Kamakura Beyond the Great Buddha
Deep Dive · Kamakura · 7 min
A walking guide to Kamakura's lesser-visited temples, coastal paths, and the side streets where locals actually eat.
Koku Travel · April 8, 2026
8 places in this guide
Kamakura was Japan's military capital for 150 years, and the temples built during that era still line every hillside and ravine. Most visitors follow the same loop: Tsurugaoka Hachimangu, the Great Buddha, Komachi-dori. That loop is fine. This guide is for the rest.

Tsurugaoka Hachimangu area
Kamakura · Kanto
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Start in Kita-Kamakura
Get off one stop early. Kita-Kamakura Station has no turnstiles and no crowd. Walk south toward Kencho-ji, but before you reach it, turn left up the Daibutsu hiking trail. The path climbs through cedar forest to Kuzuharaoka Shrine, a small hilltop sanctuary that has become known locally as a place for romantic prayers. Couples tie ema boards to the fence; solo hikers just enjoy the quiet.
Continue past Genjiyama Park and descend toward the Great Buddha. You arrive from the mountains instead of the parking lot, which changes the entire experience.
The Bamboo and the Rock Garden
Hokoku-ji Temple draws visitors for its grove of over 2,000 moso bamboo stalks, but the real reason to come is the matcha served inside the grove. Sit on the wooden bench, hold the warm bowl, and listen to the bamboo creak overhead. The tea house closes at 15:30.
Nearby Zuisenji is often called the city's most beautiful temple. The Zen garden was carved directly into the rock cliff behind the main hall. In spring, plum blossoms frame the carved stone; in autumn, the maples turn the entire valley amber.
Hokoku-ji Temple
Kamakura · Kanto
Zen temple with 2,000 bamboo stalks and an in-grove matcha tea house, rivaling Arashiyama.
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Zuisenji
Kamakura · Kanto
Acknowledged most beautiful temple in Kamakura.
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The Ravine Shrines
Sasuke Inari Shrine hides behind a residential neighborhood. Rows of weathered vermillion torii gates climb through thick forest up a narrow ravine. According to legend, the deity here appeared in a dream to Minamoto Yoritomo before his rise to power. Visit on a misty morning when the gates glisten and fog threads through the trees.
Zeniarai Benten Shrine sits inside a cave reached through a tunnel carved into rock. Wash your coins in the sacred spring water. The belief is that your fortune will multiply. The practical reality is that you get wet coins and a good story.

Sasuke Inari Shrine
Kamakura · Kanto
A forest-hidden Inari shrine with dozens of red torii gates tunneling through dense bamboo and cedar.
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Zeniarai Benten Shrine
Kamakura · Kanto
Cave shrine in Kamakura where washing money in sacred spring water is said to double fortune.
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Komachi's Back Streets
Komachi-dori is packed. The parallel side streets one block east and west are not. Here you find a knife sharpener working from a garage, a ceramics studio with irregular-seconds at half price, and coffee roasters who moved to Kamakura specifically because the rent was not Tokyo.
Akimoto serves bowls of rice topped with freshly caught whitebait, available raw or lightly boiled. Iwata Coffee has been here longer than most tourists. The hotcakes take 20 minutes to cook through, arriving golden and dense.
Kamakura Komachi Side Streets
Kamakura · Kanto
The quiet lanes flanking Kamakura's famous Komachi-dori, hiding artisan shops and local cafés away from the crowds.
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The Quiet Coast
Walk from Hasedera down to Yuigahama Beach. In summer, the sand fills with swimmers. In winter, it is yours. The Enoden line runs close enough to the coast that you can hear the trains from the shore.
Gokurakuji Temple sits beside the adorable single-platform Gokurakuji Station. Most passengers ride right past. Walk from the temple down the Gokurakuji-zaka slope toward the water. The ocean view that opens up at the bottom is one of Kamakura's finest.
Komyoji Temple has one of Kamakura's most impressive Sanmon gates, yet the grounds stay nearly empty. After visiting, walk through the back gate directly onto Zaimokuza Beach. Temple silence to ocean wind in thirty seconds.

Hasedera
Kamakura · Kanto
Sister to Nara's Hase-dera and one of the oldest temples in Kamakura.
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Komyoji Temple
Kamakura · Kanto
A grand Pure Land temple near Zaimokuza Beach with Kamakura's largest gate, a lotus pond, and virtually no tourists.
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Getting There
55 minutes from Tokyo Station on the JR Yokosuka Line. Buy an Enoden day pass at Kamakura Station for the coastal stretch. Bring comfortable shoes. The hiking trails are dirt and root, not pavement.
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