Aokigahara: Japan’s Haunted Forest of Death

Located at the base of Mt. Fuji, Aokigahara is perhaps the most infamous forest in all of Japan. Also known as the Sea of Trees, Suicide Forest, and Japan’s Demon Forest, Aokigahara has been home to over 500 confirmed suicides since the 1950s. Called “the perfect place to die,” Aokigahara is the world’s second most popular place for suicide (the Golden Gate Bridge being the first).

A Horrifying Legend is Born

Legend says that this all started after Seicho Matsumoto published a novel by the name of Kuroi Kaiju (Black Sea of Trees) in 1960. The story ends with two lovers committing suicide in the forest, so many people believe that’s what started it all. However, the history of suicide in Aokigahara predates the novel, and the place has long been associated with death. Hundreds upon hundreds of Japanese people have hanged themselves from the trees of Aokigahara forest.

Wataru Tsurumui’s controversial 1993 bestseller, The Complete Suicide Manual, is a book that describes various modes of suicide and even recommends Aokigahara as the perfect place to die. Apparently this book is also a common find in the forest, usually not too far away from a suicide victim and their belongings. Undoubtedly, the most common method of suicide in the forest is hanging.

Japan’s suicide rate is already bad enough as it is, and having this forest and suicide manual on top of it all is pretty terrible. It’s really sad. Despite many efforts to prevent suicide and provide help to those considering it, Japan’s suicide rate continues to rise.

Legend has it that in ancient times families would abandon people in the forest during periods of famine when there was not enough food to go around. By sacrificing family members to the forest, there would be less mouths to feed and therefore enough food for the rest of the family. Those abandoned in the forest would die long, horrible, drawn out deaths due to starvation. Because of that, Aokigahara is also said to be haunted by the souls of these abandoned people.

In addition, there are many other ghost and demon stories associated with the forest. It is said that these ghastly spirits glide between the trees with their white, shifting forms being occasionally spotted by unsuspecting visitors out of the corners of their eyes.

Japanese spiritualists believe that the suicides committed in the forest have permeated Aokigahara’s soil and trees, generating paranormal activity and preventing many who enter from escaping the gnarled depths of the forest. Aokigahara is not the kind of place you’d want to honeymoon at, that’s for sure.

Terrifying Topography

The vast forest covers a 3,500 hectare wide area and the tree coverage in Aokigahara is so thick that even at high noon it’s entirely possible to find places shrouded in complete darkness. It’s also mostly devoid of animals and is eerily quiet. Hearing a bird chirping in the forest is incredibly rare. The area is rocky, cold, and littered with over 200 caves for you to accidentally fall into.

The discomforting forest is known for the thickness of its trees, its twisting network of woody vines, and the dangerous unevenness of the forest floor. All of this together gives the place a very unwelcoming feeling.

Personally, I love hiking and I think the forest actually looks really pretty during the daytime. However, I think the place would turn absolutely horrifying come nightfall. Who knows when you’ll trip over some snarled root or jagged rock, fall down a hill and land on top of a pile of bones or a rotting corpse. No nighttime hiking in Aokigahara for me, thanks.

Further compounding the creepiness factor is the common occurrence of compasses, cell phones, and GPS systems being rendered useless by the rich deposits of magnetic iron in the area’s volcanic soil. I’m sure this fact has helped propagate the legend of the forest’s demonic habit of trapping visitors within it.

Besides bodies and homemade nooses, also scattered around the forest are signs put up by the police with messages like “Your life is a precious gift from your parents,” and “Please consult with the police before you decide to die,” in an attempt to discourage would be committers of suicide. Judging from the increasing number of suicides, these signs probably aren’t all that effective.

An Unfortunate Suicide Hotspot

By the 1970s the suicides had become so infamous that the Japanese government started to do annual sweeps of the forest to search for and clear out the bodies. In 2002, 78 bodies were found within the forest, exceeding the previous record of 74 in 1998. By 2003, the rate had climbed to 100.

