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!


[Header Image]

Sites Referenced:
Environmental Grafitti
Atlas Obscura
Aokigahara Wikipedia

  • Sully

    This is creepy, but I wouldn’t mind investigating it and staying over night if someone dared me. I know it sounds stupid, but I’m really in to scary stuff. So… yeah! :)

  • danny k

    How did I miss this place on my trip to Japan…

  • John Roberts

    I’d rather spend the night there than a forest with bears or mountain lions. I had a friend who was attacked by a mountain lion one time during an outing. He shot and killed it with a .357 revolver and said it was the toughest thing he’d ever had to do. He sent the head to the Center for Disease Control and it was found to be rabid. I’d hate to spend the night anywhere unarmed and without my Klarus ST11 flashlight and my Inova UV light (for scorpions). Maybe the Aokigahara Forest has no dangerous animals, I don’t know, but right now, if I were in Japan, I’d be more afraid of that damn reactor that’s still belching out radioactive materials than I am a few ghosts.

  • A. Brown

    I actually just went hiking there yesterday. Aokigahara is a very beautiful, quiet, and serene place. It is a far cry from the hustle and bustle of the bigger cities in Japan where you regularly just hear traffic and other sounds of the city. They have some beautiful caves that you can explore and the paths are quite well marked for hikers. That being said, off of the path it is extremely dense forest. You could walk 50 yards and be completely removed from any sign or sound of civilization. It would be quite easy to get lost! I feel that the place is so quiet and peaceful that is why it is chosen by folks as a place to punch their own ticket. Walking though the forest is something like being exhausted and falling into a comfortable bed…you really dont want to leave! Some people just choose to stay. All death aside, it is a beautiful forest and one that nature lovers in Japan should make a trip to see if you are in the area of Fuji-san. Just make sure that you decide to leave again! Life is too short to check out before your time.

  • Scarred Sword

    Suicide is deeply ingrained in Japan. The samurai would commit sepuku to regain their honor and get a better reincarnation. Even though the samurai are gone, the ideas still continue and you hear about high school students committing suicide if they get a bad grade or don’t pass because it shames their families.

  • Impeding Lies

    Even for people with terminal illness or incurable chronic conditions? I suffer from chronic fatigue and it just isnt taken seriously nothing has ever been proven to treat it and I don’t want to live with this overwhelming fatigue anymore. Pseudo science pushers make money off sufferers because there is so little known. Why should I go on at the mercy of whenever some drug makers decide my life is worthy of living?

  • Impeding Lies

    No. That does not mean the wealth is fairly shared through the classes because there is certainly working poor and poverty class people in Japan.

  • Beverley Davis

    fascinating article

  • Mandee

    I’m surprised I’m just now hearing about this since I’ve been obsessed with Japan for quite some time now. This absolutely blows my mind. It really is beautiful though. I’d still like to visit, during the daytime to check it out. Great article, thank you!

  • Julie Voye

    Yeah, shove Jesus down someone throat ehen they are sad, because Christians never commit suicide. s

  • lovejapan

    Well,i dont know about you guys…..but do take a look at the cover picture in the header of the page……..if it’s edited it’s disrespecting the forest…if it’s true……RUN! RUN! RUN! what the hell was the cameraman doing there….

  • lovejapan

    yes of course….the knife or bullet wounds willl be ignored…and u r an ass

  • Sarah Wesner

    Thanks for explaining the Destination Truth episode. I have been searching for a way to view it for free, but haven’t had any luck. I was thinking of paying the $2 to watch it on YouTube, but now I know I can save my money.

  • Philippine Girl

    i just read most of the people comments here and it appeared like this was a year ago… well i just had the chance to watched this video. i didnt even know that this forest exist plus stories behind this forest. We dont know what can be the reason why people end up hanging themselves up there, but definitely those that killed themselves are likely people who never cared about anyone or anybody in the family/ friends or they have disregarded it because they are determined to die… going to the forest alone, hang & die there – well no one will search their bodies…. there could also be another reason, that this place can be like a dumping place for bodies other than suicide issues. well its easy to say and people remain stigma up to the stories or history. who will care but what people know is “suicide forest”… i never want to cross this forest, if this is what the is being described about. and probably for those people who are adventurous, maybe were lost and they died becuase they could find their way out then… so many things can come across the many mind of the people. So how can we stop this? well, maybe its in their culture… or people are just insane and high at that time and they probably is not in the state of their minds….. not a good place.. there are so many places that we can appreciate…. let them RIP. For there is still light so their souls can find the way out…. just believe

  • Reader MLA

    forest can be a crime place, suicide, name it all. But people remind themselves of suicide forest and that is what impacting now to the many minds of the readers…. no intact person will kill themselves…. depression can be treated by medication now a days.. these people are born out of there genes/DNA that has the killing link.

  • 🐾AℵįℳąL🐾

    i feel the sudden urge to go camping

  • Kristin

    Watched a movie called Grave Halloween and it was about this forest. Scared the hell out of me!

  • lizzie

    Tho Mt Fuji is so well known, I had never heard of this place. Suicide has been even a noble way out in Japan for so long. Myself, knowing that the area is so popular for that reason, I would have no desire to even visit. I am glad to know that the volunteer has such compassion to do the work that he does, which is commendable. As he commented that people need to help one another stay connected in this world, I felt sad because I know that the once close-knit villages and towns are really of yesteryear and more people do feel disconnected. Was interesting, but I feel offended by the questions posed as though this was some kind of Halloween story.

  • Lana Rogers

    Wow I think I wouldn’t have been able to walk through there alone in the dark if I had read abt it either…

  • Lana Rogers

    I agree w you and was actually thinking about this while I was reading it…

  • Angela

    I think it would be an amazing place to go and explore,.. But I most likely wouldn’t be stayin the night there, or know how I would react if I found the remains of someone who couldn’t handle the beautiful life they were givin.

