Kansai
Arashiyama Bamboo Grove
How to visit Kyoto's Arashiyama bamboo grove: when to go before the crowds, whether to pay for a boat or rickshaw, and the temples and bridge worth pairing with the 10-minute walk.
Where
Kyoto, Japan
Opening hours
The bamboo path is an open public street — accessible 24 hours, free, with no ticket or gate. Aim to walk it before 08:00 or after 16:00. Tenryu-ji temple (whose grounds frame the path) opens 08:30–17:00; last entry 16:50.
Tickets
The grove is free. Tenryu-ji garden ¥500 (~£2.70), garden plus buildings ¥800. Iwatayama Monkey Park ¥800. Hozugawa river boat ¥4,100 adult / ¥2,700 child (~£22/£14). Sagano Romantic Train ¥880 one way (~£4.70). Ebisuya rickshaw from ¥7,000 per person for the 30-minute course.
Time needed
The bamboo walk itself is 10–15 minutes. Allow half a day for Arashiyama as a whole if you add Tenryu-ji and the bridge; a full day if you also do the boat or the scenic train.
In short
Visiting Arashiyama Bamboo Grove
The bamboo grove itself is a free, ten-minute walk along a public path beside Tenryu-ji temple — there is no ticket, no gate and no queue, just an open lane that funnels every tour group in Kyoto by mid-morning. Get there before 08:00 (the JR Sagano Line from Kyoto Station takes ~17 minutes for ¥240) and the towering green corridor is genuinely quiet and worth it; turn up at 11:00 and it's a slow shuffle of selfie sticks. The grove fills barely fifteen minutes, so the real decision is what you pair it with: Tenryu-ji's garden (¥500), the Hozugawa river boat from Kameoka, the Sagano scenic train, or an Ebisuya rickshaw that pulls you down the prettier closed lanes.
Go early, or don’t bother
The thing nobody tells you is that the famous bamboo grove is a free public lane about as long as a supermarket aisle — there’s no ticket, no gate, no queue to skip, just an open path running along the north side of Tenryu-ji temple. That sounds convenient, and it is, until you realise the same lack of a gate means every coach tour in Kyoto pours straight in. Walk it before 08:00 and the green corridor is hushed and genuinely striking, with soft light raking down the stalks. Walk it at 11:00 and you’re shuffling behind raised phones until mid-afternoon.
Getting there is easy and cheap: the JR Sagano Line from Kyoto Station drops you at Saga-Arashiyama in about 17 minutes for ¥240 (roughly £1.30), then it’s a five-minute walk. The first trains of the day are the whole trick — they get you to the grove well before the coaches arrive. If you can only come mid-morning, come back at 16:00 instead, when the day-trippers thin out.
What to actually pay for
The bamboo walk itself fills ten to fifteen minutes, so the real question is what you pair it with. Tenryu-ji’s garden (¥500, about £2.70) is the one paid sight we’d always add — its pond-and-borrowed-mountain layout is one of Kyoto’s best, and its rear gate spits you straight onto the bamboo path. From there it’s a short walk to the Togetsukyo bridge over the Katsura river, the postcard view of the whole district.
For something beyond a walk, you’ve three options and they’re not equal. The Hozugawa river boat (¥4,100 adult, ¥2,700 child) is the best half-day value — a two-hour, 16km drift down a gorge from Kameoka that ends in Arashiyama, part scenery, part gentle white-water. The Sagano Romantic Train (¥880 one way, 25 minutes) is the lazy alternative if you want the gorge views without the time commitment. And the Ebisuya rickshaw (from ¥7,000 per person for 30 minutes) is the one splurge we’d defend: it pulls you down the quiet, closed-to-foot-traffic lanes the crowds never see, with a guide doing the talking.
The grove alone is a ten-minute photo stop that’s been oversold, but Arashiyama as a half-day — grove at dawn, Tenryu-ji, the bridge, and a boat or rickshaw — is one of the better days out from central Kyoto. Skip the Iwatayama Monkey Park (¥800 plus a sweaty 20-minute climb) unless you’re travelling with kids who’ll love it.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Kyoto city guide.
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