The smell of soy sauce is not metaphorical here — it rises from actual breweries, from the vats of Fundokin and the older houses that have been pressing and fermenting along the Usuki coast for generations. The town sits where the Usuki River meets the bay, and the castle ruins above it still carry two intact turrets and the outlines of stone walls that once enclosed a domain.
Walking from Usuki Station, the road northwest brings you into the old merchant and samurai quarter within minutes. The stone-paved lane of Nioiza Rekishi no Michi runs past former retainer residences, quiet enough on a weekday that you notice the texture of the walls rather than other visitors. At the edge of town, the rock face at Usuki Magaibutsu holds around sixty figures carved directly into the cliff — a national treasure, and an active site of faith, not a ruin.
The festivals give the year its shape: Usuki Chikuyoi fills autumn evenings with bamboo lanterns, while the Yoshirokku Matsuri and Usuki Gion Matsuri mark summer. Sake from Kotegawa Shuzo and the soy sauce culture sit alongside a working port — Usuki, Sajio, Tsuboe among the fishing harbors along the Nippo coast — giving the town the layered feeling of a place where commerce, belief, and the sea have always operated on the same narrow strip of ground.
Stay in Usuki, Oita
What converges here
- Usuki Magaibutsu (with Hiyoshi-to, Kao 2nd Year Gorin-to, Shoan 2nd Year Gorin-to)
- Shimoyama Tumulus
- Usuki Castle Ruins
- Fūren Cave
- Gorinto (Five-Ringed Stone Pagoda)
- Gorintō (Five-Ringed Stone Pagoda)
- Kokonoe-to (Nine-Storied Pagoda)
- Gorintō (Five-Ringed Stone Pagoda)
- Hokyointo
- Nippo Kaigan
- Usuki
- Kumazaki
- Kami-Usuki
- Shimonoe
- Sajiki
- Sajio Fishing Port
- Usuki Fishing Port
- Tsuboe Fishing Port
- Higashifukae Fishing Port
- Tsukumishima Fishing Port
- Fukae Fishing Port
- Shimizu Fishing Port
- Narukawa Fishing Port