Shikoku is well off the beaten track followed by most travelers to Japan. Throughout history, the country’s fourth-largest island has evoked a sense of mystery, and even today, visitors feel as if they’re setting out on a trip of discovery when they head to Shikoku.

Part of Shikoku’s shroud of mystery is due to its perceived remoteness and longstanding reputation as a place for religious ascetic practice – for 1200 years, Buddhist pilgrims have been walking around the island’s 88 Sacred Temples in their never-ending search for enlightenment.

The island has four distinct regions, hence the name shi (four) and koku (region). Before the days of air travel, the only way to reach Shikoku was by boat, and up until the mid-1980s, it took a major effort to get there.

But nowadays there are three bridge systems linking it with Honshū, one with railway tracks, and aircraft regularly fly into the four main cities. With the doors wide open, visitors from all over the world can enjoy the host of activities Shikoku has to offer. Here’s our list of the top things to do. 

Tokushima Prefecture

Dance until you drop at the Awa-odori

Held in mid-August, Awa-odori is the biggest bon (festival for the dead) dance in Japan. Over a million turn up in Tokushima city each year to watch dancers rhythmically sway through the streets, accompanied by shamisen (three-stringed guitars), taiko (drums) and fue (flutes). Colorful groups represent villages from throughout the prefecture in a four-day party to honor their ancestors.   

Explore the remote Iya Valley

You’ll want your own wheels to get into this rugged, remote valley in the central mountains, long a haven for those on the run – most famously, members of the vanquished Heike clan following defeat to the Minamoto during the 12th-century Gempei wars. 

Here you’ll find rivers crisscrossed with kazura-bashi (vine bridges); Nagoro, a dwindling village now populated by kakashi (life-size dolls – yes, dolls!) and at the head of the valley, a trail up Tsurugi-san, the island’s second-highest peak.

Cruise into the Naruto Whirlpools

The tides produce spectacular whirlpools in the shallow, narrow strait between Shikoku and Awaji Island, where the Inland Sea meets the Pacific Ocean off Shikoku’s northeast coast. Head out on a sightseeing boat for a roller coaster–like ride through the swirling waters, or, for a less stomach-churning view, walk out on the Uzu-no-michi Viewing Walkway, which hangs below the Naruto Bridge, 42m (140ft) above the swirling action. 

Ride the cable car up to Tairyū-ji

While a millennium of walking pilgrims have had to struggle up steep paths to reach the mountaintop Tairyū-ji, Temple 21 of Shikoku’s legendary 88 temples, modern visitors can take an exciting 2.7km (1.7-mile) aerial cable car to this atmospheric haven from the valley below. Tairyū-ji oozes history and sacredness with towering cedar trees, ancient temple buildings and chanting pilgrims.

Kōchi Prefecture 

A bowl with seared slices of bonito, plus a bottle and glass of sake

Try local delicacies at Hirome Ichiba

Kōchi city’s cheap-eats scene is centered around Hirome Ichiba, nicknamed “Kōchi’s kitchen”, a market of around 70 stalls in a building below the city’s impressive castle. There’s no bad time to go, but to view the Kōchi populace enjoying local food and drink at the communal tables, aim for evenings or weekends, when the place is positively hopping. Make sure to try katsuo-no-tataki (seared bonito), considered the soul food of Kōchi. 

Search for enlightenment at Muroto-misaki

Kōchi prefecture’s great southeastern cape juts out into the Pacific Ocean, where it’s often battered by pounding waves and howling typhoons. On a good day, however, it’s a wondrous spot, the place where Kōbō Daishi, founder of Shingon Buddhism and the saint who founded the 88-temple pilgrimage, is said to have attained enlightenment. Check out the early 9th-century hilltop temple, Hotsumisaki-ji, as well as his bathing hole among the rock pools.  

Peruse the wares at Kōchi’s Sunday market

Going strong for more than 330 years, Kōchi city’s Sunday street market boasts 400 stalls stretching east from the main gate at the foot of Kōchi castle. Along with a boggling array of tantalizing street foods, you’ll find fresh local produce, dried fruit, homemade pickles and Kōchi-grown green tea. Local souvenirs include hand-forged Kōchi kitchen knives, wooden masks and fishing-boat flags.

Try local Kōchi sake at Tosa-shu Baru

This smoke-free bar, a street back from Obiyamachi Arcade in Kōchi city, is a beauty, featuring sake from all 18 of Kōchi prefecture’s sake breweries. Owner Kōji is passionate about his sake, offering three daily-changing nomi-kurabe tasting sets, along with small plates of local delicacies. 

Tosa is the old name for Kōchi Prefecture, and this place’s name translates to “Tosa Sake Bar.” It’s a real Kōchi experience featuring enthusiastic, knowledgeable Kōchi pride.

