What other travelers are saying about Ishigaki Limestone Cave
We drove to this place n parking was easily available. The admission fee is reasonable. The cave is how large and took us at least an hour to fully admire the rock formations. At one part, the view was enhanced by colored lights. Good place for nice photos. Not much in terms of English information but this is not an issue as the sights are good enough.
The walking tour takes 30 minutes to complete, covering 660 meters of the accessible pathway. Allow approximately one hour total including ticket purchase and facilities.
The paved pathway has handrails and lighting, but includes stairs and uneven surfaces requiring moderate mobility. Young children and active elderly visitors can manage the route. Wheelchairs and strollers cannot be used due to steps and narrow passages.
No direct public bus service exists. The cave is 10 kilometers from Ishigaki City, accessible by taxi or rental car (20-25 minutes via Route 79). Rental car is the most practical option, though some tour packages include the cave.
No English-speaking guides are provided. Visitors tour independently. English signage marks key formations throughout the cave, and English pamphlets are available at the entrance.
The site includes free parking, restrooms, and a gift shop selling local souvenirs and refreshments. All facilities are located at the entrance area before entering the cave.
Clean and easy to walk. Temperature inside is not hot and not cold, you can wear tshirt. Really good path way to walk inside the cave. You can buy a ticket at the entrance for 1,200yen per person.
It was fun & an exciting experience to see & visit the Stalactite Cave! It was awesome! I love it!
I am sure anyone will love it there! They also have restaurant if you want something to eat & souvenir shop where you can buy something for your family or friends
Lovely experience with caves that go on for longer than you might think. Beware of busses. The stalactite cave was a lovely suprise, sitting just outside the island's main city. I think you walk a little over a kilometer from end to end, and there are places where you will want to watch you head. Otherwise, just enjoy. It's lovely! One tip - the path is narrow, and the site does get quite a few tourist busses coming through. We beat one to the ticket gate at the start and as a result had the place more or less to ourselves. If we had been caught behind them, there would have been few opportunities to pass them.
First, we stopped to grab a meal at “Ishigaki-jima Shokudō,” a restaurant signposted along the way. We ordered a beef bowl set (with nori seaweed soup), curry rice, fried tuna, and sata-andagi Okinawan doughnuts—about ¥3,000 in total—and everything was delicious and satisfying.
Our main destination, Ishigaki Island Limestone Cave, showcases the beauty of nature shaped over some 200,000 years. The average temperature inside the cave is around 23°C, with humidity at about 90%, so we worked up a light sweat as we walked through.
The playful name “Ochite-tamaru-ka Juken-ishi” (“the exam-passing stone that refuses to fall”) made me smile. I couldn’t clearly identify the giant clam fossil, but I did recognize the honeycomb coral fossil, which really made me feel that this area had once been under the sea long ago.