Sake Region Map

Explore Japan's 47 prefectures and their sake brewing traditions. Click any prefecture to see brewery count, signature rice varieties, water characteristics, notable brands, and regional flavor style. Compare prefectures side by side and discover your preferred regional style.

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工具

Breweries
Water Type
Key Rice
Style

Regional Character

Notable Brands:

How to Use

  1. 1
    Select a prefecture from the map

    Click on any of Japan's 47 prefectures to see its sake brewing history, dominant style characteristics, notable breweries, and the water chemistry that shapes its regional expression.

  2. 2
    Filter by flavor style or brewing tradition

    Use the style filters — tannrei karakuchi (clean and dry), nokotsu amakuchi (rich and sweet), Kimoto tradition — to highlight prefectures that match your flavor preference.

  3. 3
    Explore featured breweries and regional context

    Dive into featured labels from each region, reading about the toji guild traditions, local rice varieties, and water sources that define the terroir of Japanese sake.

About

Japan's sake geography is an expression of terroir as rich and complex as any wine region, with climate, water chemistry, rice cultivation, toji guild traditions, and local culinary culture all interacting to produce distinct regional personalities. The 47 prefectures of Japan each support sake production to varying degrees, but a handful of historically dominant regions — Hyogo, Kyoto, Niigata, Akita, Yamagata, Hiroshima — have become synonymous with recognizable style archetypes.

The regional map reveals a fundamental divide shaped by water chemistry. The Pacific side of Honshu tends toward harder water from granite and volcanic geology, producing the robust, dry styles of Nada. The Sea of Japan side benefits from soft snowmelt water percolating through sedimentary limestone, enabling the delicate, aromatic styles of Fushimi and Hiroshima. Niigata's distinctive tannrei karakuchi (clean and dry) emerged from a combination of soft water, cold climate enabling prolonged slow fermentation, and a post-war drive toward lighter, food-friendly sake to compete with the booming beer market.

For modern sake enthusiasts, regional identity provides a useful first filter for exploration, even as individual breweries increasingly transcend regional conventions. A brewery in Nada might produce a delicate Daiginjo that defies expectations; a Niigata producer might craft a full-bodied Kimoto that contradicts the tannrei reputation. The region map is best understood as a starting point for the conversation between place, producer, and palate — an entry point into one of the world's most geographically and culturally layered beverage traditions.

FAQ

What are Japan's most historically important sake-producing regions?
Japan's most historically significant sake regions include Nada-Gogo (灘五郷) in Hyogo Prefecture — the largest single sake-producing area in Japan, responsible for approximately 30% of national output. Nada's fame rests on Miyamizu (宮水), a hard, mineral-rich water drawn from underground sources between the Rokko mountains and Osaka Bay, high in phosphorus and potassium but naturally iron-free, that produces robust, dry sake suited to aging. Fushimi (伏見) in Kyoto is equally celebrated for its soft, sweet water from subterranean limestone aquifers that produces the gentle, delicate sake historically preferred by the imperial court. Niigata Prefecture, the modern standard-bearer of tannrei karakuchi (clean and dry) style, developed its approach in the 20th century as refrigeration enabled precise cold fermentation in its snowy climate.
How does water chemistry determine regional sake character?
Water is sake's largest ingredient by volume, comprising approximately 80% of the finished product, and its mineral content profoundly influences both fermentation kinetics and flavor. Hard water — rich in potassium, phosphorus, and magnesium — provides strong yeast nutrition, producing vigorous fermentation, higher alcohol, and dry, robust sake characteristic of Nada. Soft water — low in minerals, as found in Fushimi and Hiroshima — produces slower, more delicate fermentation with lower amino acid levels and a softer, rounder character. Iron, even in trace amounts above 0.02 mg/L, oxidizes sake, producing harsh metallic notes and brownish color, which is why breweries in historically iron-free water regions (Nada, Fushimi) achieved fame before modern filtration technology allowed brewers elsewhere to compensate.
What are toji guilds and how did they shape regional sake styles?
Toji (杜氏) are master brewers, and the guild system (toji-dan, 杜氏団) organized them into regional associations that transmitted brewing knowledge across generations. The three historically dominant guilds — Nanbu (南部杜氏) from Iwate Prefecture, Tamba (丹波杜氏) from Hyogo, and Echigo (越後杜氏) from Niigata — each developed distinct brewing philosophies, techniques for managing fermentation temperature, and characteristic flavor preferences. Nanbu toji are associated with clean, aromatic Ginjo styles; Tamba toji with the robust, assertive Nada tradition; Echigo toji with Niigata's signature lean dryness. The guild system began declining in the 1970s as year-round brewing, refrigeration, and professionalized brewing schools changed the industry's seasonal labor patterns, but many contemporary toji still trace their lineage to these traditions.
Which regions are known for distinctive sake styles beyond the major centers?
Several regions outside the traditional centers have developed acclaimed distinctive styles. Akita (秋田) and Yamagata (山形) prefectures in the Tohoku region are noted for fruity, aromatic sake well-suited to international palates, benefiting from cold winters, abundant snow-melt water, and locally developed yeast strains. Hiroshima (広島) pioneered the softwater brewing technique developed by Senzaburo Miura in the late Meiji era, enabling soft-water breweries to compete with hard-water Nada. Saga Prefecture in Kyushu produces distinctive sake influenced by its proximity to shochu production culture, sometimes using local rice varieties. Ishikawa and Fukui on the Sea of Japan coast are associated with umami-rich, full-bodied styles suited to the region's rich seafood cuisine.
How is climate change affecting sake-producing regions?
Rising temperatures across Japan are presenting significant challenges to sake production, particularly for cold-fermentation premium styles. Niigata, historically reliant on cold winters and natural cooling, now requires more extensive refrigeration infrastructure to achieve the low fermentation temperatures (5–10°C) essential for Ginjo production. Harvest timing for sakamai rice is shifting earlier, with warmer growing seasons affecting the starch-protein composition of premium varieties. Some breweries in Hyogo and Okayama are experimenting with heat-resistant rice varieties and modified fermentation schedules. Simultaneously, climate change is enabling new regions — including Hokkaido, which previously had too cold and wet conditions for sakamai cultivation — to grow premium sake rice, potentially reshaping Japan's regional sake geography over the coming decades.