Japan's Cherry Blossom Season Begins Early Amid Overtourism Concerns

March 16, 2026
Japan's Cherry Blossom Season Begins Early Amid Overtourism Concerns
  • Japan officially declares cherry blossom season on March 16, with Kochi and Gifu reporting the earliest blooms nationwide.

  • Bloom was detected when benchmark trees bore more than five flowers, with Kochi blooming six days earlier and Gifu and Yamanashi nine days earlier than the national average.

  • The bloom arrived six days before the seasonal average and seven days before last year, marking the third consecutive year of the earliest blooms in Japan.

  • Overtourism concerns are rising near popular hanami spots, including littering and noise from visitors.

  • Hanami seasons continue to draw crowds, but littering, noise and related overtourism issues have grown near viewing sites.

  • In recent years, overtourism around cherry-blossom viewing spots has raised worries about litter and noise.

  • Forecasts predict temperatures near or above average, with full bloom expected about a week after the initial bloom.

  • Temperature trends point to near- or above-average warmth, placing full bloom roughly a week from the first blooms.

  • A local student, Koyumi Hamada, expressed excitement about cherry-blossom viewing with friends, reflecting public interest in the season.

  • Officials cite favorable conditions—low winter rainfall and longer sunshine hours—as contributing to the early bloom in Kochi.

  • Kochi meteorological officials and Shinobu Imoto attribute the early bloom to low winter rainfall and extended sunshine.

  • Low rainfall and longer sunshine hours during winter are cited as factors behind the early bloom.

Summary based on 10 sources


Get a daily email with more World News stories

More Stories