Haiden

Places of Worship

Haidenhaiden / 拝殿

The outer hall of a shrine where visitors offer prayers, typically featuring a bell and offering box.

The haiden is the building where worshippers stand to offer their prayers. This is where you will find the offering box, bell rope, and other elements familiar to shrine visitors. General worshippers typically cannot proceed beyond the haiden — behind it stands the heiden (offering hall) and then the honden (main sanctuary) housing the sacred object.

Some shrines use the "gongen-zukuri" style, where haiden and honden are connected into a single H-shaped structure, as seen at Nikkō Tōshōgū. Conversely, Ōmiwa Shrine in Nara has no honden at all — worshippers pray directly toward Mount Miwa, the sacred mountain that serves as the shrine's divine body. The variety of haiden architecture across Japan reflects the remarkable diversity of Shinto worship practices.