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Taibusa Cape — Boso's Southernmost Lighthouse

Published: Jun 3, 2026
Updated: Jun 3, 2026
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Taibusa Cape — Boso's Southernmost Lighthouse

Taibusa Cape (太房岬) forms the southernmost tip of the Boso Peninsula, where the Pacific Ocean meets Uraga Channel. The cape's white lighthouse, perched on 70-meter cliffs, has guided ships since 1919. The surrounding cape area is a windswept grassland ecosystem — rare in developed Japan — where native grasses, wildflowers, and migratory birds thrive in the constant sea breeze.

The walk from the parking area to the lighthouse (20 minutes) crosses open headlands with 180-degree ocean views. On clear winter days, Mt. Fuji appears across Sagami Bay, and the Izu Peninsula is visible to the west. The geological formations — tilted sedimentary layers from undersea uplift — create striped cliff patterns visible from the viewing platforms.

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Getting There

Access Information

Taibusa Cape, Kamogawa City. 30 min by bus from Awa-Kamogawa Station (bus stops at Taibusa entrance, 20-min walk to lighthouse). Free entry. Lighthouse not open for climbing. Best visited in clear weather.

Insider Guide

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**Photography timing:** Winter mornings (December–February, 7:00–9:00) offer the best chance of seeing Mt. Fuji across the bay — clear, cold, low-humidity days are essential. The lighthouse and Fuji a

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