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Please double-check all information carefully. The final ticket will display your name and usage date, which cannot be changed after booking is completed.
Free admission for children under 4 years old. Please be advised.
Present your e-ticket to pick up and use your tickets.
Location of use and Time of use are the same as Ticket collection location and Ticket collection time
Ticket collection time:09:30~21:30(Please go to the ticket counter on the ground floor of Fukuoka Tower to redeem your tickets.)
After a successful booking, you'll receive a QR code and a verification code via email. Present the QR code or verification code to our staff for easy access on your visit day.
Getting there
Bus (recommended):
From Hakata Station: Bus #306 to “Fukuoka Tower”
From Tenjin Station: Bus #302 or #W1302 to “Fukuoka Tower”
Subway + walk: Nishijin Station (Subway Airport Line), Exit 7 → approx. 20 min walk
Parking: Paid parking available nearby
On Fukuoka's reclaimed waterfront, a triangular tower of light rises above the city—Fukuoka Tower, the tallest seaside tower in Japan. Built in 1989 to commemorate the city's 100th anniversary and the Asia-Pacific Expo, this 234-meter landmark has become the soul of Fukuoka's skyline.
What sets Fukuoka Tower apart is its skin. Over 8,000 half-mirrored panels cover its surface, giving it the poetic name “Mirror Sail.” By day, it reflects the shifting colours of the sky—blue at noon, gold at dusk—and the city's bustling streets below. At night, its illumination transforms into a work of art: summer evenings paint the tower as a Milky Way of stars, December dresses it as a giant Christmas tree. This lighting design has earned the prestigious Paul Waterbury Award from the North American Illuminating Engineering Society.
Inside, two observatories await at 116 and 123 metres. The top-floor “SKY View 123” offers unobstructed 360-degree views: to the north, the glittering Hakata Bay; to the south, the city of Fukuoka spreading towards the mountains; on clear days, even the distant peaks of the Sefuri mountain range come into view. The floor is embedded with luminous stones that glow softly after dark, as if you're walking on a bed of stars. The sunset view here is so breathtaking it has been selected as one of Japan's “Top 100 Night Views.”
This is more than an observation deck. It's a place where architecture, light, and the human spirit meet—a mirror that reflects both the city and those who gaze upon it.