Skip to content
Roadside Japan
🎲
Inubosaki Lighthouse
🔭 Viewpoint

Inubosaki Lighthouse

📍 Chiba, Choshi

A tall white lighthouse on the windy cape at Japan's far east, where the mainland catches one of the country's earliest sunrises over the Pacific — climb it for a horizon that curves.

Where the Boso Peninsula runs out into the Pacific, the land ends in a windy headland topped by a tall white tower: the Inubosaki Lighthouse, standing at one of the easternmost points of mainland Japan since 1874.

Why It’s Interesting

Because it faces so far east, Cape Inubo catches one of the earliest sunrises on the Japanese mainland — a fact that turns New Year’s morning here into a pilgrimage. Climb the lighthouse’s spiral of 99 steps and the reward is a vast, uninterrupted ocean horizon so wide you can almost sense the planet curving. Below, waves smash the dark rocks, and the little cape town serves seafood and, of course, rice crackers.

Best Time to Visit

Year-round for the views; dawn for the famous sunrise, and New Year’s Day for the crowds chasing the first light of the year.

Getting There

Take the wonderfully ramshackle Choshi Electric Railway to Inubo Station and walk to the cape — the journey is half the fun.

📸 Mon-chan's camera roll

Snapshots from our very good boy on the road.

A tall white lighthouse on a rugged cliff above the Pacific at sunrise
One of the first spots on the mainland to catch the sunrise. Worth the early start.
Mon-chan and Cinnamon the squirrel watching the sunrise by the white lighthouse
Up before dawn. Cinnamon yelled 'YEAH!' at the sun. The sun did not respond.

Where it is

You might also like

Nearby discoveries

Comments

  • No comments yet — be the first to share a tip.

Leave a comment

Share a tip, a correction, or what you saw. Comments are reviewed before they appear — no account needed.