  • Banshari Mridha

    okkeeh!! Enough internet for today :-S

  • dixiepixie

    I had never heard of this place befor and I am an avid ghost hunter fan! This is very sad though..the Japanese people need Jesus!!

  • Jesse

    It IS and idea, but there are not a lot of christians there. There is a Buddhist temple near it, and I heard one of the monks makes it a point to find and help save people that may be attempting suicide, but also to help the spirits transition to the next step/cycle instead of lingering. So using religion IS attempted, but one temple/monastery cannot cover such a forest.

  • Jesse

    It’s a lot less selfish, for sure. Least someone like a kid wouldn’t stumble across it.

  • Jesse

    From the pictures, it looks like there is little plant life besides the trees and their roots, maybe not enough food for something like a deer to live in?

  • Jesse

    I believe ghosts, but I also believe that magnetic fields can and WILL screw with your mind, and is usually the case in most “hauntings”. This place may be both cases. Real or not, the brain cannot tell the difference.

    And I think your post on the redwood forest may also help give insight as to why there isnt a lot of life in Aokigahara.

  • ken

    why were you in japan white boy, never comeback to my country again

  • laschwill

    I think people go to this forest because they know so many before them felt the same way and most of the time, they don’t think anyone understands – kind of a twisted fraternity. It’s incredibly sad, but knowing a thing or two about the culture, the pain of depression and the thought of burdening your family/friends with it is usually the tipping point and many see no other way out. Don’t get me wrong, I do not agree, only understand the reasons.

    The reality is everyone leaves a print on the world… physically, emotionally, digitally, etc. and it cannot be erased by suicide. The burden is far greater when you are gone – even to a complete stranger. Hayano-San seems to genuinely care based on his reaction of finding a skeleton. He still has so much hope. Personally, I would not spend the night and I am not even sure about a day trip. It would be too hard to see what he sees on a regular basis. It will take a very long time to change this mindset. Ironic… I live in San Francisco and am writing this days after seeing Mt. Fuji from the train – yes, I did think about this infamous forest :/

  • Ellen Gwaltney Bales

    This is the most depressing video I’ve ever seen. I had never heard of this forest before nor did I know what a high suicide rate Japan has. I watched it in its entirety and it has left me feeling so sad. I need to do something to cheer myself up quickly. This is not something I will easily forget.

  • Angela Tran

    Who wrote this article? I need to cite this but I can’t find a First AND Last name..

  • Wendybird

    Watched an hour of video once of two guys wandering around the forest in November claiming it was completely silent. It was not! There was an almost continual echo of Japanese Warblers piping timidly in the background. And Much of the supposed “mysterious rustling” sounded like squirrels. I think the problem is that the Japanese people have lost touch with what actual wilderness is like, this forest is wilderness. To someone who has never touched that it’s damn scary. I would love to visit, for the natural beauty and bird life.

  • Jake Folger

    Actually I was going to go backpacking through Japan in April and Aokigahara is one place that I wanted to camp at. I am really looking forward to it. I am not going for the sad and ghastly reputation of the forest, but for the scenery. It is a very lovely forest right next to the towering mount Fuji.

  • Theo

    Nah, they’d pick Angeles National Forest for that. Rumor has it there are hundreds of shallow graves there of mafia victims never heard from again. Aokigahara is interesting — reminds me of Mirkwood Forest in the Hobbit.

  • Traeyeshaune Wilson

    We are not GOD. HE and HE alone is the giver and taker of life although man seems to think they are as well. People are gonna learn GOD is the alpha and the omega, the beginning and the end.

  • Traeyeshaune Wilson

    That song described how Caucasians hung our ancestors in poplar trees, and set them on fire. Has nothing to do with japan’s forest.

  • Traeyeshaune Wilson

    GOD is the only one who can help. If they leave this world then their time was up, and that’s how it had to happen. They are in a better place, no pain, suffering or worry. GOD said we all will return to him one day. WE ARE HIS CHILDREN.

  • Julie Voye

    Rant on, bigot. Your imaginary friend must be very proud of how you turn people’s stomachs and vhase them away from your pretend diety.

  • Tamara

    This sad but scary. Wouldn’t do it personally. But why does Japan have such a high suicide rate?

    And sorry if you don’t mind, you stated that you’d be lucky to get a bird chirping in the tree let alone any animals be near there, why is there bodies “picked at by wild animals”?
    If there are wild animals somewhere, wouldn’t the people abandoned be able to find some food.

    Sorry i;m just a very curious person.

  • dave

    your english sucks white girl, dont ever speak my language again.

  • ken

    god dont exist, idiot. someone mispelled dog. dont ever post on this blog again, lameass.

  • Mum of two

    It might have a reputation but they’re far from spooky looking. If you want a truly spooky looking forest, try Wistman’s Woods in Dartmoor, Devon, UK.

  • that 1 awesome p3rson

    Racest!

  • Rex Johnson

    Im into ghost hunting i would love to stay. The night

  • Xephos0

    This is really sad. :( Japan is such an awesome place especially what they make for us around the world. Why would people think about killing themselves?

  • annamarie

    anyone that wants to travel to other countries can do so at their own free will, ken…you have nothing to say on the matter. deal with it. and dont be such a racist pig over it.

  • annamarie

    ewww…dont give them any ideas!!

  • annamarie

    she can speak whatever language she wishes, dave, wow are you a racist pig…get over yourself…

  • annamarie

    this person didnt say it had anything to do with japans forest. they posted the poem because it is fitting…

  • annamarie

    actually the christian population of japan is a lot higher than 1%, since many japanese are catholic…granted the number is still small but it is much higher than 1%.