Hokkaido is Japan's legendary powder island, but there are so many resorts it's hard to pick. We compare them all — Niseko · Rusutsu · Kiroro · Furano · Tomamu · Sapporo Teine · Bankei · Kamui — on distance from Sapporo, mountain size, lift prices, who each suits, and which you can day-trip versus which need a stay.
Picture snow so light it puffs up like flour when you carve through it, falling fresh almost every morning. That's what turns Hokkaido into a bucket-list destination for skiers worldwide. Bitterly cold Siberian winds sweep across the Sea of Japan and hit the island's mountains, so the snow falls heavy and unusually dry. Skiers have a nickname for it — "Japow" (Japan + Powder) — and Hokkaido is its true home.
Honestly, Hokkaido's problem isn't whether the skiing is good — it's that there are so many great resorts you can't decide. Niseko is internationally famous but busy and pricey; Rusutsu is a big mountain right next door; Kiroro has deep snow close to Sapporo; Furano has dry snow and smaller crowds; Tomamu is a family resort with an Ice Village; and the Sapporo area itself has Teine · Bankei · Kamui that you can ride and be back the same day. This page lays it all out clearly — who each resort suits, which you can day-trip, which need an overnight, and how much it costs.
Eight popular resorts compared on the questions travellers actually ask — how far from Sapporo/the airport, how big the ski area is, whether it suits beginners or experts, and what a lift pass costs · prices are approximate adult 1-day passes for 2025–26 and vary by date and year, so always check the official site.
| Resort | From Sapporo/CTS | Size / runs | Known for | Suits | Lift pass ¥/day |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Niseko UnitedNiseko | Bus ~2.5–3 h from CTS | 4 linked resorts | Deepest powder, international, nightlife | Beginner–expert | ~7,500–9,800 |
| RusutsuRusutsu | Bus ~2 h from CTS | 3 mountains · 37 runs | Tree runs, amusement park, families | Families/beginners | ~7,200–9,500 |
| KiroroKiroro | Car ~60 min / bus ~90–150 min | 23 runs · longest 4,050 m | Deep snow, quiet, near Sapporo | Beginner–intermediate | Check official site |
| FuranoFurano | Train/bus via Sapporo · near Asahikawa Airport | 2 zones | Dry snow, fewer crowds, cute town | Families/beginners | ~6,500–8,000 |
| TomamuTomamu (Hoshino) | Bus ~1.5–2 h from CTS | 29 runs · gondola + 5 lifts | Family resort, Ice Village, sea of clouds | Families/beginners | Check official site |
| Sapporo TeineSapporo Teine | ~40 min from Sapporo | 2 zones (Highland/Olympia) | Day trip · steepest run in Hokkaido · '72 Olympics | Intermediate–expert | ~7,200 (online ~6,200) |
| Sapporo BankeiSapporo Bankei | Inside Sapporo city | 17 runs | In-city skiing · night skiing | Beginners/after work | ~4,200–4,600 |
| Kamui Ski LinksKamui · Asahikawa | ~30 min from Asahikawa | 25 runs · 6 lifts | 8m+ dry snow, bluebird days, few crowds | Intermediate–expert | Check official site |
A run-down of what each resort is known for, who it suits, how to get there, and whether it works as a day trip or needs an overnight — from legendary Niseko powder to an in-city hill in Sapporo you can ride and be home by dinner.
❄️ Stay over1
Say "Hokkaido powder" and this is the name the whole world thinks of first — over 15 metres of snow a season, dry and light enough to make every run a joy. Four resorts link up as Niseko United (Grand Hirafu · Hanazono · Niseko Village · Annupuri) on one pass. It's the most international resort here, with English signs, menus and instructors, plenty of restaurants and bars, and beginner-friendly zones at Grand Hirafu/Hanazono. The trade-off is bigger crowds and higher prices.
Full Niseko guide →
🌲 Stay over2
One of Hokkaido's biggest ski areas, spread across three mountains with around 37 runs, sitting just ~30 minutes from Niseko. It's known for its tree runs, where the powder piles up deep between the silver birches, and for the amusement park built right into the resort for the kids. There are fewer crowds than Niseko and shorter lift queues, which makes it a favourite for families and anyone who wants to ride hard without fighting for fresh tracks. Plenty of people base in Niseko and drive over to ski Rusutsu for a day.
Hokkaido guide →The big resort closest to Sapporo — about an hour's drive. Sitting near the Sea of Japan, it gets deep, light snow even by Hokkaido's already-generous standards. There are 23 well-groomed runs, the longest stretching to 4,050 metres, and it's quieter and less crowded than Niseko, which makes it great for beginners and intermediates. You can base in Sapporo and ski it in a day (the Hokkaido Resort Liner bus runs there), or stay at one of the resort hotels on the mountain.
Day trips from Sapporo →
🎿 Stay over4
A central-Hokkaido option that's less crowded than Niseko but with snow just as dry and light — being inland, the air is drier than on the coast. The resort is Prince-run and neatly laid out across two zones, ideal for families and beginners who want an easy-going day without the chaos. Furano town itself is charming, with restaurants and cafés, and it's near Asahikawa Airport, making it a natural pairing with a central-Hokkaido trip.
