Japan's 'Three Great' Festival Trios: Fire, Floats & Where to See Them
The 'three greats' (三大), explained
Japanese tradition loves to crown a 'three great' (sandai) of almost everything — gardens, night views, and especially festivals. The lists aren't official and locals argue over them, but they're a brilliant planning shortcut: each trio points you at the most spectacular, time-tested examples of a single festival type. Knowing the categories turns a wall of matsuri into a clear map.
The three great float festivals (日本三大曳山祭)
Towering wheeled floats — dashi, yamaboko, kasaboko — hauled through the streets by teams of pullers, often UNESCO-listed.
- Gion Matsuri (Kyoto, July): the grandest of all, its tapestry-draped yamaboko gliding through downtown Kyoto in the Yamaboko Junko procession.
- Takayama Festival (Gifu, spring & autumn): ornate floats with moving karakuri puppets in a postcard-perfect old town.
- Chichibu Night Festival (Saitama, December): floats hauled up a steep hill by lantern-light while winter fireworks explode overhead.
The three great fire festivals (日本三大火祭り)
Flame as ritual — torches, bonfires and burning structures that purify and protect.
- Nozawa Onsen Fire Festival (Nagano, January 15): a wild 'fire-setting battle' in deep snow, men of the unlucky ages defending a giant wooden shrine.
- Kurama Fire Festival (Kyoto, October): villagers carry blazing pine torches through a mountain hamlet north of Kyoto.
- (The third seat is contested — Nachi's fire festival in Wakayama is a common pick.)
Other trios worth knowing
- Three great 'fighting' festivals (喧嘩祭り): heavy floats deliberately crashed together — Nada no Kenka Matsuri in Himeji is the headline act.
- *Three great tanabata: star-festival streets buried in paper streamers, led by Sendai Tanabata* in August.
How to plan around a trio
Pick a season, then a type. Winter? Aim a trip at a fire festival. Summer? Floats and tanabata. Build the rest of the itinerary around that anchor — the dated picks below span fire, floats and a fighting festival so you can slot one into almost any month.
Todos los eventos
Gion Matsuri (Yamaboko Junko Float Procession)
Kyoto's grandest festival fills July with towering wooden floats, lantern-lit evening parties, and 1,100 years of tradition.
2026/07/17 KiotoGratis
© Salvador Fernández · GoogleTakayama Autumn Festival (Hachiman Matsuri)
Eleven gilded Edo-era floats parade through old Takayama by day, then glow with 100+ lanterns at dusk in one of Japan's three most beautiful festivals.
2026/10/09 NagoyaGratis
© kari one · GoogleChichibu Night Festival 2026
One of Japan's three great float festivals: six lantern-lit floats are hauled up a steep hill in the December cold while winter fireworks burst overhead.
2026/12/02 05:00 TokioGratis
© 鈴木隆一 · GoogleNozawa Onsen Fire Festival 2027
One of Japan's three great fire festivals: villagers defend a giant wooden shrine with blazing torches as attackers try to set it alight in a wild snowbound battle.
2027/01/15 10:00 Por todo JapónGratis
© 雲 · GoogleKurama Fire Festival (Kurama no Hi Matsuri)
Men in loincloths haul flaming 80-kg torches through a mountain village after dark in one of Kyoto's wildest, most primal night festivals.
2026/10/22 09:00 KiotoGratis
© Nishimura T. · GoogleNada no Kenka Matsuri 2026 (Fighting Festival)
Three portable shrines are violently crashed together as seven ornate floats clash in Japan's most famous 'fighting festival.'
2026/10/14 01:00 Por todo JapónGratis
© k (ken5) · Google