Kamakura Private Tour from Yokohama with Guide and Vehicle

Kamakura, JP
66% of travellers recommend this
Good (2 reviews)

Included

  • inclusion
    Licensed Local English Speaking Guide
  • inclusion
    Customizable Tour of your choice of 3-4 sites from 'What to expect' list'
  • inclusion
    Private vehicle

Excluded

  • exclusion
    Entrance fees, lunch, and other personal expenses
  • exclusion
    Guide entry fees are only covered for sights listed under 'what to expect.'
  • exclusion
    You cannot combine multiple tour groups.

Pickup

Check if pick-up is available from your location, you will select during checkout (providers may allow other pickup locations)

Pickup Location
Business Sun Hotel
Daikokuya Honkan
Four Points Flex By Sheraton Yokohama West
Hotel Aqua Yokohama
Hotel Livemax Yokohamaeki-Nishiguchi
Hotel Plumm
Hotel The Knot Yokohama
Hotel Yokohama Camelot Japan
Keikyu Ex Inn Yokohama-eki Higashiguchi
Richmond Hotel Yokohama Ekimae
Sakura Ryokan
Toyoko Inn Yokohama Nishi-guchi
Yokohama Bay Sheraton Hotel & Towers
Your guide and driver will pick you up at your hotel in the Yokohama area or your preferred location around Yokohama Station or Yokohama Port. Please use email for any communication before the tour. We cannot pick you up in Kamakura.

What to expect

1
Tsurugaoka Hachimangu Shrine

The shrine is dedicated to Hachiman, the patron god of the Minamoto family and of the samurai in general. The deified spirits of the ancient Emperor Ojin who has been identified with Hachiman, Hime-gami and Empress Jingu are enshrined at Tsurugaoka Hachimangu Shrine.

Duration 30 minutes
Admission Admission Not Included
2
Kotoku-in (Great Buddha of Kamakura)

The Great Buddha of Kamakura (鎌倉大仏, Kamakura Daibutsu) is a bronze statue of Amida Buddha, which stands on the grounds of Kotokuin Temple. With a height of 11.4 meters, it has long been the second tallest bronze Buddha statue in Japan, surpassed only by the statue in Nara's Todaiji Temple and some recent creations.

Duration 30 minutes
Admission Admission Not Included
3
Hasedera Temple

Hasedera (長谷寺) is a temple of the Jodo sect, famous for its eleven-headed statue of Kannon, the goddess of mercy. The 9.18 meter tall, gilded wooden statue is regarded as one of the largest wooden sculpture in Japan and can be viewed in the temple's main building, the Kannon-do Hall

Duration 30 minutes
Admission Admission Not Included
4
Hokoku-ji Temple

Hokokuji Temple is best known for the beautiful, small bamboo grove found behind the temple's main hall, which lies thick with over 2000 dark green bamboo stalks. A few narrow pathways lead through the bamboo to a tea house where, for a small fee, you can sit and enjoy a cup of matcha tea while enjoying views into the bamboo grove. Also located behind the temple are a series of shallow caves carved into the hillsides, which are believed to hold the ashes of some of the later Ashikaga lords.

Duration 15 minutes
Admission Admission Not Included
5

Engaku-ji

ngakuji (円覚寺) is one of the leading Zen temples in Eastern Japan and the number two of Kamakura's five great Zen temples. Engakuji was founded by the ruling regent Hojo Tokimune in the year 1282, one year after the second invasion attempt by the Mongols had been reverted. One purpose of the new temple was to pay respect to the fallen Japanese and Mongolian soldiers. Engakuji is built into the slopes of Kita-Kamakura's forested hills. The first main structure encountered upon entering the temple grounds is the Sanmon main gate, which dates from 1783. Behind it stands the temple's main hall, the Butsuden, which displays a wooden statue of the Shaka Buddha. The Butsuden was rebuilt relatively recently in 1964 after the former building was lost in an earthquake.

Duration 15 minutes
Admission Admission Not Included
6

Kencho-ji Temple

Kenchoji (建長寺, Kenchōji) is the number one of Kamakura's five great Zen temples. The oldest Zen temple in Kamakura, Kenchoji was founded by the ruling regent Hojo Tokiyori in 1253 during the Kencho Era after which it was named. Its first head priest was Rankei Doryu, a Zen priest from China. Although considerably smaller than during its heydays, Kenchoji still consists of a large number of temple buildings and subtemples, and stretches from the entrance gate at the bottom of the valley far into the forested hills behind. After passing through the Sanmon main gate, visitors will see Kenchoji's temple bell (Bonsho), designated a national treasure, on their right.

