First-Timer's Guide to Japanese Festival Etiquette
Before you go
Japanese festivals are joyful and open, but a little awareness goes a long way. Check the schedule and arrive early for processions and fireworks — prime spots fill hours ahead. Consider renting a yukata (light summer kimono); many festivals practically expect it, and rental shops are everywhere.
During the festival
- Follow the flow. Crowds often move one direction; don't push against it, and watch for staff directing foot traffic.
- Mind your photos. Action like Kishiwada's racing floats moves fast — stay behind barriers. In intimate spots like Golden Gai, ask before photographing people or interiors.
- Cash is king. Food stalls (yatai) are almost always cash-only.
- Carry your trash. Public bins are rare; bring a small bag and take rubbish with you.
Joining in
Some festivals — Awa Odori, Nebuta, the Naha tug-of-war — actively invite spectators to dance or pull. If you wear the right outfit and follow along respectfully, you're welcome.
The golden rule
Be curious, be considerate, and smile. Japanese festivals reward visitors who join the spirit of the moment.
Tous les événements
Kishiwada Danjiri Matsuri
Teams haul massive wooden festival floats at full sprint through Kishiwada's streets in one of Japan's most thrilling matsuri.
2026/09/18 21:00 OsakaGratuit
© アナム博士! · GoogleAwa Odori Dance Festival
Japan's most famous dance festival: 100,000 dancers and a million spectators fill Tokushima with rhythm every August.
2026/08/12 09:00 Partout au JaponGratuit
© 坂口博紀(さかグルメっち) · GoogleAomori Nebuta Matsuri
Giant illuminated warrior floats are paraded through Aomori nightly as chanting dancers leap alongside in a blaze of color.
2026/08/02 10:00 Partout au JaponGratuit
© Fisherman · CC BY-SA 3.0Naha Great Tug-of-War Festival
Join thousands pulling the world's largest straw rope through Naha in this Guinness-record Okinawan autumn festival.
2026/10/11 02:00 OkinawaGratuit
© JCHuang · GoogleSanja Matsuri
Asakusa's wildest weekend: nearly 100 portable shrines and two million people flood the streets around Senso-ji Temple.
2026/05/15 02:00 TokyoGratuit
© Guanchul Guanchunao · Google