Japan's Fireworks (Hanabi) Season 2026: The Dated Calendar
Why hanabi own the Japanese summer
Fireworks (hanabi) aren't a sideshow in Japan — they're the headline event of summer, drawing crowds in yukata to riverbanks for displays of 10,000–20,000 shells. The season runs roughly late July through late August, with a few competition showpieces stretching into autumn. Every date below is confirmed for 2026.
Tokyo & around
- Sumida River Fireworks — July 25, 2026 (last Sat of July), 7:00 pm. Tokyo's most iconic hanabi: ~20,000 shells over the river by Asakusa, framed by Tokyo Skytree. Held since the Edo era.
- Edogawa & Itabashi Fireworks — early August. Two of Tokyo's biggest, less foreign-tourist-heavy than Sumida.
- Jingu Gaien Fireworks — August. A central-Tokyo show paired with live music.
The lake & river giants
- Nagaoka Festival Grand Fireworks — Aug 2–3, 2026. One of Japan's 'big three', famous for the colossal Phoenix sequence over the Shinano River.
- Lake Biwa Fireworks, Otsu — August. ~10,000 shells mirrored on Japan's largest lake, an easy hop from Kyoto.
- Lake Suwa Fireworks — Aug 15, 2026. A natural amphitheatre of mountains echoes the blasts across the water.
- Katakai Festival Fireworks — Sept 9–10. Home of the record-setting yonshakudama, one of the world's largest shells.
The competitions (master pyrotechnicians)
- Omagari National Fireworks Competition — Aug 29, 2026. The 'fireworks Olympics' where Japan's top hanabishi compete for the Prime Minister's Prize.
- Tsuchiura All-Japan Fireworks Competition — early November. The autumn counterpart to Omagari; crisp air, technical brilliance.
Visitor tips
- Arrive hours early for a spot, or buy reserved seating where offered — the best riverbanks fill by afternoon.
- Trains are packed afterward; build in patience or walk a station out.
- Bring cash for yatai stalls, a fan, and a small mat to sit on.
- Many displays avoid Obon week itself — check the exact date, as a rain-date shift is common.
The dated picks below let you build a fireworks-led trip across Tokyo, Kansai and the great northern competitions.
Tous les événements
Sumida River Fireworks Festival 2026
Tokyo's most storied summer fireworks show launches 20,000 shells over the Sumida River with Tokyo Skytree glowing behind.
2026/07/25 10:00 TokyoGratuit
© Mark Williams · GoogleJingu Gaien Fireworks Festival 2026
Ten thousand fireworks burst over central Tokyo synced to a live concert lineup, a rare downtown display you can pair with a stadium seat.
2026/08/08 10:30 TokyoFree to glimpse from afar; the official stadium viewing-and-concert tickets are paid.
© ミスタータイガース72 · GoogleNagaoka Festival Grand Fireworks 2026
One of Japan's three great fireworks festivals, famed for the colossal 'Phoenix' shells fired across the Shinano River as a prayer for peace.
2026/08/02 10:20 Partout au JaponGratuit
© ひろと · GoogleLake Biwa Grand Fireworks Festival 2026
Around 12,000 fireworks reflect off Japan's largest lake near Otsu in a 40th-anniversary show fused with drones and lasers.
2026/08/06 10:30 KyotoGratuit
© ミシガンクルーズのりば(琵琶湖汽船) · GoogleLake Suwa Fireworks Festival 2026
Around 40,000 fireworks erupt over Lake Suwa, their booms echoing off the surrounding mountains in one of central Japan's most spectacular summer displays.
2026/08/15 10:00 Partout au JaponGratuit
© 松尾まさひろ · GoogleKatakai Festival Fireworks 2026
The birthplace of the giant 'sanshakudama', this Niigata shrine festival fires the world's largest fireworks shell — a four-shaku, 800kg behemoth.
2026/09/11 10:30 Partout au JaponGratuit
© 夏澄 · GoogleOmagari National Fireworks Competition 2026
Japan's most prestigious pyrotechnic competition, where the nation's top fireworks artisans battle for the Prime Minister's Award.
2026/08/29 08:10 Partout au JaponReserved seating required for prime spots (paid); riverbank viewing free
© 920 kana · GoogleTsuchiura All-Japan Fireworks Competition 2026
One of Japan's three great fireworks competitions, where rival pyrotechnicians fire 20,000 shells over the Sakuragawa river to be crowned the nation's best.
2026/11/07 08:30 Partout au JaponGratuit
© Takanori Isoyama · Google