

Kyoto Aquarium's penguin relationship chart is a wall-sized flowchart that tracks the romances, breakups, friendships, rivalries, family ties, and keeper relationships among its African penguins. At launch, the 2026 edition covered 50 African penguins and turned the Penguin area into something between a field guide, a family tree, and a tiny soap opera.
The short version: go for the penguins if you are already near Kyoto Station, traveling with kids, looking for a rainy-day Kyoto activity, or building a slower half day around Umekoji Park. Skip it if you have only one or two days in Kyoto and still have not seen the core temple and shrine districts.
The chart is the hook; the real question is whether Kyoto Aquarium deserves a place in your Kyoto itinerary.
The Kyoto Aquarium penguin relationship chart, officially called the Kyoto Penguin Relationship Chart, maps the changing relationships among the aquarium's African penguins. Keepers update it from daily observations, so it includes more than family ties. It also shows couples, breakups, crushes, friendships, rivals, personality notes, and even relationships with keepers.
The color code is part of the fun:
| Symbol | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Red hearts | Couples |
| Blue broken hearts | Breakups |
| Purple lines with question marks | Complicated relationships |
| Yellow lines | Friendships |
| Green lines | Enemies or rivals |
The result is surprisingly readable once you know the legend. Without the legend, it looks like someone asked a dating app, a family tree, and a detective board to share one wall.
Kyoto Aquarium says the 2026 chart was released online and displayed inside the aquarium from December 13, 2025. The aquarium has made the chart since 2018, and the 2026 version is its eighth update. At launch, the 2026 edition covered 50 African penguins at Kyoto Aquarium.
Official source: Kyoto Aquarium's English 2026 penguin chart
The 2026 chart is not just a reprint of the old viral version. Kyoto Aquarium's 2026 announcement highlighted several launch-time storylines:
| 2026 storyline | What to know |
|---|---|
| Rei and Yanagi | Rei, born at Kyoto Aquarium in 2022, became part of her first couple with Yanagi. Kyoto Aquarium notes the pair has a 14-year age gap. |
| Mibu and Sen | Mibu, also born at Kyoto Aquarium in 2022, formed a first couple with Sen. The aquarium describes Sen as handsome but not especially strong in fights, so keepers are watching what happens next. |
| Kuruma's relationships | At launch, Kyoto Aquarium highlighted two overlapping triangular relationships around Kuruma, including a changed relationship with Take and a new friendship with Pon. Kyoto Aquarium later announced that Kuruma died on March 17, 2026, so this should be framed respectfully as part of the 2026 launch context rather than ongoing relationship drama. |
| Keeper relationships | The chart includes not only penguin-to-penguin ties, but also relationships with aquarium staff. |
| Penguin ID support | Kyoto Aquarium also updated its web tool for identifying penguins by the colored bands on their wings. |
That is the part worth using as your 2026 reference point. Many English articles about the chart still repeat older 2019 and 2020 stories, but the official 2026 chart had its own launch-time relationship updates.
The chart first spread in English because it made real keeper observations feel like a relationship map from a drama: couples, breakups, triangles, rivalries, and personality notes all packed into one display. Older coverage leaned into the gossip, which is why people still search for the chart years later.
For this article, keep that older lore as background rather than a source base. The current travel value comes from the official 2026 chart and the visit decision: if you are going now, use Kyoto Aquarium's current English chart and in-aquarium display as the reference point.
You can see the Kyoto Penguin Relationship Chart inside Kyoto Aquarium in the first-floor Penguin area, in the cave near the penguin display. Kyoto Aquarium's 2026 announcement says the in-aquarium display started on December 13, 2025 at 10:00.
One important detail for English-speaking travelers: Kyoto Aquarium says the physical in-aquarium panel is Japanese only. The English version is available online, so the easiest move is to open the official English 2026 chart on your phone while you are standing near the display.
That works better than trying to decode every name and line from the wall alone, especially if you are visiting with kids or trying to keep the day moving.
For the easiest visit, go on a weekday morning. Kyoto Aquarium is not as logistically intense as Kyoto's headline temples, but school groups, weekends, holidays, and peak tourism seasons can make the aquarium feel busier than expected.
Expect extra crowd pressure in Kyoto during cherry blossom season and autumn foliage season. Those are not aquarium-specific events; they are citywide travel peaks. If your Kyoto days are already packed with Arashiyama, Kiyomizu-dera, Fushimi Inari, and Gion, use Kyoto Aquarium as a flexible half-day or weather backup rather than forcing it into your best outdoor sightseeing window.
