Japan Events in January 2027: What's On, Where, and Whether It's Free

January 2027 starts at a shrine and ends on ice. The year opens with hatsumode — Japan's first shrine visits, at their peak Jan 1–3 — then Tokyo's attention turns to the Hatsu Basho grand sumo tournament (Jan 10–24) at Ryogoku Kokugikan and the tuner-car spectacle of Tokyo Auto Salon (Jan 15–17). In the snow country the fire-and-ice season begins: Nozawa Onsen's Dosojin fire festival (Jan 15), Sounkyo's ice waterfalls (from Jan 23) — and Kobe Luminarie glows Jan 29 – Feb 7.
As of Jul 2026 — every linked row is confirmed on its own page; tap through for access, tickets and updates.
January 2027 at a glance
| Event | Dates | City / Region | Free? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hatsumode at Meiji Jingu | Jan 1–3 (peak) | Tokyo | Yes |
| Fushimi Inari hatsumode | Jan 1–3 (peak) | Kyoto | Yes |
| Atami Plum Festival | from Jan 9 | Atami (Shizuoka) | Small admission |
| Hatsu Basho (Grand Sumo) | Jan 10–24 | Tokyo (Ryogoku) | Ticketed |
| Tokyo Auto Salon | Jan 15–17 | Makuhari Messe | Ticketed |
| Nozawa Onsen Fire Festival | Jan 15 | Nozawa Onsen (Nagano) | Yes |
| Sounkyo Ice Waterfall Festival | from Jan 23 | Sounkyo (Hokkaido) | Small admission |
| Kobe Luminarie | Jan 29 – Feb 7 | Kobe | Yes (donation requested) |
| Lake Shikotsu Ice Festival | from Jan 30 | near Sapporo | Small admission |
The honest short-list — which one is for you?
| Pick | Best for | The trade-off |
|---|---|---|
| Hatsu Basho | Fifteen days of top-division sumo in central Tokyo — the defining January experience. | Weekends and finals sell out when sales open (~5 weeks ahead); book the moment they do, or aim mid-week. |
| Nozawa Fire Festival | One night of controlled mayhem: villagers defend a wooden shrine from torch-bearers, sake flows. | One night only (Jan 15), in a ski village — beds go extremely early; consider basing in Iiyama or Nagano city. |
| Hokkaido's ice festivals | Frozen waterfalls and lake villages of ice, floodlit at night — deep-winter magic before the February crowds. | It's seriously cold (−10 °C and below); this is a gear-and-onsen trip, not a stroll. |
| New Year in the cities | Hatsumode, fukubukuro lucky-bag sales, first sunrises — culture you can join for free. | Jan 1–3 sees many restaurants and museums still closed; department stores reopen with the sales. |
For most first-timers: the Hatsu Basho — nothing else this month matches its accessibility-to-spectacle ratio. How tickets work: Grand Sumo 2027 guide.
New Year, the Japanese way
The first days belong to the shrines: Meiji Jingu alone draws around three million visitors, Fushimi Inari threads its vermilion gates with queues, and Sumiyoshi Taisha anchors Osaka. Go after Jan 3 for the same atmosphere at a fraction of the wait — shrines welcome hatsumode all month.
Fire and ice up north
Mid-January flips the switch: Nozawa's Dosojin festival (Jan 15) is Japan's wildest fire ritual, then Hokkaido opens Sounkyo's ice waterfalls (from Jan 23) and Lake Shikotsu's ice village (from Jan 30) — both floodlit after dark, both a perfect warm-up (so to speak) for February's Sapporo Snow Festival: see February 2027.
Planning tips for January
- Shutdown lingers to Jan 3. Many restaurants and museums stay closed through the first days — shrines, parks, and the Jan 1–2 fukubukuro sales are the reliable program.
- Sumo is a calendar sport. Advance sales open ~5 weeks out; Tokyo weekends vanish first. Set the reminder now.
- Snow-country logistics are the event. For Nozawa/Sounkyo/Shikotsu, book transport and stays before anything else — January capacity is small and international ski demand is at its peak.
- Luminarie falls at month's end. If Kobe is on your list, aim Jan 29 – Feb 7 and pair it with Osaka — details on the Kobe Luminarie page.
More months: ← December 2026 · February 2027 → · Theme: sumo 2027 schedule · winter illuminations
FAQ
What are the biggest events in Japan in January 2027? Hatsumode shrine visits (peak Jan 1–3), the Hatsu Basho sumo tournament (Jan 10–24, Tokyo), Tokyo Auto Salon (Jan 15–17), Nozawa Onsen's fire festival (Jan 15), Hokkaido's ice festivals (from late Jan) and Kobe Luminarie (Jan 29 – Feb 7).
Is January a good time to visit Japan? Yes for winter culture: sumo, snow, onsen and the New Year atmosphere, with clear dry skies in Tokyo. Expect closures through Jan 3 and full ski-season pricing up north.
When is the Grand Sumo Hatsu Basho 2027 and how do I get tickets? Jan 10–24, 2027 at Ryogoku Kokugikan, Tokyo. Buy on the official channels when advance sales open (~5 weeks ahead); weekdays are the realistic target.
