Kanto Castles

関東

The Kanto plain, home to modern Tokyo, was the heartland of samurai power from the Kamakura period onward, and its castles tell the story of how Japan's political center shifted from Kyoto to Edo. The great fortresses here — from Edo Castle's massive stone foundations to the mountain strongholds of the Hojo clan — shaped the outcome of Japan's most decisive battles. Today, traces of these castles survive amid one of the world's busiest urban landscapes.

24 castles
0 original towers
20 free entry

Prefectures

Tokyo, Kanagawa, Saitama, Chiba, Ibaraki, Tochigi, Gunma

Edo Castle

江戸城 · Edo-jo

Ruins

📍 Tokyo — Kanto

The largest castle ever built in Japan — now the Emperor's residence — where you can walk the foundations of the tower that ruled a nation for 265 years.

A Tourism 80/100
A Defense 85/100
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Odawara Castle

小田原城 · Odawara-jo

Ruins

📍 Kanagawa — Kanto

The castle that Hideyoshi could not storm — famous less for its tower than for the legendary city-swallowing earthworks and the indecisive council that became a Japanese proverb.

B Tourism 72/100
B Defense 70/100
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Kawagoe Castle

川越城 · Kawagoe-jo

Ruins

📍 Saitama — Kanto

The last honmaru palace in the Kanto region and the castle town that became 'Little Edo' — Kawagoe rewards visitors who want castle life beyond just the tower.

D Tourism 52/100
F Defense 35/100
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Oshi Castle

忍城 · Oshi-jo

Ruins

📍 Saitama — Kanto

The Floating Castle that refused to sink — Oshi's 1590 water siege is one of the great underdog stories in Japanese military history.

D Tourism 48/100
D Defense 52/100
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Sakura Castle

佐倉城 · Sakura-jo

Ruins

📍 Chiba — Kanto

The castle that hosts Japan's largest history museum — walk ancient earthwork moats, then explore 10,000 years of Japanese history without leaving the castle grounds.

D Tourism 48/100
D Defense 48/100
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Mito Castle

水戸城 · Mito-jo

Ruins

📍 Ibaraki — Kanto

Home of Japan's most famous fictitious traveler and the intellectual dynasty that helped end the shogunate — a castle of ideas more than stone.

D Tourism 45/100
D Defense 40/100
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Tateyama Castle

館山城 · Tateyama-jo

Ruins

📍 Chiba — Kanto

The Satomi clan's coastal stronghold — best known as the setting that inspired Japan's longest classical novel, the 106-volume Hakkenden epic.

D Tourism 45/100
D Defense 42/100
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Kanayama Castle

金山城 · Kanayama-jo

Ruins

📍 Gunma — Kanto

The Kanto mountain castle that shouldn't have stone walls but does — an unexpected masonry fortress with water cisterns at the summit of a Gunma mountain.

D Tourism 42/100
C Defense 65/100
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Numata Castle

沼田城 · Numata-jo

Ruins

📍 Gunma — Kanto

Sanada clan cliff fortress above three river gorges — one of Sengoku Japan's most dramatic natural defensive positions, destroyed by Tokugawa political fiat in 1681.

D Tourism 42/100
D Defense 55/100
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Otaki Castle

大多喜城 · Otaki-jo

Ruins

📍 Chiba — Kanto

The domain castle of Honda Tadakatsu — Japan's most famous undefeated samurai, who fought 57 battles without receiving a wound.

D Tourism 42/100
D Defense 42/100
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Ishigaki-yama Castle

石垣山城 · Ishigakiyama-jo

Ruins

📍 Kanagawa — Kanto

Where Hideyoshi built a complete fortress in secret behind a mountain, then revealed it overnight to psychologically break the last castle that had never been conquered.