Kyoto Aquarium is worth visiting if it solves a real itinerary problem: you need a child-friendly activity, a rainy-day backup, a gentler stop near Kyoto Station, or a break from temples and shrine-heavy sightseeing. It is less compelling for first-time visitors with only one or two days in Kyoto. If you are still choosing a hotel base, use Trip To Japan's Where to Stay in Kyoto guide first, then decide whether the Kyoto Station and Umekoji Park area fits your route.
| Traveler type | Verdict | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Families with kids | Yes | Penguins, indoor exhibits, Umekoji Park, and the nearby Kyoto Railway Museum make this one of the easier Kyoto half-days with children. |
| Animal lovers | Yes | The penguin chart gives the visit a specific reason beyond a standard aquarium stop. |
| Repeat Kyoto visitors | Yes | It adds a different side of Kyoto after the major temples, shrines, and historic districts. |
| Rainy-day planners | Yes | It is indoors and easy to pair with Kyoto Station-area logistics. |
| Travelers staying near Kyoto Station | Usually yes | Access is simple, and the Umekoji Park area is close enough to keep the day efficient. |
| First-timers with one full Kyoto day | Usually skip | Use limited time for Kyoto's core cultural sights unless you are traveling with kids who need a reset. |
| Travelers with no interest in aquariums | Skip | The penguin chart is fun, but it probably will not justify the stop by itself. |
The honest framing is simple: Kyoto Aquarium should not replace Kyoto's temples, gardens, or old neighborhoods. It works best as a smart add-on. For a short first trip, compare this against the pacing in our 7-day Japan itinerary and our guide to how many days to spend in Kyoto. For a longer trip, the 14-day Japan itinerary gives you more room for flexible Kyoto stops like this.
Kyoto Aquarium is in Umekoji Park, west of Kyoto Station. The official access page lists the address as 35-1 Kankijicho, Shimogyo-ku, Kyoto, inside Umekoji Park. The nearest station is Umekoji-Kyotonishi Station, about a 7-minute walk from the aquarium. From Kyoto Station, many travelers treat the area as a short taxi, bus, local train, or walkable add-on depending on weather and luggage.
Most travelers should plan 1.5 to 2 hours for Kyoto Aquarium itself. Add more time if you are visiting with young children, stopping for lunch, or pairing it with the Kyoto Railway Museum.
| Plan | Best for | Route logic |
|---|---|---|
| Aquarium + Umekoji Park | Young kids, slower travel days | Keep the day close, flexible, and easy to abandon if children get tired. |
| Aquarium + Kyoto Railway Museum | Families, train fans, rainy days | Two major family-friendly stops sit in the same area, so transit stays simple. |
| Nishi Honganji + Aquarium | Travelers near Kyoto Station | Start with a major temple near Kyoto Station, then switch to a lighter indoor activity. |
| Toji Temple + Aquarium | First-timers with a flexible morning | Pair one important cultural stop with a more relaxed afternoon near Kyoto Station. |
| Aquarium before an evening train | Travelers leaving Kyoto later | Works if your luggage is stored and you do not want to cross town before departure. |
Planning a Kyoto day with children, a rainy-day backup, or a Kyoto Station base? Share your dates and travel style with Trip To Japan, and we can help decide whether Kyoto Aquarium belongs in your Kyoto plan or whether that time is better spent elsewhere.
Always verify current hours and ticket rules on the official Kyoto Aquarium site before you visit. Kyoto Aquarium standard hours are usually 10:00–18:00, with seasonal exceptions — 10:00–19:00 and 9:00–20:00 dates appear on the official calendar. Admission ends one hour before closing, and the aquarium has no regular closed days, though temporary closures or hour changes can occur due to weather or other conditions.
As of Kyoto Aquarium's official December 1, 2025 price-revision notice, general admission from February 10, 2026 is listed as:
| Visitor | General admission from February 10, 2026 |
|---|---|
| Adult, age 19+ | 2,600 yen |
| High school student, age 16-18 | 2,000 yen |
| Junior high / elementary student, age 6-15 | 1,400 yen |
| Child, age 3-5 | 900 yen |
Use those prices as a planning reference, but check Kyoto Aquarium's official site before you buy tickets in case the aquarium changes ticket rules or special admission conditions.
For access, Kyoto Aquarium's official English page lists:
Address: 35-1 Kankijicho, Shimogyo-ku, Kyoto 600-8835, inside Umekoji Park
Nearest station: about 7 minutes on foot from Umekoji-Kyotonishi Station on the JR San-in Main Line
Bus access from Kyoto Station: Kyoto City Bus options to Nanajo Omiya / Kyoto Aquarium
Parking: no dedicated parking; use nearby parking lots if driving
A few practical tips:
Go earlier in the day if you want more space around the penguin area.
Check the aquarium's daily schedule for feeding or keeper events before you go.
Open the English chart on your phone because the physical display is Japanese only.
If you are visiting during Kyoto's peak spring or autumn seasons, keep this as a flexible indoor option rather than a fixed must-do.
If your group includes both train-loving kids and animal-loving kids, the Kyoto Railway Museum plus Kyoto Aquarium pairing is the cleanest half-day plan. For a broader family route, use our family Japan planning guide alongside this Kyoto Aquarium decision.
Want help choosing between Kyoto Aquarium, Arashiyama, Fushimi Inari, Nara, and other Kyoto day plans? Start with our Kyoto travel guide, then compare routes on Trip To Japan itineraries. Use the itinerary page to see how Kyoto days connect with Tokyo, Osaka, Nara, and longer Japan routes before you lock in tickets, hotels, or private-guided time.