Ehime Prefecture 

Soak in the soothing waters of Dōgo Onsen

Matsuyama city’s Dōgo Onsen Honkan is a 19th-century public bathhouse built over ancient hot springs, made famous in Natsume Soseki’s 1906 novel Botchan. It is the place to go for a soak, despite building renovations planned to last until 2026.

Dōgo Onsen has two other modern bathing complexes nearby. In the eastern part of the city, the Dōgo Onsen area has a plethora of hotels and ryokan, most sporting their own onsen, plus a bustling township of arcades leading up to the Honkan bathhouse.

What you need to know about visiting an onsen

Clamber around inside Matsuyama Castle

Perched high above the city on Mt Katsuyama, Matsuyama-jō is one of Japan’s finest surviving castles. You can skip most of the climb up to the castle entrance by taking an aerial cable car, but the walk is a pleasant one. The path winds around massive stone walls before leading into the castle itself, where there are wooden stairs and ladders to be climbed, narrow corridors to be negotiated, towers to be peeked out of and a treasure trove of artifacts to be examined. 

Climbers using chains to pull themselves up a steep, rocky slope
To test your mettle, take the

Climb Ishizuchi-san, the highest peak in western Japan

Shikoku’s highest peak is an enjoyable ascent, more so if you run into Shintō mountain ascetics on the trail. This holy mountain can be climbed by a number of routes: from Nishi-no-kawa, with the use of an aerial ropeway, or from Tsuchi-goya, with your own wheels. 

To test your mettle, take the kusari routes near the peak, using the steel chains embedded in the rock to pull yourself up steep spots. There’s also a roundabout route to the hut at the top for those inclined to take it. 

Stroll the Yōkaichi historic district of Uchiko

The small town of Uchiko was once known as a producer of fine vegetable wax, winning awards at world expositions in Chicago (1893) and Paris (1900). The town’s preserved main street features museums, souvenir and craft shops, accommodations and tea houses in cream-colored plaster-walled buildings – an extremely convivial and historic atmosphere. Watch traditional candlemakers at work at Ōmori Wa-rōsoku.

Kagawa Prefecture

A young woman in Yayoi Kusama's Red Pumpkin on the island of Naoshima
Naoshima has become a world-renowned visitor attraction with some of Japan’s best contemporary art, including Yayoi Kusama’s

Admire art on the Inland Sea island of Naoshima

North of Takamatsu city and reached by ferry, Naoshima has become a world-renowned visitor attraction with some of Japan’s best contemporary art, plus works by international names, displayed in magnificent museums designed by award-winning architect Tadao Ando. See Yayoi Kusama’s Red Pumpkin, pieces by Andy Warhol, David Hockney and Jasper Johns and several of Monet’s water lily paintings. The Art House Project has rejuvenated a run-down area with creative installations by contemporary artists. 

5 reasons to visit Japan’s Shikoku Kagawa prefecture 

Climb to the inner shrine of Konpira-san at Kotohira

Tell any older Japanese person that you’ve been to Shikoku, and they’ll ask if you climbed Konpira-san – a Shintō shrine dedicated to the god of seafarers, its 1368 stone steps are seen as a rite of passage for many Japanese. There’s a whole town at the foot of the walk catering to Japanese visitors, and though the thousand-plus stone steps may not appeal, the Shintō gates, halls and pavilions along the way are captivating, as are the views. 

Enjoy the gardens and teahouses of Ritsurin Park

Takamatsu city’s Ritsurin-kōen is known throughout Japan as one of the country’s most beautiful gardens. Dating from the mid-1600s, it took more than a century to complete as a “walking garden” for the local daimyō (lord) and boasts a series of ponds full of brightly colored carp, bridges, islands and traditional tearooms. Wander the winding paths and imagine yourself as an influential feudal lord. 

A chef preparing a bowl of udon
You won’t have to look too hard to find a Sanuki-udon shop in Kagawa – it seems like there’s one on every corner © Said Karlsson / Lonely Planet

Partake of the local noodle delicacy, Sanuki-udon

Sanuki is the former name of Kagawa prefecture, and while it may be the smallest of Japan’s 47 districts, it certainly packs a wallop in terms of national recognition. Cheekily calling itself udon-ken (udon prefecture), Kagawa is the place to try udon (thick wheat noodles) in the local broth. You won’t have to look too hard to find a Sanuki-udon shop – it may seem like there’s one on every corner. This is cheap, local comfort food at its best. Don’t leave Kagawa without trying a bowl or two.

Shikoku is on our 2022 Best of Travel list. For more stories from some of the world’s most exciting destinations click here.

Safety recommendations and restrictions during a pandemic can change rapidly. Lonely Planet recommends that travelers always check with local authorities for up-to-date guidance before traveling during Covid-19.

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