七五三 Shichi-Go-San Celebration Planning

Check your child's eligibility age, wareki shrine dates, and yakudoshi considerations for parents

Cultural & Traditional 2 min read

Who this is for: Japanese parents with a child approaching age 3 who want to plan the Shichi-Go-San shrine visit and check whether either parent is in a yakudoshi year that might complicate ritual participation.

Steps

  1. Confirm the Child's Age in Both Systems

  2. Record the Shrine Visit Date in Wareki

  3. Check Parents' Yakudoshi Status

七五三 (Shichi-Go-San, "Seven-Five-Three") is one of Japan's most beloved childhood milestones — a Shinto celebration of children at ages 3, 5, and 7 that takes place on or around November 15 each year. Families dress children in kimono or hakama and visit a Shinto shrine for a shichi-go-san blessing (gobyōdai, 御祈祷). Planning requires knowing the child's age in both Western and traditional counting, scheduling the shrine visit in wareki, and — for cautious parents — checking whether either parent is in a yakudoshi year.

Step 1 — Confirm the Child's Age

Age

Shichi-Go-San is celebrated at specific ages: girls at 3 and 7, boys at 5, and in some regions boys also at 3. The question of which age system applies divides families. Traditionally, kazoedoshi (数え年) was used, meaning a child born in the previous year is counted as 2 in January, reaching 3 in the spring even if their Western birthday hasn't passed yet. Modern practice increasingly uses man-nai (満年齢, Western age), so a 3-year-old by Western counting celebrates the Shichi-Go-San for threes.

Check both counting systems in the age calculator. If your child is 2 by Western age but 3 by kazoedoshi, you have the option to celebrate either this November or next — a flexibility many families appreciate when a sibling's milestone overlaps.

Step 2 — Record the Shrine Visit Date in Wareki

Wareki

Shrine reservations for Shichi-Go-San blessings are made in wareki on the official forms (mōshikomi yōshi, 申込用紙). November 15 in the current year written as a wareki date is what you will fill in. The converter also helps when booking a photography studio for the commemorative portrait, as some traditional studios log appointment dates in wareki.

Beyond November 15, shrines accept Shichi-Go-San visits throughout October and November. If November 15 falls on a weekday, most families visit the nearest weekend. Convert your preferred weekend dates to wareki for the booking form.

Step 3 — Check Parents' Yakudoshi Status

Yakudoshi

Some families, particularly those who observe traditions closely, are concerned if a parent is in their hon-yaku (本厄) main unlucky year during the Shichi-Go-San. While this is not a strict prohibition, it may influence the family's decision to: - Consult the shrine priest about participating in the ritual during hon-yaku - Have the yakudoshi parent undergo their own yakubarai purification at the same shrine visit - Schedule Shichi-Go-San slightly earlier or later in the season to avoid the yakudoshi parent's most sensitive period

Check each parent's yakudoshi status with the calculator. If a parent is in mae-yaku or ato-yaku (the flanking years), most families proceed without concern. Hon-yaku is where families sometimes pause to reflect.

What to Prepare

Item Notes
Chitose-ame (千歳飴) "Thousand-year candy" in a long bag — symbolizes longevity
Kimono / hakama rental Book 2–3 months in advance for popular studios
Shrine offering (初穂料, hatsuhoryō) Typically 5,000–10,000 JPY per child
Photography session Many studios offer same-day shrine + portrait packages

Timeline

  • August–September: Book photography studio and kimono rental
  • October: Confirm shrine reservation, prepare offering envelope
  • Early November: Hair and makeup trial (optional, for girls)
  • November 15 (or nearby weekend): Shrine visit and photography
  • After: Send kibun thank-you cards to grandparents