Every spring the same circus begins: travelers buying tickets to Japan chasing sakura (cherry blossom) based on an outdated blog post, an old Instagram photo, or an agency hunch. They arrive and the bloom is gone. Or hasn't opened yet. Or opened in the wrong park. This guide cuts the rumor. It shows how the JMA (Japan Meteorological Agency) official forecast works, updated every two weeks between January and March. It lists the 30-year historical median for Tokyo, Kyoto, Osaka, Hiroshima, Sapporo and Okinawa. It explains why global warming has pulled the bloom forward by five days in the last decade. And it gives the real plan B: if it's late, head further north; if it's early, head further south. All with concrete dates, official sites to check, and how much it costs to stay in Tokyo during peak week 2027.
15 min de leitura
The first time I tried to see sakura in Tokyo was in 2019. I bought my ticket in October for the first week of April because the blog said "first week of April is a sure bet." I arrived on the 2nd. The bloom had started on March 21st. By the time I stepped onto Meguro River, the trees already had 90% of their petals on the ground. I got a beautiful photo of the wet pink carpet, but that wasn't what I came to see.
I got it wrong because I trusted a generic phrase. The sakura bloom doesn't have a fixed date — it has a meteorological window. In some years the window is March 18-28 in Tokyo. In others, April 1-10. The difference between getting it right and getting it wrong is checking three official sites and understanding the system.
This guide is what I wish I had read in October 2018. The JMA forecast, the historical median per city, the plan B if it's late or early, and how much this trip costs in 2027.
Note: "sakura" is the Japanese word for cherry blossom; "hanami" is the practice of picnicking under blooming cherry trees during peak season.
What sakura is and why it becomes an obsession
Sakura is the Japanese ornamental cherry tree blossom — mainly the Somei Yoshino variety, which accounts for about 80% of trees planted in urban parks across Japan. The bloom lasts seven to ten days per region. Mankai (full bloom) happens four to seven days after the first bud opens.
Hanami is the practice of picnicking under cherry trees during peak. It's not a tourist event — it's a national ritual. Japanese companies hold happy hour under the trees, families spread out blue tarps at 6 a.m. to secure the best spot until dinner, and the TV news opens with the sakura zensen (sakura front) map, which advances from south to north of the archipelago between January and May.
The obsession has cultural roots. Sakura is the flower that blooms intensely and falls quickly — a Buddhist metaphor for impermanence (mono no aware). It's not just a "pretty flower." It's a reminder that everything passes. Eating onigiri under a blooming tree with a coworker while a petal falls on your head is an experience that lasts seven days and never repeats the same way the next year.
For the foreign traveler, this means: you have no flexibility. Either you nail the window, or you miss it. There's no "sakura month" — there's a sakura week, and it changes every year.
How the official JMA forecast works
The JMA (Japan Meteorological Agency) is Japan's public weather agency. Since the 1950s it has monitored standard trees (a specific cherry tree per city) and uses two official dates:
- Kaika: the date when the standard tree has five to six open buds. It's the "first day of bloom."
- Mankai: the date when 80% of the standard tree's buds are open. It's the "peak."
In Tokyo, the standard tree is at Yasukuni Shrine in Chiyoda. In Kyoto, at Nijo Shrine. Each major city has its own, and the kaika announcement makes national news.
The JMA releases its first official forecast in late January. It updates every two weeks — late January, mid-February, late February, mid-March, late March. The forecast uses a model based on average temperatures in prior months: cold winter + warm spring = early bloom; mild winter + cold spring = late bloom.
Three official sites to follow:
- jma.go.jp — the agency's official site. In Japanese, with an interactive map. Use Chrome with auto-translate.
- sakura.weathernews.com — Weathernews, a private company doing parallel forecasts since 2004. In English. Updates weekly.
- weathermap.jp/sakura — Weather Map Co., another reliable parallel forecast. In Japanese, easy-to-read visual map.
