July kicks off Japan's festival season with Gion Matsuri, Tenjin Matsuri, fireworks, and ancient fire rituals. Your complete July guide.
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July is when Japan's festival season truly ignites. The rainy season lifts, summer heat arrives, and communities pour into the streets for celebrations stretching back centuries. Whether you are planning your first festival trip or building a summer itinerary, July delivers like no other month.
July Festival Calendar
| Dates | Festival | Location |
|---|---|---|
| July 1--31 | Gion Matsuri | Kyoto |
| July 1--15 | Hakata Gion Yamakasa | Fukuoka |
| July 7 | Tanabata | Nationwide |
| July 14 | Nachi Fire Festival | Wakayama |
| Mid-July | Mitama Matsuri | Tokyo |
| July 24--25 | Tenjin Matsuri | Osaka |
| Last Sat. of July | Sumidagawa Fireworks | Tokyo |
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The Festivals
Gion Matsuri -- Kyoto (July 1--31)
Japan's most famous festival spans the entire month. Born in 869 as a purification ritual, it centers on towering yamaboko floats draped in centuries-old tapestries. Grand processions roll through Kyoto on July 17 and 24, but the yoiyama evenings (July 15--16) -- lantern-lit floats, food stalls, festive crowds -- are equally magical. Full details in our Gion Matsuri guide.
Tenjin Matsuri -- Osaka (July 24--25)
One of Japan's top three festivals, honoring the deity of scholarship at Osaka Tenmangu Shrine. Day one: 3,000 participants in Heian-period costumes. Day two: illuminated boats glide along the Okawa River, capped by fireworks on the water. See our Tenjin Matsuri guide.
Hakata Gion Yamakasa -- Fukuoka (July 1--15)
Fukuoka's most intense festival. Teams race through Hakata carrying one-ton floats, building to the oiyama dawn race on July 15 at 4:59 AM -- thirty breathtaking minutes of speed and tradition.
Sumidagawa Fireworks -- Tokyo (Last Saturday of July)
Dating back to 1733, around 20,000 fireworks burst above the Sumida River near Asakusa. Nearly a million spectators line the riverbanks for one of Tokyo's most iconic summer nights.
Tanabata -- Nationwide (July 7)
The Star Festival celebrates the yearly meeting of celestial lovers Orihime and Hikoboshi. Streets fill with streamers and bamboo branches hung with tanzaku -- paper strips where people write wishes. The largest Tanabata events happen in August, but many cities honor the traditional July 7 date.
Mitama Matsuri -- Tokyo (Mid-July)
For four evenings, roughly 30,000 lanterns illuminate Yasukuni Shrine. The golden glow, bon odori dancing, and food stalls create one of Tokyo's most photogenic summer moments.
Nachi Fire Festival -- Wakayama (July 14)
Twelve enormous torches blaze down the stone steps of Kumano Nachi Taisha to meet portable shrines ascending from below. The flames against Nachi Falls -- Japan's tallest single-drop waterfall -- make this one of the country's most dramatic rituals.
Why July Is Special
July marks the shift from rainy season into full summer, historically tied to purification and warding off disease. Many of these festivals trace roots back over a thousand years. For travelers, July falls before the Obon rush in mid-August, so accommodation is easier to secure -- though Gion Matsuri week in Kyoto is a notable exception.
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Travel Tips
Beat the heat. July averages 30+ degrees with high humidity. Carry a towel, portable fan, and water.
Book early. Hotels near Gion Matsuri and Tenjin Matsuri sell out months ahead.
Combine festivals. Kyoto to Osaka is 15 minutes by shinkansen -- attend both in the same week.
Check our 2026 festival calendar for exact dates and the festival tips guide for etiquette basics. July in Japan is loud, hot, and electric -- time it right and you will witness traditions unbroken for centuries.
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Explore More Festival Guides
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