Near Nakanogō Station in Toba, the highway has a junction with the paired highways: National Routes 42 and Route 259, which have just entered Mie Prefecture via the Ise-wan Ferry from Cape Irago in Aichi Prefecture. National Route 259 meets its western terminus here, while National Routes 42 and 167 continue north together as a concurrency out of Toba.
Upon crossing into the city of Ise, Routes 42 and 167 meet the eastern terminus of the Ise Futami Toba Line, a limited-access highway signed as a bypass of National Route 42. The northern terminus and ending point of National Route 167 is at an intersection where the concurrency between it and National Route 42 meet National Route 23. National Route 42 continues beyond the ending point of National Route 167 in another concurrency with National Route 23.[1]
History
National Route 167 was originally designated on 18 May 1953 as a second-class national highway connecting then-extant town Ago (the former town was merged into Shima in on 1 October 2004) to Ise.[2][3]
Junction list
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^ ab"一般国道の路線別、都道府県別道路現況" [Road statistics by General National Highway route and prefecture] (PDF) (in Japanese). Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism. Retrieved 19 February 2020.