In recent years, the local government has stopped publicizing the numbers in an attempt to downplay Aokigahara’s association with suicide. In 2004, 108 people killed themselves in the forest and in 2010, 247 people attempted suicide, 54 of whom succeeded. But that’s just the number they found and reported. Who knows how many more there are that just go undiscovered?

I’m actually pretty surprised that I hadn’t heard about Aokigahara until just recently. You’d think that something like this, being the number two hotspot for suicides in the world, and located right at the base of Mt. Fuji, would be more well known. Maybe it’s just me.

Its Effect on the Locals

Nearly as unfortunate as the suicides themselves is the impact the suicides have on the locals and forest workers. One local man says, “It bugs the hell out of me that the area’s famous for being a suicide spot.” A local police officer said, “I’ve seen plenty of bodies that have been really badly decomposed, or been picked at by wild animals. There’s nothing beautiful about dying in there.” It’s really a shame that such a unique and interesting forest has become sullied by so many suicides.

The forest workers have it even worse than the police who comb and investigate the forest. The workers are tasked with the job of carrying the bodies down from the forest to the local station, where the bodies are put in a special room used specifically to house suicide corpses. The forest workers then play janken to see who has to sleep in the room with the corpse. Talk about terrible.

The reason for these strange sleeping arrangements is that it is believed if the corpse is left alone, it’s very bad luck for the ghost of the suicide victim. Their spirits are said to scream throughout the night if left alone, and their bodies will get up and shuffle around, searching for company.

I don’t know about you, but this sounds like one of the absolute worst ways to spend a night. Maybe it wouldn’t be so bad if the body is just like a pile of bones, but I can’t imagine how creepy it would be to sleep in a dinky little room with a fresh corpse as a roommate.

To make matters worse, a few years back people started to scavenge the forest for valuables. And by this I mean that people would search the forest for dead bodies and then loot their corpses. Talk about disrespectful, not to mention creepy.

Suicide Forest Documentary

[yframe url='http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4FDSdg09df8']

I also found this awesome video about one of the guys who regularly goes on suicide prevention patrols in Aokigahara. It’s really interesting and definitely worth a watch if you have twenty minutes to spare.

Like I said before, the suicide rate of Japan is one of the highest in the world and really shows no sign of decreasing despite government measures to discourage it. That being said, I don’t really see Aokigahara becoming less of a suicide hotspot anytime soon.

Destination Truth

Aokigahara was also featured on an episode of SyFy’s Destination Truth series because of how famous the place is for being haunted. Unfortunately, you can only view the episode online with Hulu+ (link to the episode here). I signed up for the free trial just to watch the episode, but it’s nothing special.

It’s pretty much just what you’d expect from a paranormal investigation show. Americans getting lost in the woods at night, seeing things in the shadows, and hearing whispers in the night. The best part about the episode is seeing what the place looks like at nighttime, and how easy it is to get lost there.


So, what are your thoughts on Aokigahara, undoubtedly one of the creepiest places in Japan? Would you want to visit and explore the forest, or would it be too scary? Would you be willing to camp overnight in the forest if someone dared you? Have you even heard of this place before? Let us know in the comments!


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Sites Referenced:
Environmental Grafitti
Atlas Obscura
Aokigahara Wikipedia

  • vivianlostinseoul

    Great post. I visited Aokigahara Forest. It’s beautiful and sad, and very eerie. I highly recommend going for how gorgeous it is. Here is my post:
    http://vivianlostinseoul.blogspot.jp/2011/11/aokigahara-forest-and-mount-fuji.html

  • http://twitter.com/Shisu__ Francisca

    First of all, sorry for my English.
    I’ve listened/watched/read things about Aoikigahara before and I was so shocked. I’ve also watched that documentary and makes me feel sad. Suicide matters are a delicated issue because involves lots of things such as families’ pain for those who comitted suicide and so on. I must recognize that I was very curious for this topic the first time I saw pictures of Aokigahara, but now this makes me think about suicide and one of the -I think- topics in Japan that now are a concern for Japan society.

