Culture & Entertainment in Kyoto — Student Guide

Temples, festivals, nightlife, and the cultural activities included in your Nihongo Center tuition.

The Discover Kyoto Program — Included in Your Tuition

All enrolled Nihongo Center students participate in the Discover Kyoto Program (DKP) — a structured cultural activity calendar included in tuition at no extra cost. Activities are organized by the school and run throughout the academic year. Past activities include:

  • Guided visits to Fushimi Inari, Arashiyama bamboo grove, and Kinkaku-ji
  • Tea ceremony (茶道) experience with a Kyoto tea master
  • Calligraphy (書道) and ikebana (flower arrangement) workshops
  • Yukata dressing and wearing session
  • Nishiki Market food tour with a Japanese guide
  • Kimono rental and old-town walking tour in Higashiyama

DKP activities are also a structured way to spend time with classmates of different nationalities outside the classroom — an important part of building the informal Japanese practice that accelerates acquisition.

Kyoto’s Major Festivals

Aoi Matsuri — May 15

One of Japan’s three great festivals (三大祭). An imperial procession of 500 people in Heian-period costume walks from the Kyoto Imperial Palace to Shimogamo and Kamigamo shrines. Free to watch from the street.

Gion Matsuri — July

Kyoto’s most famous festival, running all of July. The main float parades (Yamaboko Junko) are on July 17 and 24. Yoiyama evenings (July 14–16 and 21–23) — streets closed to traffic, food stalls, lantern-lit floats. One of Japan’s largest festivals.

Jidai Matsuri — October 22

The “Festival of the Ages” — a 2km procession through the city with 2,000 participants dressed in costumes representing 1,200 years of Kyoto history from the Heian era to the Meiji period. Free from the street.

Daily Life & Nightlife

Evenings & Weekends

  • Kiyamachi street — bars, izakayas, clubs along the Kamo river
  • Pontocho alley — narrow lantern-lit street, upscale restaurants and casual bars
  • Karaoke — ubiquitous, from ¥400/hour. Joysound and Big Echo are the main chains
  • Kawaramachi area — restaurants, shopping, cinemas (MOVIX Kyoto)
  • Izakaya hopping — Japanese pub culture, essential language practice

Day Trips from Kyoto

  • Osaka — 15 min by Hankyu express (¥400). Food, nightlife, Dotonbori
  • Nara — 45 min by Kintetsu (¥640). Free-roaming deer, Todai-ji temple
  • Kobe — 50 min by train (¥1,080). Harbourfront, Chinatown, hiking
  • Hiroshima + Miyajima — 1h45 by Shinkansen (¥10,000). Day trip possible
  • Hakone / Tokyo — 2h15 by Shinkansen. Weekend trip feasible

Living in Kyoto means the cultural immersion never stops — the temple you walk past on your commute, the festival that fills your neighborhood street, the izakaya where the owner switches to Kyoto dialect. This is the learning environment that classroom hours alone cannot create.

Ready to Start Your Japanese Journey?

Apply for the April 2027 intake — student visa support included, central Kyoto.
Application deadline: October 31st, 2026.