Duration 15 minutes
Admission Admission Not Included
7

Zeniarai Benten Shrine

Zeniarai Benten Shrine (銭洗弁天) is a popular shrine in western Kamakura, which people visit to wash their money (zeniarai means "coin washing"). It is said that money washed in the shrine's spring, will double. Minamoto Yoritomo, the founder of the Kamakura government, ordered the shrine's construction after a god appeared in his dream and recommended him to build the shrine in order to bring peace to the country. Because the dream occurred on the day of the snake, in the month of the snake of the year of the snake, the shrine was later also dedicated to Benten, a Buddhist goddess associated with snakes.

Duration 15 minutes
Admission Admission Not Included
8
Meigetsuin (Hydrangea Temple)

Meigetsuin Temple (明月院) is a temple of the Rinzai Zen Sect founded in 1160 in Kamakura. It is also known as Ajisaidera ("Hydrangea Temple") because hydrangea bloom in abundance on the temple grounds during the rainy season around June. 95% of the hydrangea here are of the Hime Ajisai ("Princess Hydrangea") variety; they are thus named because of their pretty blue colors. The temple was originally a repose built by a son in memory of his father who had died in the struggle for power between the Taira and Minamoto clans in the late Heian Period. It later became part of a larger temple complex called Zenkoji, which was abolished during anti-Buddhist movements soon after the Meiji Restoration, leaving only Meigetsuin to remain as an individual temple today.

Duration 30 minutes
Admission Admission Not Included
9

Ankokuronji Temple

Ankokuronji (安国論寺) is one of several temples of the Nichiren sect of Japanese Buddhism along the hills in the southeast of Kamakura. Nichiren himself founded Ankokuronji around 1253 when he first came to Kamakura, and he is said to have lived at the temple for several years. Visitors can walk along a short hiking trail through the wooded hills around the temple buildings. A nice view of the city of Kamakura can be enjoyed underway. Some of the trail's passages are quite steep and should only be explored with good walking shoes and during dry weather.

Duration 15 minutes
Admission Admission Not Included
10

Jomyo-ji Temple

Jomyoji Temple (浄妙寺, Jōmyōji) is a Zen temple in the hills of eastern Kamakura. Ranked fifth among the five great Zen temples of Kamakura, Jomyoji was founded by the influential Ashikaga family and at its peak was made up of seven buildings and several pagodas. Over the centuries, however, many of the structures were destroyed by fire, and only its historic main hall, reception hall, main gate and warehouse remain today. The main hall sits at the end of a garden and houses a statue of Shaka Nyorai, the historical Buddha. Jomyoji Temple also has a restored teahouse where visitors can sit and enjoy a cup of tea for a small fee while enjoying the view of a nice dry garden. On the hillside behind the main hall is the temple's spacious cemetery, while a path leads up the hill to a small western-style restaurant. The restaurant is operated by the temple and offers good views out over Kamakura from its patio.

Duration 15 minutes
11

Zuisen-ji Temple

Zuisenji (瑞泉寺) is a beautiful Zen temple in the far east of Kamakura, in the back of a narrow valley and surrounded by wooded hills. It is a branch temple of the Engakuji Temple. Zuisenji was founded by Muso Kokushi, a leading Zen master of his time and one of Japan's most famous garden designers. The temple is known for its pure Zen rock garden behind the temple's main hall, designed by Muso himself. The temple furthermore attracts with its many flowers and blooming trees in the other parts of the temple grounds, including a large number of plum trees.

Duration 15 minutes
Admission Admission Not Included
12

Myohonji Temple

Myohonji (妙本寺, Myōhonji) is one of several temples of the Nichiren sect of Japanese Buddhism along the southeastern hills of Kamakura. The temple was founded by Hiki Yoshimoto in 1260, and features a statue of Nichiren to the left of the main hall. The temple is connected via the Gionyama hiking trail with some other nearby temples and a shrine. It leads through the wooded hills of Kamakura, and should be explored only with good walking shoes and during dry weather, because there are a few steep and rough passages.

Duration 15 minutes
Admission Admission Not Included
13

Jochiji Temple

Jochiji (浄智寺, Jōchiji) is the number four of Kamakura's five great Zen temples. It is a branch temple of the Engakuji school of the Rinzai sect of Zen Buddhism. Its head temple, the Engakuji Temple, stands just a few hundred meters away on the opposite side of the railway tracks. Jochiji was founded in 1283 by members of the ruling Hojo family on the occasion of the premature death of a son. Once a large temple complex with many buildings and subtemples, Jochiji is now small and calm. In its main hall, the Dongeden, the temple's main object of worship, a Buddhist trinity of the Amida Buddha, Shaka Buddha and Miroku Buddha, is displayed.