Is hatsumode only on January 1? No — the peak is Jan 1–3, but shrines welcome first visits all month. Going after Jan 3 means the same rituals with far shorter queues.
What festivals happen in the snow in January 2027? Nozawa Onsen's Dosojin Fire Festival (Jan 15), the Sounkyo Ice Waterfall Festival (from Jan 23) and the Lake Shikotsu Ice Festival (from Jan 30) — all floodlit at night.
Tous les événements
OfficialÀ venirGrand Sumo Hatsu Basho 2027 (Tokyo) | Dates, lieu et billets
**Le Grand Sumo Hatsu Basho 2027 se tient du 10 au 24 janvier 2027 au Ryogoku Kokugikan, à Tokyo** : le tournoi du Nouvel An qui ouvre le calendrier du sumo. Il dure 15 jours d'affilée (du dimanche au dimanche) ; **un billet est requis** (à acheter sur le site officiel en anglais). Arrivez vers 14h00–15h00 pour les combats de la division supérieure, qui se terminent toujours vers 18h00.
2027/01/10 08:00 TokyoUn billet est requis (pas d'entrée gratuite). Les prix varient selon le jour et la catégorie de place ; les tarifs 2027 sont publiés avec le tournoi — à confirmer sur sumo.or.jp. À titre indicatif (prix approximatifs de 2026, en date de juillet 2026) : tamari-seki au bord du ring ~¥20 000/personne ; loges de tatami masu-seki ~¥9 000–15 000/personne selon la catégorie et le jour ; sièges occidentaux à partir de ~¥3 500 (catégorie C, en semaine) jusqu'à ~¥11 000+ (SS). La mise en vente a généralement lieu 5 à 8 semaines avant — consultez le site officiel pour la date exacte de 2027.
© Creazilla · CC0
OfficialÀ venirTokyo Auto Salon 2027
Japan's wildest custom-car show, where 300,000 fans crowd in for tuned machines, concept builds and motorsport glamour.
2027/01/15 09:00 TokyoAdvance digital ticket only, around ¥3,000 (weekend day); preschoolers free with an adult.
© Vincent van Gogh · Public domain
OfficialÀ venirKobe Luminarie 2027 | Dates, lieu et billets
**La Kobe Luminarie 2027 se tient du 29 janvier (ven.) au 7 février (dim.) 2027**, pour sa 32e édition. Vous pouvez admirer les arches de lumière **gratuitement depuis les rues alentour** ; les **zones payantes spéciales du Meriken Park** nécessitent un billet (à l'avance 500 ¥ en semaine / 750 ¥ le week-end, à jour de juillet 2026). Les trois sites sont accessibles à pied depuis la gare de Sannomiya.
2027/01/29 18:00 Partout au JaponGratuit
© Yoyogimura · CC BY-SA 4.0
OfficialÀ venirNozawa 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 19:00 Partout au JaponGratuit
© Midori (Wikimedia user) · CC BY-SA 3.0
OfficialÀ venirSounkyo Onsen Ice Waterfall Festival (Hyobaku Matsuri) 2027
In a Daisetsuzan gorge, ice domes and towers fill a riverside field, lit nightly in shifting colors with weekend fireworks over the snow.
2027/01/23 13:00 Partout au JaponCooperation fee around ¥500 (junior-high+); free for younger children.
© Midori (Wikimedia user) · CC BY-SA 3.0
OfficialÀ venirLake Shikotsu Ice Festival (Shikotsuko Hyoto Matsuri) 2027
Sculptors spray the clear blue waters of Lake Shikotsu onto frames to build towering turquoise ice domes and tunnels, glowing in jewel tones after dark.
2027/01/30 10:00 SapporoDonation around ¥500 (high-school age+); free for younger children.
© Inlet Masu · CC BY-SA 3.0
OfficialÀ venirAtami Plum Garden Festival (Atami Bairin)
Famous as Japan's earliest-blooming plum grove, Atami Bairin opens its winter ume from early January with taiko, geisha dances and hot-spring charm.
2027/01/09 09:00 Partout au JaponModest garden admission during the festival (recent years a few hundred yen).
© Ogata Kōrin · Public domain
OfficialÀ venirMeiji Jingu Hatsumode — Japan's Most-Visited New Year Shrine
Roughly three million people stream through the towering torii to pray at Tokyo's grandest shrine in the first three days of the year.
2026/12/31 23:00 TokyoGratuit
© Nightcrafter · CC BY-SA 4.0
OfficialÀ venirFushimi Inari Taisha Hatsumode — Thousand Vermilion Torii
Kyoto's head Inari shrine welcomes some 2.5 million New Year worshippers who pray for prosperity beneath endless tunnels of vermilion torii.
2026/12/31 23:00 KyotoGratuit
© Hyppolyte de Saint-Rambert · CC BY-SA 4.0
OfficialÀ venirSumiyoshi Taisha Hatsumode — 'Sumiyossan' New Year
Some two million Osakans cross the arched Sorihashi bridge to greet the year at 'Sumiyossan,' head shrine of Japan's 2,300 Sumiyoshi shrines.
2026/12/31 22:00 OsakaGratuit
© Saigen Jiro · CC0