Zazen meditation in Kyoto — English temple sittings, price, and how to book

The zazen meditation hall (zendō) of a Japanese Zen temple, with cushions on a raised platform
エヴァンズの秘書 / CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons

The short answer

Kyoto, the home of Japanese Zen, is the best place to try zazen (seated Zen meditation), and several temples guide it in English. You'll learn how to sit, where to put your hands, how to breathe, and how to quiet a busy mind — usually followed by a short dharma talk. A typical English class runs 60–90 minutes and costs from ¥3,000; a few temples also hold free public sittings for a small entry fee.

This page is the honest go-info: which temples teach in English, what it costs, and what zazen actually asks of you.

Where to book (English-friendly)

  • Shunkō-in Temple, within the great Myōshin-ji complex, is the best-known for English instruction: the deputy head priest lived in the US and leads clear, welcoming sessions. A zazen class is ¥3,000; a longer course adding a tea ceremony and temple tour is ¥18,700. Reserve via the official site.
  • Kennin-ji, Kyoto's oldest Zen temple in Gion, opens a monthly public sitting (Senkō-kai) on the second Sunday at 7:30am — it's free with the ¥500 temple entry, though instruction is mostly in Japanese. Details on the official site.

Sessions cap numbers and fill up, especially in spring and autumn, so book or arrive early. Times and fees change, so confirm on the temple's page.

What actually happens

You're shown to a cushion (zafu) and taught the posture: legs crossed (or kneeling), back straight, hands resting in a soft oval, eyes half-open and lowered. The guide leads slow breathing and explains how to let thoughts pass without chasing them. You sit in silence for a period or two — short for beginners — sometimes ended by a small bell or the gentle keisaku stick on the shoulders. Most sessions close with a short talk you can ask questions in.

The etiquette that matters

Zazen is shared silence, so the etiquette is simple: arrive early, silence your phone, stay still and quiet, and bow to your seat and your neighbours. No special belief is required — anyone can sit.

Make a day of it

The stillness of zazen pairs naturally with a Kyoto tea ceremony and the aesthetic of wabi-sabi that shapes the Zen room. Build it into a day of the best cultural experiences in Kyoto. For seasonal temple events and special openings, cross-reference japan-event.info.

The MICHI Desk
  • Japanese-culture experience editor

Verified, English-friendly guides to experiencing Japanese culture.