Hokkaido guide →
🏔️ Stay over5
A full-service family resort run by the Hoshino group — 29 runs for all levels, served by one gondola and five lifts, with the longest run reaching 4,200 metres. What makes Tomamu special is its Ice Village: a cluster of domes built entirely from snow and ice housing a bar, shop, chapel and skating rink (open roughly 10 Dec–14 Mar), plus the "sea of clouds" (Unkai) you can view from the summit in other seasons. The resort has hotel towers, an indoor pool and kids' zones — perfect for the whole family in one place.
Hokkaido guide →
⛷️ Day trip6
The favourite day-trip hill for anyone basing in Sapporo — just ~40 minutes from the city centre. It hosted events at the 1972 Sapporo Winter Olympics and splits into two zones: Olympia (family and beginner terrain) and Highland (steeper, including the 36-degree Kitakabe run, often called the steepest in Hokkaido). The views over Ishikari Bay are beautiful on a clear day. It's ideal if you want to ski while staying in the city and carry on into Susukino's nightlife afterwards.
Sapporo city guide →A ski area genuinely inside Sapporo city — just a few minutes' drive from the centre. Its 17 runs suit beginners and intermediates, and the standout feature is night skiing under floodlights. It's perfect if you spend the day sightseeing in Sapporo and want to nip out for a few runs in the evening, or for a first-timer who'd rather not travel far to try it. It also has the cheapest passes of this bunch (~¥4,200–4,600).
Sapporo city guide →A mid-sized resort near Asahikawa (~30 minutes away) that in-the-know riders love because the snow is as dry and light as Furano or Tomamu — over 8 metres a season — with plenty of bluebird days thanks to its inland location. It has 25 runs and 6 lifts, and crowds are tiny compared with Niseko, so lift queues barely exist. It's a great pick for anyone wanting to escape the tourist hordes and find genuinely good snow. Pair it with Furano on a central-Hokkaido trip.
Hokkaido guide →Not every resort works as a there-and-back day trip — if Sapporo is your base, picking a nearby hill saves hours. The great-snow resorts further out are better as an overnight so you can ski a full day without burning time on the road.
Sapporo Bankei (in the city · night skiing) · Sapporo Teine (~40 min · bigger mountain) · Kiroro (~60–90 min · deep snow, Resort Liner bus). Ideal if you want to sightsee in Sapporo and ski without moving hotels · some people add Otaru or Fu's into the mix.
Niseko and Rusutsu (~2–3 h from CTS) · Tomamu (~1.5–2 h) · Furano (central). Stay at the resort or a nearby town — they're too far to return the same day, and an overnight lets you catch the freshest first-tracks powder in the morning.
A popular plan: base in Sapporo for a few days of sightseeing plus day-trip skiing at Teine/Kiroro, then move out to stay several nights at Niseko or Furano · see a worked example in our 5-day Sapporo itinerary.
You can absolutely learn in Hokkaido — you just need to prep right. Match the resort to your level, sort gear and lessons, and the lift-pass and travel details become easy.
Beginners want wide green zones and a ski school — Niseko (Grand Hirafu/Hanazono), Furano, Rusutsu · for a gentle first try near the city, Bankei/Teine work too · experts should look for tree runs and off-piste at Niseko, Rusutsu, Kamui. Honestly, deep powder is harder than groomed runs, so beginners should always start on greens first.
The big Hokkaido resorts rent everything — skis/snowboard, boots, poles, helmet. Booking online ahead is usually cheaper and skips the queue · beginners should book a lesson (group or private, with English-speaking instructors — especially at Niseko/Furano/Rusutsu) for the first 1–2 days. It's far safer and more fun than going it alone.
Lift passes run roughly ¥4,200–9,800 for an adult day, depending on the resort and date; some include gear bundles · getting there: fly into CTS and take a bus/shuttle to the resort, or head into Sapporo first if you're skiing Teine/Bankei/Kiroro · see how at our New Chitose Airport guide.
The little things first-timers often miss — know these and the whole snow trip goes more smoothly, from what to pack to picking the best-value window.
See exactly where each resort sits — Niseko/Rusutsu/Kiroro cluster on the western side near Sapporo, Teine/Bankei are within Sapporo itself, and Furano/Tomamu/Kamui sit in central Hokkaido. It makes planning a route from New Chitose Airport much easier.
Japanese runs are colour-graded — green is easiest, red intermediate, black the hardest. Know where you stand and pick the right Hokkaido terrain, and you'll have more fun without biting off more than you can chew.
A deep dive into Hokkaido's most international resort — the four mountains, lodging, prices and how to get there.
Niseko guide →Compare Hokkaido with the Honshu resorts — Hakuba, Nozawa, Zao — and how to choose a region.
Skiing in Japan →The main base for a Hokkaido snow trip — where to stay, eat, what to do, and the Snow Festival.
Sapporo guide →The gateway to Hokkaido — how to reach the city, connect to ski resorts, and the airport's shops.
Airport guide →A ready-made plan that mixes city sightseeing with day-trip skiing — no planning needed.
5-day plan →Visa · eSIM · IC Card · JR Pass · yen · etiquette — everything to sort before you fly.
Visit Japan →Choose the resort that matches your level and style, open the Niseko or Sapporo guide for lodging, activities and travel details, or start looking for accommodation near the slopes early — before the Jan–Feb peak sends prices soaring.