D Tourism 42/100
D Defense 52/100
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Bannaji (Ashikaga Clan Manor)

足利氏館(鑁阿寺) · Bannaji (Ashikaga-shi Yakata)

Ruins

📍 Tochigi — Kanto

The birthplace of the Ashikaga Shogunate — a living temple inside a perfectly preserved 12th-century warrior manor moat, where Japan's second shogunate had its origin.

D Tourism 40/100
F Defense 25/100
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Hachigata Castle

鉢形城 · Hachigata-jo

Ruins

📍 Saitama — Kanto

The cliff-top fortress that defeated Takeda Shingen — Hachigata's natural river defenses are among the best in the Kanto region, now preserved in an excellent earthworks park.

F Tourism 38/100
C Defense 68/100
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Karasawayama Castle

唐沢山城 · Karasawayama-jo

Ruins

📍 Tochigi — Kanto

The castle that beat Uesugi Kenshin nine times — and now hosts dozens of cats among its mossy stone walls and mountain shrine.

F Tourism 38/100
C Defense 60/100
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Hachioji Castle

八王子城 · Hachioji-jo

Ruins

📍 Tokyo — Kanto

Tokyo's forgotten mountain fortress — where thousands died in a single day when Hideyoshi came for the last holdouts of the Hojo clan.

F Tourism 38/100
B Defense 72/100
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Minowa Castle

箕輪城 · Minowa-jo

Ruins

📍 Gunma — Kanto

The castle that resisted Takeda Shingen and Uesugi Kenshin — a vast earthwork system in Gunma preserving the memory of the Nagano clan's remarkable defense.

F Tourism 35/100
D Defense 58/100
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Takiyama Castle

滝山城 · Takiyama-jo

Ruins

📍 Tokyo — Kanto

Tokyo's forgotten mountain fortress — the Hojo clan's earthwork masterpiece held off Takeda Shingen, and its ridge-cut moats remain dramatic 450 years after abandonment.

F Tourism 35/100
C Defense 62/100
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Tsuchiura Castle

土浦城 · Tsuchiura-jo

Ruins

📍 Ibaraki — Kanto

A lake-floating castle with two genuine Edo-period survivors — modest ruins, but the Lake Kasumigaura setting tells the whole defensive story.

F Tourism 35/100
F Defense 30/100
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Kasama Castle

笠間城 · Kasama-jo

Ruins

📍 Ibaraki — Kanto

A medieval mountain castle above one of Japan's three great Inari shrines, with boulder-integrated stone walls and a famous spring azalea garden.

F Tourism 35/100
D Defense 58/100
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Iwatsuki Castle

岩槻城 · Iwatsuki-jo

Ruins

📍 Saitama — Kanto

Ota Dokan's swamp fortress — a water-island defense on the flat Kanto Plain that held Hideyoshi's army at bay longer than most.

F Tourism 32/100
F Defense 28/100
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Iwabitsu Castle

岩櫃城 · Iwabitsu-jo

Ruins

📍 Gunma — Kanto

The Sanada clan's ultimate mountain refuge — one of Sengoku Japan's most dramatically positioned castles, now famous for sea-of-clouds autumn photography.

F Tourism 32/100
C Defense 68/100
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Sugiyama Castle

杉山城 · Sugiyama-jo

Ruins

📍 Saitama — Kanto

Zero visual drama, maximum scholarly significance — Sugiyama is the 'textbook castle' that only the most serious castle enthusiast will truly appreciate.

F Tourism 30/100
B Defense 72/100
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Nagurumi Castle

名胡桃城 · Nagurumi-jo

Ruins

📍 Gunma — Kanto

The tiny castle whose seizure triggered Hideyoshi's Odawara campaign — Japan's unification started here on a narrow Gunma ridgeline in 1589.

F Tourism 30/100
D Defense 42/100
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Setagaya Castle

世田谷城 · Setagaya-jo

Ruins

📍 Tokyo — Kanto

A 14th-century medieval castle ruin hidden in a central Tokyo residential neighborhood — five minutes from a tram stop, a world away from modern urban reality.

F Tourism 30/100
F Defense 25/100
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