoke the Edo period.
- Magome’s hillside layout: cobbled slope, waterwheels, and great local cafes and shops
- Torii Pass (1,197 m): crest the highest point on the Kisoji section, then descend to Narai’s kilometer-long street of dark-wood machiya.
- Narai “of a Thousand Houses”: shop, sip, and photograph a continuous row of Edo-style facades; discover nearby Kiso lacquerware traditions.
- Matsumoto Castle (National Treasure): climb inside a 16th-century keep for arrow-slit views and finish among cafés and kura storehouses on Nawate & Nakamachi streets.
- Onsen comfort: unwind at Hirugami Onsen after the trail days—ideal for legs and morale.
- Private coach throughout: seamless drops at trailheads (e.g., Nenoue Pass start) and luggage handled with the group—minimal transfers, maximal walking time.
- Flexible pacing: long and short route options (e.g., Nenoue Pass descent to Nagiso, with optional extension to Tsumago) keep mixed-ability groups happy.
- Photogenic variety: cedar forests, mossy milestones, pass markers, post-town lanterns, castle reflections, ready-made hero shots for albums and socials.













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