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Kyoto Gozan no Okuribi (Daimonji Bonfire Festival) — Kyoto, August 2026

On 16 August 2026, Kyoto's Gozan no Okuribi lights five giant bonfires on the mountains around the city to close the Obon festival of the ancestors.

  • 16 August 2026
  • 京都市, Japan
▸ About this event

On 16 August 2026, Kyoto's Gozan no Okuribi lights five giant bonfires on the mountains around the city to close the Obon festival of the ancestors.

Each **16 August**, as the Obon season of honouring the dead draws to a close, five colossal fires are lit on the mountains ringing **Kyoto**. **Gozan no Okuribi** — often called the **Daimonji Festival** after its most famous fire — is a solemn, deeply atmospheric send-off, its flames meant to guide ancestral spirits back to the other world after their brief return during Obon. The tradition is centuries old and, unlike Kyoto's spring and autumn crowds, draws people out into the warm night to watch in near silence as the characters flare against the dark hillsides.

## What to expect

The fires are lit in sequence in the evening, each burning for roughly half an hour. The great **Daimonji** character (meaning "great") on Mount Nyoigatake lights first, followed by **Myo-Ho** (a Buddhist teaching), the **Funagata** (a ship shape), the **Hidari Daimonji** (a second "great" on the western hills) and finally the **Toriigata** (a torii shrine gate). Together they trace glowing shapes across five peaks. There is no single venue — the spectacle is watched from open ground across the city, with the banks of the **Kamo River** a classic and accessible vantage point for the first Daimonji fire.

Arrive well before the 20:00 lighting to claim a clear northeast-facing spot; the riverbanks and bridges fill quickly, and higher open areas offer views of more than one fire at once.

▸ In photos

Kyoto Gozan no Okuribi (Daimonji Bonfire Festival) — Kyoto, August 2026 in photos

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How to get there

The Daimonji bonfires are lit on the mountainsides ringing Kyoto, best seen from riverbanks and open spots across the city rather than a single venue. Fly into Kansai International (KIX) or Osaka Itami (ITM). From Kansai, the JR Haruka express runs to Kyoto Station in about 75 minutes. Kyoto Station is the main hub; from there, subway and bus lines reach popular viewing areas such as the Kamo River near Demachiyanagi (Keihan line) and the Imadegawa area. On the night the city is crowded, so use the subway and trains rather than taxis, and stake out a river viewpoint well before the first fire is lit.

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