    An interesting but a delicate topic as well.
    :C

  • Michael S

    Aokigahara looks like a pretty place to go for a hike.
    As for suicides, it seems very rude to kill yourself and leave all that clean-up work behind for everyone else.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100001535919021 Heather Stewart

    It really is a spooky place to read about… I feel like there should be a movie here in the states about it

  • sandra03

    really interesting. and creepy. i kind of want to go for a hike there

  • ジョサイア

    It seems like something like this would be bit more known.

    That is a very interesting way to die…O_o

    The Japanese government should use it interrogation…just stick em in the forest for a night…

  • simplyshiny

    great blog! thanks!

  • http://www.facebook.com/andrew.magee.9 Andrew Magee

    You mentioned the area being devoid of animals. I tried checking but I couldn’t find anything as to why. I’m not really privy to the wildlife situation in Japan so I was wondering if you had any idea why the forest is so barren?

  • 古戸ヱリカ

    As far as interrogation techniques go, I’m not sure “let them leave” ranks too high on the list.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100001462817558 Michael Baltazar

    I think he means tie him to a tree or something so he can’t run off. I’d be pretty scared..

  • Emi

    I stumbled upon the forest a good few years
    back when I was reading up on Japans culture. The more I learn about the forest,
    the more I will not want to visit there. It’s not that it’s disturbing, it’s
    just that it’s an area filled with extreme sadness, and I’m quite sensitive to
    that. As for sleeping in a room with a corpse, it’s different when it’s your
    family member. Although, to keep someone company isn’t necessarily a bad thing,
    so I wouldn’t mind.

  • DeTo-13

    What a sad story for a beautiful forest, I don’t know if you’ve covered it before but doesn’t Japan lack in the psychological health department which is what influences the high suicide rate?.

  • ジョサイア

    Tied to something of course…Maybe a tree with a “man on a swing” on it.

  • t. jodo

    this place is referenced in the current manga ‘i am a hero’ by kengo hanazawa. its a zombie manga and the main character finds himself lost in aokigahara and finds corpses of people hung from trees who have come back as zombies.

  • John

    As far as I could tell, I think it has to do with the volcanic soil and the topography. Just the land being so jaggy and stuff. I know there’s some wildlife, like the occasional bird and there’s bats in some of those caves, but there’s a definitive lack of wildlife in Aokigahara compared to the surrounding areas. In other words, I’m not really sure, lol.

  • http://twitter.com/NishiLain LC

    I found about the forest years ago. I felt shocked and scared then. Now that I read about it again I feel sad. I once watched a show whit ex Morning musume member Kago Ai who went there to try to find and help somebody from commiting suicide. Hard gay went there too, but for treasure hunting lol. Thank you for posting that documentary, it was very interesting. I wonder how many people reconsider their decision to commit suicide and come back.

  • Robert Patrick

    “Further compounding the creepiness factor is the common occurrence of
    compasses, cell phones, and GPS systems being rendered useless by the
    rich deposits of magnetic iron in the area’s volcanic soil.”

    Honestly, I want to scream “TOTAL BULLSHIT !” : cell phones are also inoperative in the middle of Yoyogi Kôen. Oh wait, also inoperative in the Shinagawa station.
    Seriously, there are so many places in “modern Japan” where you just get ZERO network, I’m not really surprised you wouldn’t get any in the middle of such a forest.

    Great article, by the way !

  • http://zoomingjapan.com/ zoomingjapan

    “… Japan’s suicide rate continues to rise.” – Not true. Recently it actually decreased (though I can’t remember if that was only the rate for those who decide to jump in front of a train …)

    I also never heard about that forest before!
    While I like traveling to weird places, that would be very scary, especially alone.
    I’m not afraid of the forest, but to stumble upon some dead bodies! T_____T …..

  • http://www.myjapanesegreentea.com/ Ricardo Caicedo

    Japan ranks in the top ten countries with higher wealth. Is this a case of “money can’t buy happiness”?