The three forecasts diverge by up to three days. Use all three and take the average. When they converge (less than 24h apart), the forecast has high reliability.
TABLE_MARKER: 2027 Forecast vs 30-Year Historical Median
| City | Historical median (1991-2020) | Typical window | Preliminary 2027 forecast* | Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Okinawa (Naha) | Jan 18 | Jan 10-30 | Jan 14-20 | Kanhizakura variety, pink, early bloom |
| Fukuoka | Mar 22 | Mar 20-29 | Mar 19-22 | Gateway of the zensen in Kyushu |
| Hiroshima | Mar 25 | Mar 23 - Apr 2 | Mar 22-25 | Hiroshima Castle is the main spot |
| Osaka | Mar 28 | Mar 26 - Apr 5 | Mar 25-28 | Kema Sakuranomiya is the densest cluster |
| Kyoto | Mar 28 | Mar 28 - Apr 7 | Mar 26-29 | Philosopher's Path and Maruyama are classics |
| Tokyo | Mar 24 | Mar 26 - Apr 5 | Mar 22-26 | Yasukuni is the official standard tree |
| Kanazawa | Apr 1 | Apr 1-12 | Mar 30 - Apr 3 | Kenroku-en Park, historic garden |
| Sendai | Apr 8 | Apr 8-18 | Apr 6-10 | Start of Tohoku, intermediate stop |
| Hirosaki (Aomori) | Apr 23 | Apr 23 - May 5 | Apr 21-26 | Castle park, 2,600 cherry trees |
| Sapporo | May 1 | May 1-10 | Apr 28 - May 3 | Hokkaido lags Tokyo by 5 weeks |
| Matsumae (south Hokkaido) | May 10 | May 8-20 | May 7-13 | Japan's last cluster, extreme plan B |
*Preliminary forecast based on a projection of cold winter + moderate spring, released in January 2027 by JMA and Weathernews. Update closer to the date.
Tokyo: the real spots (and what nobody tells you about night-time Chidorigafuchi)
Tokyo has more than a thousand cherry tree locations. These five account for 80% of the photos you've already seen:
Meguro River — three and a half kilometers of canal lined with 800 cherry trees on both sides in Naka-Meguro. At night red lanterns (bonbori) light up and the photo becomes iconic. Packed from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. during mankai. Go at 7 a.m. to see it without crowds and with clean light.
Ueno Park — historic park with 1,200 cherry trees. It's Tokyo's most democratic space: Japanese families with blue tarps, expats with wine, students with chuhai cans. You go to sit on the grass, not to rush around.
Shinjuku Gyoen — paid imperial garden (¥500 entry), 12 different cherry tree varieties, extended bloom of up to three weeks because each species has its own window. The only large park in Tokyo that bans alcohol — ideal for those wanting photos and calm.
Chidorigafuchi — moat of the Imperial Palace. This is where the photo looks different: you rent a rowboat (¥800 per hour) and row inside the moat with petals falling on the water around you. At night (6-10 p.m. during mankai) it lights up with yellow light. The detail nobody tells you: the boat line exceeds 2 hours on mankai weekends. Go Tuesday or Wednesday morning (10 a.m. is ideal), or forget it.
Sumida Park — banks of the Sumida River with Tokyo Skytree in the background. The cliché sakura-with-Skytree photo is taken here. Combine with lunch in Asakusa.
Kyoto: three spots and a combination worth two days
Kyoto is a religious city. The sakura spots are almost all at shrines or temples, and the afternoon light on dark wooden temples with pink cherry trees around them is why many people come back.
Philosopher's Path (Tetsugaku-no-michi) — two-kilometer stone path along a canal, from Ginkakuji Temple to the Nanzen-ji neighborhood. 500 cherry trees on both sides. Go at sunrise (5:30-6:30 a.m.) — you'll have the path nearly empty and golden light.
