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Japanese national parks Voyage Tips and guide

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    National parks of Japan (国立公園 kokuritsu-koen), 34 in total, are listed here by region from north to south. In addition, Japan has 58 Quasi-National Parks (国定公園 kokutei-koen) designated by the state and administered by prefectures.

    Understand

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    Ministry of Environment has an official site for the National Parks and lists of both kinds of parks in English. Its Japanese site has a page for Quasi-National Parks with links to prefecture websites.

    JNTO has a well-organized English-language site dedicated to National Parks.

    Fees

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    Japanese national parks don't require any fee to enter. However, money on voluntary basis (協力金, kyōryokukin) may be collected in some areas, typically around high mountains, to help protecting the environment.

    Hokkaido

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    Lakes in Shiretoko National Park
    • 3 Akan-Mashu National Park – designated a national park on December 4, 1934, together with Daisetsuzan National Park, it is the oldest national park in Japan. The park is separated into two separate areas, the Akan area centered around the Akan caldera, and the Kawayu area, centered around the caldera lake of Lake Mashu and Lake Kussharo.
    • 4 Kushiro-shitsugen National Park Kushiro-shitsugen National Park on Wikipedia – home to Japan's largest wetland and the only place where the endangered Japanese crane can be found
    • 5 Daisetsuzan National Park – Japan's largest park, home to many onsen towns and unspoilt wilderness. It is also home to Hokkaido's tallest mountain, Mount Asahi.

    Tohoku

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    Blue Pond of Goshikinuma in Bandai-Asahi National Park
    • 7 Towada-Hachimantai National Park
    • 8 Sanriku Fukkō National Park Sanriku Fukkō National Park on Wikipedia – a park created in 2013, after the Great Tohoku Earthquake devastated the Sanriku Coast, to help reconstruct and revitalize the area.
    • 9 Bandai-Asahi National Park Bandai-Asahi National Park on Wikipedia – consists of the Iide and Asahi Mountains in Niigata Prefecture, the Bandai area of Fukushima Prefecture, and Dewa Sanzan in Yamagata Prefecture.

    Kanto

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    Chubu

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    Kamikochi in Chubu Sangaku National Park
    • Myoko-Togakushi Renzan National Park
    • Chubu Sangaku National Park
    • Minami Alps National Park – a park encompassing the Akaishi Mountains.

    Kansai

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    • Yoshino-Kumano National Park - This park encompasses the entirety of the Kansai region from Yoshino on down.

    Chugoku

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    View from Washuzan in Setonaikai National Park
    • San-in Kaigan National Park - A coastal park, spanning the region around the Sea of Japan from Tottori to Kyoto Prefecture.
    • Setonaikai National Park - The first and largest national park in Japan. Any place in or around the Seto Inland Sea is considered to be part of the park.

    Shikoku

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    • Ashizuri-Uwakai National Park - A park made up of locations on the southwestern corner of Shikoku in Ehime and Kochi, including Cape Ashizuri.

    Kyushu

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    Wilson Stump heart in Yakushima
    • Aso-Kuju National Park - Originally established strictly around Mount Aso, the park was later expanded to include the Kuju Mountains.

    (Kirishima-Yaku National Park was divided to the following two Parks in 2012.)

    • Kirishima-Kinkowan National Park
    • Amami Gunto National Park - The nine islands of the Amami Islands were made a national park in 2017.

    Okinawa

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    • Yambaru National Park - The northernmost peninsula of Okinawa Island, since 2016.

    Quasi-National Parks

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    See also

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