  • Amber Lynn

    This is a very interesting and eerie article-odd how I’ve never heard of it before this. It seems like such a beautiful place; though, even from watching the video I can sense the overall sadness. Odd, I cant see myself ever wanting to go there.

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    I heard it decreased as well, but I also remember something rising. Maybe percentage? But yeah, I also heard there was an overall decrease, or something, recently.

  • hikaru1412

    I first heard of this forest by watching the Discovery Truth episode. I really wish I could help all that feel like the answer is suicide. That documentary was very good. The skeleton made me really sad. And you don’t have to be there to feel the sadness that envelops the forest. The man is right, “Nobody is alone in this world. We have to coexist, and take care of each other.” That’s what I feel, too.

  • http://twitter.com/sushimanster hoshiro-

    The moment I read the title I knew it was talking about the forest in Mt. Fuji, so that’s what the forest is called. I learned about it from Lucky Star but I never actually knew the name.

  • Crystal

    Just a couple months ago, I visited the three caves near Mt. Fuji (Bat, Wind and Ice caves). There’s actually an 1-hour guided tour to the Forest, which you can sign up for 500 yen at the Bat cave’s office. But it’s Japanese only. The tour mentioned about wild-life, though I’m guessing they are just birds.

    I didn’t join the tour, but I did hike the part of trail in the forest that linked between the Wind and Ice caves. The trail itself was well marked and took 20 mins… Great for people who want a little taste of Suicide Forest. But I freaked out, because I was pretty much alone on the trail, and the tangling tree roots and small caves along the way was plain creepy. It was deadly silent and I could hear my own breathing… Then all the graphical memories of reading up about the suicide stories flooded back… But gotta admit the topography was quite amazing, it’s really too bad it’s become a famous place for suicides.

  • John

    Happy to help!

  • John

    From what I could tell, it rose from about 1990 to about 2009 and then kind of tapered off, it does seems like it fell a bit earlier this year though.

    http://www.who.int/mental_health/media/japa.pdf
    http://opsafeintl.com/2012/01/crash-update-suicide-rate-in-japan-falls/

  • John

    lol, yes that is true. I just wanted to make the reason clear as to why they would act screwy in Aokigahara since the magnetism in the ground can mess with (normally functioning) devices ranging from a simple compass to a cellphone/gps. In the Destination Truth episode, they show one of the guys holding a normal, old school compass that keeps flipping directions as it’s affected by the ground’s magnetism. But yeah, they’d probably get bad cellphone reception anyway being out in the wilderness like that, haha.

  • Nigger

    I’ve heard of it and I would actually love to go exploring in the Forest of the Dead.

  • A fan

    Great article. Do you generally get your ideas from Japanese sources? I am always looking for good reads in Japanese but don’t always know how to find them. I find it easier to look up things based on the interesting topics of your articles and others on Tofugu.
    Rock on.

  • Ugly Pig

    Ooh, now I get the part in GTO where he tries to bury a student he thinks he killed “in the woods around Mt. Fuji”.

  • http://www.facebook.com/brenda.goodman.100 Brenda Goodman

    It’s sad but there is a lot of beauty in certain sadness, I believe it is so in this case. I do not & never shall believe that suicide is the answer for anyone, but one thing was mentioned in the video where he state’s that he does not know the reason that people choose that forest to commit suicide, but clearly they feel that they wont be alone & also it is a beautiful place. And just maybe they want to leave this world surrounded by beauty. If I had the chance to goo to that Forrest, I would go unafraid, with an open & reverent mind to all who has crossed over through that place. There is no reason for fear of they dead. They have after all done what we all must do. I pray for their peace.

  • http://twitter.com/CarlineBenois Carline Benois

    I know I’m being really creepy here, but this article creeped me out then it got me thinking on a creepy tangent..but think of how easy it would be for someone to get murdered and have their body dumped in that forest. It would be easy to write it off as a suicide since dead bodies in the forest are a common occurrence..just saying.

