Shrinking Towns of Japan
Japan is home to thousands of municipalities that have been shrinking continuously since the 1960s economic boom. Understanding which towns are disappearing — and where — is key context for anyone studying urbanization, real estate, or the future of rural societies.
The "marginal villages" phenomenon (限界集落)
A 2006 paper by sociologist Akira Ōno coined the term gengai shūraku — marginal settlements where more than half of residents are aged 65+. By 2050, hundreds of Japanese municipalities are projected to meet this threshold at the whole-town level, not just individual hamlets. This is unprecedented in modern demographic history.
What happens to a town that loses 60% of its population
Schools consolidate and close. Bus routes are cut. Bank branches, hospitals, and supermarkets withdraw. Abandoned houses (akiya) accumulate. Road and water infrastructure built for a larger population becomes prohibitively expensive to maintain per-capita. The town does not vanish overnight, but it transitions into what researchers call a "care-giving economy" dominated by nursing services.
Can shrinking towns reverse course?
A small number of Japanese towns have reversed decline through targeted strategies: artist-in-residence programs (Naoshima), satellite offices (Kamiyama, Tokushima), digital-nomad zones (Higashikawa, Hokkaidō). These remain exceptions. Most projections suggest the bottom decile of Japanese municipalities will have populations under 1,000 by 2060.
Fastest-shrinking municipalities in Japan (2020–2050)
| Rank | Municipality | Pop. | 30y Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Gunma Nanmoku | 1,612 | ▼ -74.8% |
| 2 | Kumamoto Kuma | 2,438 | ▼ -73.3% |
| 3 | Nara Nosegawa | 358 | ▼ -72.6% |
| 4 | Hokkaido Utashinai | 2,989 | ▼ -72.0% |
| 5 | Nara Mitsue | 1,480 | ▼ -71.5% |
| 6 | Nara Soni | 1,294 | ▼ -70.8% |
| 7 | Nara Kurotaki | 626 | ▼ -70.8% |
| 8 | Hokkaido Yuubari | 7,341 | ▼ -70.7% |
| 9 | Nara Higashiyoshino | 1,502 | ▼ -70.6% |
| 10 | Aomori Imabetsu | 2,335 | ▼ -70.4% |
| 11 | Gunma Kanna | 1,645 | ▼ -69.7% |
| 12 | Hokkaido Matsumae | 6,260 | ▼ -69.0% |
| 13 | Nagano Tenryuu | 1,175 | ▼ -69.0% |
| 14 | Mie Minamiise | 10,979 | ▼ -68.8% |
| 15 | Kochi Ootoyo | 3,256 | ▼ -68.8% |
| 16 | Nara Yoshino | 6,232 | ▼ -68.7% |
| 17 | Hokkaido Kamisunagawa | 2,847 | ▼ -68.6% |
| 18 | Kyoto Kasagi | 1,142 | ▼ -67.9% |
| 19 | Kochi Muroto | 11,744 | ▼ -67.8% |
| 20 | Aomori Sotogahama | 5,410 | ▼ -67.7% |
| 21 | Oita Himeshima | 1,726 | ▼ -67.7% |
| 22 | Hokkaido Kikonai | 3,836 | ▼ -66.2% |
| 23 | Aomori Sai | 1,788 | ▼ -66.1% |
| 24 | Hokkaido Fukushima | 3,794 | ▼ -65.9% |
| 25 | Gunma Shimonita | 6,583 | ▼ -65.5% |
| 26 | Nara Shimoichi | 5,042 | ▼ -65.5% |
| 27 | Aomori Fukaura | 7,346 | ▼ -65.3% |
| 28 | Tokushima Naka | 7,370 | ▼ -65.1% |
| 29 | Yamanashi Minobu | 10,655 | ▼ -64.5% |
| 30 | Hokkaido Ashibetsu | 12,578 | ▼ -64.2% |
| 31 | Nara Kamikitayama | 446 | ▼ -64.1% |
| 32 | Fukushima Mishima | 1,457 | ▼ -63.8% |
| 33 | Hokkaido Moseushi | 2,696 | ▼ -63.4% |
| 34 | Aomori Nakadomari | 9,663 | ▼ -63.4% |
| 35 | Akita Kamikoani | 2,069 | ▼ -63.3% |
| 36 | Akita Fujisato | 2,898 | ▼ -63.3% |
| 37 | Tokushima Mugi | 3,747 | ▼ -63.1% |
| 38 | Hokkaido Kamoenai | 870 | ▼ -62.6% |
| 39 | Hokkaido Akabira | 9,707 | ▼ -62.5% |
| 40 | Kyoto Wazuka | 3,483 | ▼ -62.5% |
| 41 | Nara Kawakami | 1,159 | ▼ -62.5% |
| 42 | Akita Oga | 25,175 | ▼ -62.4% |
| 43 | Kochi Niyodogawa | 4,824 | ▼ -62.3% |
| 44 | Iwate Nishiwaga | 5,137 | ▼ -62.2% |
| 45 | Hokkaido Kaminokuni | 4,308 | ▼ -62.0% |
| 46 | Nagano Sakae | 1,667 | ▼ -62.0% |
| 47 | Aomori Shingou | 2,197 | ▼ -61.9% |
| 48 | Niigata Aga | 9,970 | ▼ -61.9% |
| 49 | Tottori Wakasa | 2,868 | ▼ -61.9% |
| 50 | Hokkaido Otobe | 3,406 | ▼ -61.8% |
By prefecture
- Hokkaido
- Aomori
- Iwate
- Miyagi
- Akita
- Yamagata
- Fukushima
- Ibaraki
- Tochigi
- Gunma
- Saitama
- Chiba
- Tokyo
- Kanagawa
- Niigata
- Toyama
- Ishikawa
- Fukui
- Yamanashi
- Nagano
- Gifu
- Shizuoka
- Aichi
- Mie
- Shiga
- Kyoto
- Osaka
- Hyogo
- Nara
- Wakayama
- Tottori
- Shimane
- Okayama
- Hiroshima
- Yamaguchi
- Tokushima
- Kagawa
- Ehime
- Kochi
- Fukuoka
- Saga
- Nagasaki
- Kumamoto
- Oita
- Miyazaki
- Kagoshima
- Okinawa
Source: National Institute of Population and Social Security Research (IPSS), "Regional Population Projections for Japan (2023 revision)", and Japan's Statistics Bureau (e-Stat) national census data.