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Magome-juku — Hillside Post Town on the Nakasendo

Published: Jun 2, 2026
Updated: Jun 2, 2026
Nakasendopost townKiso Valleyhillsidegohei-mochi
Magome-juku — Hillside Post Town on the Nakasendo

Magome-juku (馬籠宿) is another Nakasendo post town, built on a steep hillside with dramatic views of the Kiso Valley and Mount Ena. Unlike flat Tsumago, Magome's main street ascends in switchbacks, creating a unique vertical townscape. The buildings are wooden inns, souvenir shops, and cafes, many serving gohei-mochi (五平餅, grilled rice cakes with miso-walnut glaze) and kuri-kinton chestnut sweets.

Magome is the birthplace of author Shimazaki Toson (1872–1943), whose novels depicted life in Meiji-era rural Japan. His family home (Toson Memorial Museum) is preserved in the upper town. While Magome is more commercialized than Tsumago, the hillside setting and mountain views add scenic beauty. The town is especially popular with domestic tourists as a romantic getaway destination, with several high-end ryokan offering kaiseki dinners and cypress baths.

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Getting There

Access Information

Magome-juku, 30-min bus from Nakatsugawa Station (JR Chuo Line). Free to walk the main street. Toson Memorial Museum: ¥550. Town walkable in 30 minutes. Luggage forwarding available to/from Tsumago (¥600).

Insider Guide

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**Tsumago–Magome hike direction:** Most hikers walk Magome → Tsumago (downhill, easier on knees). The opposite direction (Tsumago → Magome, uphill finish) rewards you with Magome's upper-town view and

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