Mount Fuji hikers to be charged $36 on all trails
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Thanks in part to the new restrictions, the number of climbers who tackled Mount Fuji declined to 204,316 in 2024.
PHOTO: UNSPLASH
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TOKYO - Hikers attempting any of Mount Fuji’s four main trails will be charged an entry fee of 4,000 yen (S$36) from the summer, after local authorities passed a Bill on March 17.
A record influx of foreign tourists to Japan has sparked alarm about overcrowding on the nation’s highest mountain, a once-peaceful pilgrimage site.
In 2024, the Yamanashi region – home to Mount Fuji – introduced a 2,000 yen entry fee
A cap on daily entries and online reservations were also brought in on that trail by officials concerned about safety and environmental damage on Fuji’s majestic slopes.
The Yoshida Trail fee will be doubled for 2025’s July-September climbing season, while neighbouring Shizuoka region passed a Bill on March 17 to also charge 4,000 yen for its three trails, which were previously free.
Thanks in part to the new restrictions, the number of climbers who tackled Mount Fuji declined to 204,316 in 2024
Although climber numbers continue to be eclipsed by pre-pandemic levels, “200,000 hikers is still huge”, Mr Natsuko Sodeyama, a Shizuoka prefecture official, told AFP.
“There is no other mountain in Japan that attracts that many people in the span of just over two months. So some restrictions are necessary to ensure their safety.”
Mount Fuji is covered in snow for most of the year, but during the summer hiking season, many trudge up its steep, rocky slopes through the night to see the sunrise.
The symmetrical mountain has been immortalised in countless artworks, including Hokusai’s Great Wave Off Kanagawa. It last erupted around 300 years ago. AFP