Duration 15 minutes
Admission Admission Not Included
14

Tokeiji Temple

Tokeiji (東慶寺, Tōkeiji) is a small branch temple of the Engakuji school within the Rinzai sect of Zen Buddhism. Its head temple, the Engakuji Temple, stands just a few hundred meters away on the opposite side of the railway tracks. Tokeiji was founded by the wife of the regent Hojo Tokimune in 1285 after Tokimune had died at a young age. Until the end of the Edo Period, the temple served as a shelter for women who suffered abuse by their husbands and sought a divorce. An official divorce could be attained by staying at the temple for three years.

Duration 15 minutes
Admission Admission Not Included
15

Jufukuji Temple

Jufukuji Temple (寿福寺) is the number three of Kamakura's five great Zen temples. It is a branch temple of the Rinzai sect's Kenchoji school. Jufukuji was established by the order of Minamoto Yoritomo's wife Masako after her husband had passed away. Its founding priest was none other than Eisai, the man responsible for introducing Zen Buddhism into Japan. Besides the often photographed pathway that leads towards the temple, Jufukuji is not open to the public.

Duration 30 minutes
Admission Admission Not Included
16

Eishoji Temple

Eisho-ji Temple (英勝寺) is the only surviving nunnery in Kamakura, located near Tsurugaoka Hachimangu. Founded in the early Edo period by a woman connected to the Tokugawa family, it’s known as a “flower temple” for its seasonal blooms. Visitors can enjoy a peaceful bamboo grove and a graceful Amida Buddha statue said to be by the famous sculptor Unkei. The quiet atmosphere makes it a hidden gem worth visiting.

Duration 10 minutes
Admission Admission Not Included

The experience can be subject to change due to bad weather or unforseen circumstances. We always endeavour to give you the best possible experience.

Additional Information

  • Additional information
    Infants and small children can ride in a pram or stroller
  • Additional information
    Service animals allowed
  • Additional information
    Specialized infant seats are available
  • Additional information
    Suitable for all physical fitness levels
  • Additional information
    There are only a limited number of car seats and booster seats. Rear-facing car seats are not available. You must contact us directly if you need them.
  • Additional information
    Transportation options are wheelchair accessible
  • Additional information
    Wheelchair accessible
Provided by Japan Guide Agency

What our experts say

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    Try Hatosabure biscuits on Komachi St.
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    Visit Hokokuji for a tea in bamboo grove.
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    Check out Meigetsuin during hydrangea season.
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    Plan your itinerary to avoid crowds.
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    Bring cash for entrance fees and snacks.

More About this Experience

Introduction

Embark on an unforgettable journey with the Kamakura Tour from Yokohama with Guide and Vehicle. This exclusive experience offers travelers a unique opportunity to explore the cultural treasures of Kamakura in the comfort of a private vehicle, accompanied by a knowledgeable government-licensed guide.

What to expect?

Travelers can look forward to immersing themselves in the rich history and stunning beauty of Kamakura. From the serene temples and shrines with their picturesque gardens to the breathtaking views of the ocean, this tour promises a truly unforgettable experience. Visitors can also indulge in local delights at the charming Komachi shopping street, sampling delicious treats like Hatosabure biscuits.

Who is this for?

This tour is perfect for travelers seeking a personalized and insightful exploration of Kamakura. Whether you are a history enthusiast, a nature lover, or a foodie looking to discover new flavors, this experience caters to a diverse range of interests and preferences. Both solo travelers and groups can benefit from the expertise of a government-licensed guide and the convenience of private transportation.

Why book this?

Indulge in the luxury of a private tour that allows you to discover Kamakura's hidden gems at your own pace. With a government-licensed guide by your side, you can gain in-depth knowledge about the history and culture of the region while enjoying the comfort of a private vehicle. This exclusive experience offers a seamless and hassle-free way to explore Kamakura's top attractions and create lasting memories.

Good to know

Travelers can customize their itinerary by selecting 3-4 spots from a list of tour highlights. The tour includes essential amenities such as a licensed local guide, private transportation, and necessary fees, ensuring a smooth and enjoyable experience. Additionally, participants can benefit from the expertise of a guide with a National Government Licensed Guide Interpreter certification, guaranteeing a deep understanding of Japanese culture and history.

Reviews

Travelers who have experienced the Kamakura Tour rave about the personalized attention, informative guidance, and seamless logistics provided by the tour. Visitors appreciate the opportunity to explore Kamakura's top attractions with ease and comfort, making it a must-do experience for anyone looking to delve into the rich cultural heritage of Japan.

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