Drinking tea in the Old Capital: Ten Tea and Tea Culture Spots in Kyoto

Kyoto has been the centre of Japanese tea culture for….800 or so years? So you’d expect there to be some good places to sit and have a cup (or bowl) of tea. Here are some of my favourite tea places to go in the old capital, ranging from the well-known to the more unassuming. I’ll be sticking to Kyoto proper here; there’s plenty more tea in Uji…

Cafes and Tea Shops

Ippodo Kyoto

Ippodo kyoto

If you know matcha, you probably know Ippodo. While this is a lovely shop with some lovely tea, it’s bound to be busy as they are one of the most well-known tea companies in Japan. Stop by if you’re in the area, but you can do better. Actually, if you are in the area, walk a block down the street to Kumagai Dōgusho for some fun antiquing.



Fukujuen Kyoto Main Store

A kimono-clad staff member at the Fukujuen tea shop in Kyoto speaks to seated guests across a wooden counter backed by shelves of labelled tea boxes.

Right on one of Kyoto’s busiest shopping streets is this multi-story tea complex operated by another centuries old tea giant: Fukujuen. The ground floor carries the regular tourist fare: lots of elegantly packaged sencha and matcha. Go downstairs to the basement and you’ll find the first of their experiences: Kyō-no-Chagura. Here you can take quick lessons in brewing and matcha whisking, custom blend your own sencha, or partake in tea guessing games (all subject to availability and reservations).

Go upstairs from the ground floor and see Saryo Fukucha, a cafe centred around pairing tea and sweets. They also offer various tray menus and herbal blends.

The third floor takes things international with a blend of French Cuisine and Nihoncha at Maison de Matsuda. Here, special lunch and dinner courses are offered by reservation.

Continue your upwards climb and things take a more traditional turn with the 4.5 mat tearoom Muryo-an. Here Fukujuen hosts various tea ceremony experiences and drinks. Of course, the tea room is also available to rent if you want to host your own chaji :)

The Muryo-an tatami tearoom at Fukujuen, framed by woven bamboo screens with a calligraphy plaque above the alcove.

If you’re looking to buy some tea ceremony utensils, keep on climbing to the fifth floor where you can buy delicate wares for both sencha and matcha. In true Kyoto spirit, most of the pieces offered here are of the elegant, floral, and highly decorated styles.

The next two floors are event spaces, so check online to see if there’s anything going on.

Salon de Kanbayashi

A wooden table at Salon de Kanbayashi set with a tiered sweets box and tea cups beside a lattice window looking out onto greenery.

The Kanbayashi name is one of the most historic and well-respected in Japanese tea, with the family’s involvement in Uji tea dating back to the early 1500s, and since then they continued to work with Japan’s most influential figures, such as Toyotomi Hideyoshi and Furuta Oribe. The family has four branches, with the Shunshō branch, currently on their 15th generation, operating this cafe.


Despite their main association with matcha, Salon de Kanbayashi is a sencha specialty cafe, nestled in a century-old house.


Garden Lab Tea & Bar

The leafy entrance courtyard of Garden Lab Tea & Bar, set in an old wooden Kyoto kyomachiya townhouse with a stone path and planted garden.

Creative cocktails and mixed tea drinks alongside well-brewed high-quality teas: fun for everyone! This space feels very “Kyoto” to me, with many blends of contemporary and traditional aesthetics in an old kyomachiya.



Aotake

The tranquil roji garden at Aotake, carpeted with bright green moss beneath a maple tree and lit by a stone lantern.

A personal favourite of mine. Small, dark, intimate, and unassuming. Passing through the gate on the street, you find yourself in a tranquil roji garden, with moss and maple trees to admire as you sit at the koshikake waiting bench (you’ll probably have to sit at this bench because it’s tiny inside). Without any signs or directions, you’ve already experienced a hallmark of Japanese tea culture: waiting on the bench in the roji is an integral part of a chaji.

The dark, rustic wood-walled interior of Aotake, with a low table, chair and a hanging calligraphy scroll evoking wabi simplicity.

Inside is ripe with dark wabi rusticity, offset by a view back the moss garden. There’s no matcha here, instead the owner curates a small selection of high-quality local teas in addition to imported teas and desserts.


7T+

The bright, modern counter at the 7T+ specialty tea shop, lined with rows of glass tasting cups as a staff member brews tea.

A huge aesthetic departure from aotake, 7T+ is bright, clean, modern, and clearly part of the contemporary specialty tea scene, offering many single cultivar teas to drink and buy. They also have some pretty good ice cream.


〇間 (0Ma)

The interior of 0Ma in a Taisho-era building, with antique wooden tansu chests and contemporary ceramics under a paper lantern.

Contemporary ceramics in traditional Taisho-era architecture and lots of tasty tea—what’s not to love.


Kouroan

Two women smiling as they sort fresh green tea leaves in a large round bamboo basket during a tea experience at Kouroan.

Located up by Daitoku-ji, Kouroan has some unique experiences. Alongside the tea ceremony demonstrations and tasty drinks you might expect, you can also try your hand at…sorting tencha!? (and also grinding it and drinking it, of course).


Museums and Galleries


Raku Museum

A dark raku chawan tea bowl with a gold-glazed patch displayed on a low plinth at the Raku Museum in Kyoto.

A small and quiet museum with a rotating display of raku chawan made by the successive generations of the Raku family, usually spanning from their first generation, Chōjiro, to the present day.


Museum of Furuta Oribe

The dimly lit gallery of the Museum of Furuta Oribe, where illuminated glass cases display tea wares along dark walls and a wooden floor.

A lesser-known museum tucked away in Kitayama that focuses on Furuta Oribe, the eccentric samurai tea master who succeeded Sen-no-Rikyū. Highlights here are the various unique wares dug up from Oribe’s old residence in Fushimi. Oribe’s warped and unique aesthetics were extremely popular for a brief period, but have now been replaced by the more elegant fashions of Kyoto, so seeing this small glimpse into a different aesthetic era is fascinating.



Of course, there are many many more tea and tea-adjacent spots to go in Kyoto, but these are some of our favourites.

If you’re traveling through Tokyo as well, check out our Top Ten Tokyo Tea Destinations

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