Quick answer: the key My Neighbor Totoro characters are Satsuki, Mei, Totoro, Catbus, Tatsuo Kusakabe, Yasuko Kusakabe, Granny, and Kanta. The film is gentle, but each character has a clear job: they show childhood curiosity, family stress, rural kindness, and the way imagination can help children live with uncertainty.

Why the characters feel so real
My Neighbor Totoro does not build its drama from a villain. It builds it from a family situation that children can feel before they can fully explain it. Satsuki and Mei have moved to the countryside with their father while their mother is ill in hospital. The film never turns that into melodrama, but the worry is always there beneath the sunlight, soot sprites, gardens, and bus stops.
The characters work because they are written from a child’s emotional scale. A new house is an adventure. A missing sandal is terrifying. A neighbour’s gruffness can become kindness. A giant forest spirit can feel more trustworthy than adult reassurance, because Totoro does not lecture the girls. He simply exists beside them.
Satsuki Kusakabe
Satsuki is the older sister, and much of the film’s emotional weight sits on her shoulders. She is lively and playful, but she is also trying to be responsible in a way that is slightly too big for her age. She helps with the house, watches Mei, writes to her mother, and tries to keep the family mood bright.
That is why her late-film panic matters. Satsuki is not merely worried about Mei. She is finally overwhelmed by all the responsibility she has been carrying. Her strength is real, but the film is wise enough to show that a strong child is still a child. Totoro and Catbus become important because they give her help at the moment when adult competence and brave pretending are not enough.
Mei Kusakabe
Mei is the younger sister, and she gives the film much of its wild comic energy. She is stubborn, loud, physical, and completely sincere. When she discovers small Totoro spirits and follows them into the camphor tree, it feels exactly like the kind of adventure a very young child would accept without needing proof.
Mei’s intensity also creates the film’s scariest emotional turn. Her attempt to reach her mother comes from love, not logic. She cannot process hospital uncertainty the way adults can, so she tries to solve the problem with a child’s directness: take the corn, go to Mother, make things better. The film treats that impulse with tenderness rather than blame.
Totoro
Totoro is the forest spirit at the centre of the film, but he is not a conventional guide or mascot. He does not explain himself, announce rules, or fix every problem immediately. His power is partly in his silence. He is huge, strange, sleepy, funny, and reassuring in a way that feels older than language.
For Satsuki and Mei, Totoro turns the countryside into a living place. The trees are not background. The night is not empty. Seeds can become a midnight ritual. Waiting at a rainy bus stop can become magical. Whether viewers read him as a literal spirit, a childhood experience, or both, Totoro represents the comfort of being held by a world that feels bigger than adult explanations.
Catbus
Catbus is one of Studio Ghibli’s strangest and most beloved creations. He appears when ordinary travel is not enough. A bus route becomes a grin, paws, windows, warm fur, and impossible speed. Like Totoro, Catbus does not need a backstory because the image explains itself emotionally.
His role near the ending is practical and magical at once. Satsuki needs to find Mei, and Catbus gives her a child-sized miracle: transport that understands exactly where she needs to go. The destination sign changing for Mei is a tiny perfect detail, because it makes the fantasy feel responsive rather than random.
Tatsuo Kusakabe
Tatsuo, the girls’ father, is gentle, distracted, and deeply loving. He does not dismiss the girls’ stories about spirits. That choice shapes the whole film. Instead of shutting down their imaginative world, he gives it respect, bowing to the great camphor tree and allowing the countryside to remain mysterious.
He is not a flawless parent. He misses things, and Satsuki often carries more responsibility than she should. But the film presents him as a father trying to create warmth during a frightening season. His openness helps the girls feel that wonder and worry can exist in the same home.
Yasuko Kusakabe
Yasuko, the girls’ mother, spends most of the film in hospital, yet her presence is everywhere. The move, the letters, the visit, and Mei’s desperate journey all orbit around her absence. Because the film keeps her illness understated, viewers experience it much like the children do: as a fact everyone is trying to be brave around.
Her warmth in the hospital scenes matters. She is not just a symbol of fear. She is funny, loving, and recognisably herself. That makes the family’s anxiety more grounded, and it keeps the ending from feeling like a simple escape from sadness.
Granny and Kanta
Granny gives the Kusakabe family local care. She watches the girls, explains the house with patience, and represents the rural community around them. Kanta, meanwhile, starts as an awkward boy who communicates badly because he is embarrassed. His umbrella gesture is clumsy, sweet, and very human.
Together, they show that the family is not alone. The village may be unfamiliar, but it is not hostile. That social safety net is easy to miss because Totoro is so iconic, yet the human neighbours are part of why the film feels safe enough for magic to bloom.
Best character to watch on a rewatch
On a rewatch, Satsuki is the character who changes the most. Younger viewers often follow Mei’s wonder first, while adults may notice how carefully Satsuki manages fear. Her scenes show why My Neighbor Totoro lasts: it respects children’s joy, but it also respects the work children do to survive uncertainty.
FAQ
Who are the main characters in My Neighbor Totoro?
The main characters are Satsuki, Mei, Totoro, Catbus, and the Kusakabe parents, with Granny and Kanta supporting the family’s countryside life.
Is Totoro a good character for young children?
Yes. Totoro is mysterious but comforting, and the film is one of the strongest Studio Ghibli starting points for family viewing.
Why is Catbus so popular?
Catbus combines a familiar object with dream logic. He is funny, useful, slightly eerie, and instantly memorable.
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Image note: Images on this page use official Studio Ghibli stills from ghibli.jp, shared under the studio’s common-sense use notice.






















