SPECIAL
LAUNCH
PRICE

AWAJI ISLAND

Duration

Group Size

Oct 2 - 5, 2026

3 nights / 4 days

Max 6 guests

Min 3 guests

Starting Point

Ending Point

Nishi-Akashi

Hyogo Prefecture

Nishi-Akashi

Hyogo Prefecture

Train Access

Tokyo: ~3 hours

Kyoto/Osaka: ~30 min

Price

A$3,377.92 A$2,477.92
based on double occupancy

Solo supplement available

A large suspension bridge over the Seto Inland Sea, with mountains in the background and a partly cloudy sky, connecting Awaji Island to Mainland Japan.

Awaji Island is Japan's creation myth made tangible, the place where the country's was born from gods, yet somehow still flies under the radar. Connected to the mainland by one of the world's longest suspension bridges, this unassuming island punches way above its weight.

The island is obsessive about its food culture, with locals going crazy for their famous sweet onions, hyper-regional seafood specialties, and agricultural traditions that supplied the imperial court for centuries. Awaji raises its own breed of cattle to strict standards that mean only around 200 are certified each year, and the island's dairy tradition traces back over 120 years. From ancient salt-making techniques to hand-stretched somen noodles and spring-only raw shirasu (whitebait), the island's food fanaticism borders on the spiritual.

The landscape delivers drama too, from the churn of the Naruto whirlpools to windswept coastal cliffs and views that stretch across the entire Seto Inland Sea. Beyond nature, the island surprises with world-class architecture like Tadao Ando's sunken meditation hall at Honpukuji Temple, and Izanagi Shrine where Japan's creator god is enshrined amid ancient camphor trees, making Awaji the kind of detour that turns into the highlight.

Map of Hyogo Prefecture showing the locations of Nishi and Akashi in the mainland and Awaji Island south of the mainland.
A map of Japan with Hyogo prefecture highlighted in red.

DAILY ITINERARY

This is a sample itinerary and is subject to change based on availability
Interior view of Honpukuji Temple featuring a concrete and wood structure with a bright red grid-patterned window or door at the end of a corridor.
A traditional Japanese in castle in Sumoto with dark gray roofs at different levels, surrounded by green trees and a stone wall, under a partly cloudy blue sky.
Colorful neon signs of a ship, a text saying 'NO ONION NO LIFE,' a cow, a beer can, two fish, a spiral, a mask, a bottle, and Japanese characters, all on a dark background.
A large, golden onion sculpture on a grassy hill with ocean and distant islands in the background under a partly cloudy sky.
View of the Naruto whirlpools with a large bridge over water and hills in the background under a clear blue sky.

GET OFF THE EATEN TRACK WITH US

Our tours are deliberately small, created for travelers who crave discovery and connection. Register your interest and we’ll be in touch to arrange a quick call—so we can get to know you, and you can get a taste of what’s waiting Off The Eaten Track.

Image credits:
Kyung-Min Park via Unsplash
Erika M via Unsplash
 
Sumoto Castle via Wikimedia Commons