Maruyama Park — Kyoto's most famous park for hanami. The mother tree (shidarezakura) is 80 years old, weeping (hanging branches), and lit up at night with special illumination. Early morning (5-7 a.m.) or after 10 p.m. are the only calm windows.
Daigoji — temple in southeast Kyoto, far from the center (40 min by subway + walk). That's why it filters tourists out. 1,000 cherry trees spread across three levels (Sanboin, Reihokan, Kami-Daigo). Combination of historic temple, cherry trees and absence of crowds that doesn't exist downtown.
Practical combo: day 1 Philosopher's Path in the morning + Maruyama at night. Day 2 Daigoji all day + Kiyomizu-dera at sunset. The two days yield 300 different photos of the same sakura.
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Osaka, Hiroshima, Sapporo: the three alternative choices
Osaka blooms two days before Tokyo. Kema Sakuranomiya (Okawa River banks) has 4,800 cherry trees over 4.2 km — it's the densest cluster in urban Japan. Osaka Castle combines 16th-century military architecture with cherry trees around the moat. Use Osaka as a base if you want hotel prices 30-40% lower than Tokyo and a day trip to Kyoto 14 minutes away by train.
Hiroshima blooms first among the major Honshu cities. Hiroshima Castle and Peace Memorial Park combine sakura with heavy history — the contradiction between the delicate flower and the memory of the bomb is part of the experience. Additional spot: Miyajima (Itsukushima Shrine with floating torii and cherry trees), a 10-minute ferry from the center.
Sapporo is the premium plan B. Hokkaido blooms five weeks after Tokyo — if you missed the window in Honshu, fly two hours north and still catch mankai. Maruyama Park (Sapporo) and Matsumae Park (south of the island, 2h by car) are the main spots. Combine with local food: miso ramen, sea urchin sashimi, Mongolian barbecue (jingisukan).
Global warming: why sakura is shifting earlier
JMA data: the median kaika in Tokyo in the 1990s was March 29. In the 2011-2020 decade, March 24. Five days earlier in 30 years. The trend continues — some models predict that by 2050 Tokyo could bloom in mid-March.
Practical impact for the traveler: planning a Japan trip for "the first week of April" today is too late in ~60% of years. The safe window has migrated to the last week of March. Buy a flexible ticket, be ready to move two or three days earlier if the February forecast indicates a warmer-than-normal winter.
Plan B: what to do when the forecast fails
Even with three cross-checked forecasts, in 15-20% of years the bloom is late or early by 4-7 days due to unexpected weather events (sudden heat wave, late cold front, hail).
If it's late (bloom hasn't opened when you arrived):
- Wait two to three days in Tokyo, visiting temples, eating, exploring neighborhoods (Shimokitazawa, Yanaka, Daikanyama).
- If it's more than three days, fly to Sendai (Tohoku) — lags Tokyo by two weeks. Shinkansen round-trip USD 100.
- If the bloom is still late, fly to Hirosaki (Aomori) — lags by four weeks. Castle park with 2,600 cherry trees is one of the three most beautiful experiences in Japan.
If it's early (bloom already passed in Tokyo):
- Fly to Sendai — may be at peak if you arrived late.
- Fly to Hirosaki or Sapporo — Hokkaido blooms in May, guaranteed to save the trip.
- Extreme plan: Matsumae (south Hokkaido) blooms until mid-May, it's the last active cluster in the country.
If you want to deliberately escape the tourist hurricane:
Go to Kyushu (Fukuoka, Kumamoto) in the first week of the zensen. It blooms a week before Tokyo, gets 70% fewer international tourists, and cities like Fukuoka have food (motsunabe, hakata ramen, mentaiko) that justifies the detour on its own.
Real costs: flight, hotel, food
Flight to Tokyo Narita or Haneda in March/2027:
- Ideal booking window: September to November 2026 (5-7 months ahead).
- Expected price range: USD 1,200-1,800 round-trip economy with one connection (Doha, Dubai, Istanbul, Los Angeles).
- Direct flight from major US/EU hubs: from USD 1,800+.
