Quick take
What is Osaka most useful for?
Osaka currently has 86 active listings and houses dominate. Treat it as a screening layer first, then compare the municipalities with real depth such as Kishiwada, Katano, Taishi.
Where should you look first?
The top three municipality hubs already account for about 62% of the published inventory. Start with Kishiwada, Katano, Taishi, then move into the local hubs before treating the prefecture median as meaningful.
What should you verify next?
Verify the municipality hubs, the subsidy guide, and the source coverage page in that order so you can see both market depth and any known source gaps.
Market summary
| Metric | Value | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|
| Active listings | 86 | Currently active pages in this hub |
| For sale / rent | 83 / 3 | Split between sale and rental listings |
| Homes / land | 77 / 9 | Property-type mix |
| Median price | ¥15,800,000 | Rough center of the current price band |
| Subsidy signals | 0 listings | Signals only; verify with the original public source |
| Hazard flags | 17 (1 flood / 3 debris / 0 steep) | Decision-support hazard signals inside the current listings |
| Added in last 30 days | 86 listings | Recently added supply based on first-seen timestamps |
| Seen in last 7 days | 86 listings | Latest seen March 30, 2026 |
| Source updates | 0 listings | Counts only listings where a source update timestamp was extracted |
Top city hubs
How to use the Osaka hub
This page works best as a screening layer, not as a final market report. The high-signal read is the mix between sale and rental stock, the balance between homes and land, and whether activity is concentrated in a small set of municipalities such as Kishiwada, Katano, Taishi, Misaki.
If the prefecture average looks attractive but the live inventory is clustered in only a few towns, treat the prefecture as several smaller markets. Open the city hubs before assuming the median price reflects the part of the prefecture you actually want to live in.
| Signal | Why it matters | What to verify next |
|---|---|---|
| Listing count | Tells you whether the hub reflects a real live market or a thin slice | Open the city hubs and check source freshness |
| Sale vs. rent mix | Separates ownership-led markets from places where rental supply is the more realistic entry point | Compare the towns with the strongest live inventory |
| Subsidy signals | Useful for shortlist direction, not for budgeting | Read the actual municipal program page before assuming eligibility |
| Hazard flags | Helpful for triage, especially in rural terrain | Verify the address against municipal maps and road reality |
Osaka Prefecture: Even Outskirts Stay Semi-Urban
Osaka has limited truly rural property, but southern hill areas offer cheaper options.
Commuter infrastructure is strong, so fringe properties retain more liquidity than most prefectures.
- Hillside areas carry landslide hazard designations
- Urban proximity supports resale compared to neighbors
- Buyers overlook strict rebuilding restrictions on slopes
Where activity concentrates
Current live activity is concentrated in Kishiwada, Katano, Taishi, Misaki. That usually means contractor availability, transport, and everyday services will also differ meaningfully across the prefecture.
Use the prefecture page to decide which city hubs deserve attention first, then switch from average signals to town-level diligence. The cheapest municipality in a prefecture is often cheap for reasons the prefecture median hides.
Questions to answer before you shortlist
A good prefecture hub should help you ask better questions, not just admire low headline prices. The next step is to translate the aggregate view into town-level, road-level, and utility-level checks.
- Is your real target a resort market, a regional city, or a remote mountain village?
- Will you need year-round living quality, occasional use, or income-producing flexibility?
- Does the town have contractor depth, snow management, sewer access, and everyday services that match your plan?
- If subsidies look attractive, do the local residency and timing rules still fit your actual purchase path?
Featured listings
This page shows a capped set of recent examples rather than every listing in the prefecture.
Recent listings
Quick answers
How many active listings are in Osaka?
Osaka currently has 86 active listings. 83 are for sale and 3 are rentals.
Are homes or land listings more common in Osaka?
Osaka currently shows 77 home listings and 9 land listings, which is useful for understanding the local inventory mix.
What does the pricing look like in Osaka?
A useful median benchmark is ¥15,800,000 overall, ¥16,800,000 for sale listings, and ¥75,000/month for rentals.
Does Osaka have subsidy and hazard context?
Osaka currently has 0 listings with subsidy signals and 17 with hazard flags. These are decision-support signals and should still be checked against the original source.