Kansai
Kinkaku-ji (Golden Pavilion)
How to visit Kyoto's Golden Pavilion: the ¥500 cash-only ticket, when to go to beat the coach groups, and why you only ever see it from across the pond.
Where
Kyoto, Japan
Opening hours
09:00–17:00 daily, all year including public holidays. Last entry is shortly before closing; the ticket booth queue can add 20–30 minutes on weekends and in the autumn-leaf weeks of November.
Tickets
¥500 adults (about £2.60), ¥300 for primary and middle-school children. Cash only — no cards, no IC card at the gate, and no ATM nearby, so carry yen. The ticket is a printed paper o-fuda talisman rather than a stub, so it's worth keeping.
Time needed
40–60 minutes on the fixed one-way path. It's a compact site, so don't block out a whole morning — pair it with Ryoan-ji rather than padding the visit.
In short
Visiting Kinkaku-ji (Golden Pavilion)
Bring ¥500 in cash per adult — Kinkaku-ji takes no cards, has no ATM at the gate, and sells no advance or timed tickets, so you simply turn up and pay. You never go inside the pavilion: a one-way garden path loops you past the gold-leaf building reflected in the Kyoko-chi pond and back out in 40–60 minutes. Arrive for the 09:00 opening or after 15:30 to miss the 11:00–15:00 crush of school trips and coach tours.
How to visit without the faff
Kinkaku-ji is one of the few big Kyoto sights you can’t over-plan, because there’s nothing to book. There are no advance tickets, no timed slots and no online queue — you walk up, hand over ¥500 (about £2.60) in cash, and you’re in. The catch is that it really is cash only: no cards at the gate, no IC card tap, and no ATM in the immediate area, so draw yen before you head north. Your ticket is a printed paper o-fuda talisman rather than a torn stub, so it’s worth tucking into a guidebook as a keepsake.
The thing first-timers don’t expect: you never go inside the pavilion. A one-way garden path leads you to the famous view across the Kyoko-chi (Mirror Pond), where the top two gold-leafed storeys throw a near-perfect reflection — this is where every photo you’ve seen was taken — and then loops you past a few smaller halls, a tea house and the exit. The whole circuit takes 40 to 60 minutes. It’s a compact site, so don’t set aside a morning for it; treat it as one stop, not a half-day.
Timing, and is it worth it?
Get to the gate for the 09:00 opening or come back after about 15:30. The middle of the day — roughly 11:00 to 15:00 — is when the school trips and coach tours stack up, and on the November leaf-season weekends the ticket queue alone can run 20–30 minutes. Morning light also catches the gold leaf best against the water. Autumn frames the pavilion in red maples and winter occasionally dusts the roof in snow, both of which beat the flat green of high summer.
Getting there from Kyoto Station is a flat ¥230 on city bus #101 or #205 to the Kinkakuji-michi stop (about 40 minutes, then a 3-minute walk) — just don’t board the Rapid 205, which skips the temple. If the buses are jammed, ride the Karasuma subway to Kitaoji and pick up bus #204 or #205 for the last leg.
It’s a genuine 20-minute showstopper rather than an immersive afternoon, so the smart move is to chain it with Ryoan-ji, an 18-minute stroll away along the Kinukake-no-michi lane, and ideally Ninna-ji beyond it. Do Kinkaku-ji on its own and it can feel like a long bus ride for one photo; do it as the opener to a northern-Kyoto loop and it earns its reputation.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Kyoto city guide.
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