- Best value airlines: Qatar, Turkish, Emirates, ANA.
Tokyo hotel during cherry blossom peak (Mar 25 - Apr 5, 2027):
- Hostel/capsule (Asakusa, Ueno): USD 40-70/night.
- 3-star hotel (Ikebukuro, Shinjuku): USD 150-280/night.
- 4-star hotel (Ginza, Roppongi): USD 300-500/night.
- Ryokan (traditional style): USD 400-800/night with meals.
Book six months in advance. Hotels release rooms in the week before — those who booked early pay 30-40% less.
Seasonal sakura food (worth trying):
- Sakura mochi: sticky rice sweet with red bean paste, wrapped in a pickled cherry leaf. ¥300-500.
- Hanami bento: special picnic lunchbox, usually with pink onigiri, tempura and sakura sweet. ¥1,500-3,000.
- Sakura latte: coffee with pink syrup and a pickled petal on top. Starbucks launches a yearly variation in February. ¥600.
- Sakura beer: seasonal beer from Asahi, Sapporo and Kirin with light floral aroma. ¥400 at konbini.
Tokyo + Kyoto combo in 10 days during hanami
Day 1-2: arrival Tokyo, jet lag, Asakusa, Shibuya. Preliminary cherry trees at Sumida Park. Day 3: Meguro River dawn + Shinjuku Gyoen afternoon + Chidorigafuchi night (boat). Day 4: Ueno Park morning + free day Akihabara/Harajuku + Yasukuni late afternoon. Day 5: Shinkansen Tokyo-Kyoto (2h15, ¥14,000). Afternoon Maruyama Park. Day 6: Philosopher's Path sunrise + Ginkakuji + Nanzen-ji. Day 7: Daigoji all day + Kiyomizu-dera at sunset. Day 8: day trip Osaka (Kema Sakuranomiya + Osaka Castle + okonomiyaki at night). Day 9: Nara (day trip from Kyoto, 45 min by train). Todaiji Temple + deer park + cherry trees. Day 10: Kyoto last morning + Shinkansen direct to Kansai airport.
Estimated total per person, flights not included: USD 2,200-3,200 depending on hotel and food level.
Practical appendix
Official sites to check forecast (in priority order):
- jma.go.jp/jma/index.html — official JMA, Japanese with auto-translate.
- sakura.weathernews.com — Weathernews, English.
- weathermap.jp/sakura — Weather Map, Japanese with visual map.
- japan-guide.com/sakura — English aggregator, updates daily in March.
Useful apps:
- NAVITIME — Japan public transport, in English.
- Hyperdia — Shinkansen and local train search.
- Google Translate — camera translates Japanese menus in real time.
When to buy your ticket:
- September to November 2026 for travel in March/April 2027.
- Fares rise 25-40% from December on.
What you won't be able to do:
- Guarantee a crowd-free photo at Meguro River at night during peak.
- See mankai in Tokyo and Sapporo on the same two-week trip.
- Eat at the best Kyoto restaurant without a reservation made 30 days in advance.
Sakura isn't a destination. It's a window. Those who understand this book in October, check three forecasts in February, know the plan B before boarding, and come home with the photo they wanted.
Pontos-chave
The JMA updates its official forecast every two weeks between January and March — check jma.go.jp, sakura.weathernews.com and weathermap.jp
30-year median: Tokyo Mar 26 - Apr 5, Kyoto Mar 28 - Apr 7, Osaka Mar 28, Hiroshima Mar 25, Sapporo May 5, Okinawa January-February
Global warming has pulled the bloom forward by ~5 days compared to 1990s averages
Perguntas frequentes
Ideal window: September to November 2026. The first official forecast comes out in late January 2027 — if you wait to buy with a confirmed date, fares are already up 30-50%. Buy in October with a preliminary date based on the historical median (Tokyo: arrive March 23, leave April 5) and have flexibility to change cities if the bloom surprises you.
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