  • http://www.facebook.com/L.L.Abogilal Laura Combs Abogilal

    Actually, an EXCELLANT point:(

  • http://twitter.com/JericaOHagan Jerica O’Hagan

    I have done a lot of paranormal research, and while the topography may be a factor for the lack of animals, they are also very sensitive to the paranormal. Thousands of people have died there according to records, which are only recent. There must have been tens of thousands of deaths there. That’s a lot of spiritual/paranormal energy. Animals feel unwanted, sad, depressed like we do when we enter the forest so they avoid it. I’ve heard of haunted houses where the dog/cat refused to enter a room/section of a house.

  • http://twitter.com/JericaOHagan Jerica O’Hagan

    Um not to argue, but we all die in the end. Should it be considered rude for you to have a heart attack and collapse on the spot, then cease to live and commence to empty your bladder and defecate on the spot, for someone else to clean up? I can’t imagine reviving myself, dressing myself into my death suit, and climbing into my coffin before the funeral. (Sarcasm: the last sentence your death creates work for someone else to take care of your corpse)

  • John

    I usually get them from English sources actually. Sometimes I’ll find an article about something that interests me or articles will make me think of other good ideas to Google search for. Glad you enjoyed it though!

  • http://twitter.com/raazgupta Raj Gupta

    Such a sad documentary. Mount Fuji looked so beautiful at the end.

  • http://www.facebook.com/NiiCKx3 Nick Coughlin

    It’s odd to me because the beauty of nature is often something that can keep my from feeling sadness of any sort and feel happy about the world and existence. I’ve never suffered from mental illness and can’t relate to being suicidal though, it’s just weird in a place of such natural beauty so many people do such a thing.

  • Chris

    I would love to see a missions trip here, say what you want but if someone could show God’s love to one of these people right before they committed suicide, it would be awesome

  • Carlos S.

    No, I haven’t heard before about this creepy place, thank you for widening my woldly facts’ collection. I guess your interesting article will arise its appeal for suicidees wannabes from all over the world. ‘Suicidal tourism’ may sound too weird but nothing coming from humankind is weird enough, or it just is until you know about the next weirder thing coming.

  • evey

    Really Interesting article. Thanks for putting that documentary up. I didn’t know any of this. The forest is so pretty, its sad that people feel the need to commit suicide there.

  • Mothman

    Creepy.

  • Micsha

    oh, my god. it it sad Japan, does things like that..
    I want to go to this place its so interesting
    inspiration for a macabre story, maybe a graphic novel even

  • John

    Yeah, it seems like a really cool place to explore or go hiking. It’s really a shame it’s become a suicide hotspot :(

  • John

    Yeah, I forgot about that. Thanks!

  • Hickory

    I have never heard of this forest before now, though I have always been interested in Japanese culture. I am very interested in visiting this place. I am also an aspiring Novelist and came across this looking for a setting for a fantasy novel and I think this would be perfect. Thanks!!

  • Sandy

    I pray for these unfortunate souls, to find peace and forgiveness in our Lord and Father, GOD, may they rest in peace!! They are so sad and I pray that more reconsider their lives as being important to me as well as others! I pray they hear my prayers for them. In GOD’S HOLY NAME! Please don’t kill yourselves, someone in the world cares about you SOUL.

  • l Amplify

    Put chills down my spine.

  • http://www.facebook.com/robert.horn.9404 Robert Horn

    I walked through this forest after climbing Mt Fuji at the end of May before the winter season had ended in 2008. The only reason I walked through it was because the last bus left from the 5th station around 4pm and I missed the bus. It was very creepy and not to mention I walked all night and still didn’t reach the road. I did however see some large animal that looked like some kind of mountain lion but I couldn’t be sure. The entire time I felt like I was bring watched, luckily I had not read this article beforehand because I probably would have crapped my pants.

  • Pedia Robinson

    As creepy as this place sounds I actually wouldn’t mind visiting it (: The fact that the hauntings are due to suicides instead of murder is slightly comforting. But I would never spend the night, even if someone paid me.