Gion Matsuri
Gion Matsuri is not just Kyoto's biggest festival — it is one of Japan's three great festivals, and it has been running in some form for over a thousand years. What started in 869 as a religious ceremony to ward off plague has grown into a month-long celebration that peaks with spectacular float processions through the city center.
Key Dates
The festival runs throughout July, but the essential dates are:
July 14–16: Yoiyama (evening pre-festival). The streets around Shijo-dori are closed to traffic and lined with food stalls. The massive wooden festival floats (yamaboko) are displayed on the streets, lit with paper lanterns. The atmosphere is electric — this is when locals come out in yukata to stroll, eat, and socialize.
July 17: Saki Matsuri (main procession). Thirty-three towering floats, some weighing 12 tonnes, are pulled through the streets by teams of men in traditional costume. The floats are decorated with centuries-old tapestries, some from as far as Persia and Flanders. The procession begins at 9:00am from Shijo Karasuma.
July 24: Ato Matsuri (rear procession). A smaller, quieter second procession with eleven floats. Less crowded and, many locals say, more enjoyable for actually seeing the floats up close.
If you can only attend one event, choose the Yoiyama evenings (July 14–16). The combination of the illuminated floats, the festival music (kon-chiki-chin), the summer evening air, and the river of people in yukata creates an atmosphere that captures the essence of Japanese summer celebration.
Kibune Kawadoko Dining
Kawadoko (literally "river floor") dining is a Kyoto summer tradition where restaurants build wooden platforms directly over mountain streams. You sit on tatami mats just inches above rushing water, eating elegant multi-course meals while the cold air rising from the stream provides natural air conditioning.
Kibune, a small village in the mountains north of Kyoto, is the most famous kawadoko destination. The narrow valley is filled with restaurants that extend platforms over the Kibune River from May to September. The temperature here is typically 5–10 degrees cooler than central Kyoto, and the sound of the river and the green canopy of trees overhead create a sense of retreat that feels worlds away from the city's summer heat.
How to Experience Kawadoko
Take the Eizan Railway from Demachiyanagi Station to Kibuneguchi Station (30 min), then walk or take a shuttle bus up the valley. Reservations are strongly recommended, especially on weekends. Expect to pay ¥5,000–15,000 per person for a multi-course meal. Lunch is easier to book than dinner.
An alternative, lesser-known kawadoko experience is found in Takao, a mountain valley west of the city. The restaurants here are quieter and slightly less expensive than Kibune, with a wilder, more forested atmosphere.
Escaping the Heat
July and August in Kyoto can reach 38°C with suffocating humidity. The basin geography that makes the city beautiful in autumn traps heat and moisture in summer. Locals have developed centuries of strategies for coping.
Mountain Temples
Kurama-dera and Kifune Shrine are in the mountains north of the city, significantly cooler than the city floor. The hike over Mount Kurama between the two is shaded and atmospheric. Enryaku-ji on Mount Hiei is even cooler and emptier.
Bamboo Groves
The bamboo at Arashiyama and the lesser-known Sagano area provides dense shade and the rustling leaves create the psychological sensation of coolness that Japanese culture calls "suzushisa." The deeper into the grove you walk, the cooler it gets.
Kamo River Evening
After sunset, the Kamo River becomes Kyoto's living room. Locals sit on the riverbanks between Shijo and Sanjo bridges, drinking beer, eating snacks, and letting the evening breeze off the water cool them down. Join them. This is summer in Kyoto at its most authentic.
Summer Evening Walks
Summer evenings are Kyoto's secret weapon. The heat breaks around 7pm, the golden-hour light softens, and the city takes on a warm glow that makes everything look better. Several areas are particularly rewarding for evening walks.
- Gion & Shinbashi: The lanterns along the Shirakawa canal are lit, the wooden machiya glow with warm light, and you may glimpse a maiko walking between engagements
- Pontocho Alley: The narrow dining alley beside the Kamo River comes alive with the clatter of plates and laughter from the riverside terraces
- Higashiyama (Ninenzaka & Sannenzaka): The stone-paved streets near Kiyomizu-dera are dramatically quieter after the temple closes, lit by traditional shop lanterns
- Fushimi Inari after dark: The shrine is open 24 hours. Walking the torii gate trail by the light of stone lanterns on a warm summer night is otherworldly
Summer in Kyoto is not easy. The heat is real, the humidity is relentless, and by 2pm you will want to do nothing but sit in an air-conditioned cafe. But the city rewards those who adapt to its rhythm: early mornings, long lunches, mountain retreats, and late evenings when the ancient streets cool down and the sound of festival drums carries across the water.
Last updated: 2026-03-03