Japan has thousands of onsen towns — so which one should you choose? We've picked 12 spread across every region and every style: from Hakone, the easiest hop from Tokyo, to Ginzan, magical in the snow, to Kurokawa, the rural village where you stroll between open-air rotenburo baths. Find the one that's right for your trip, all on one page.
Japan has thousands of onsen towns scattered across the country, and honestly, every time you sit down to plan a trip it's hard to know which one to pick — because each town has its own kind of charm. Some are just over an hour by train from Tokyo; some are old wooden villages tucked into a valley; some come paired with a ski slope; and some sit right by the sea where you feast on giant crab. So on this page we've picked the 12 best onsen towns, spread from Hokkaido down to Kyushu, to cover every region and every travel style.
An easy way to choose is to look at three things — the region your trip is in (around Tokyo? start with Hakone/Kusatsu; in Kansai? Arima/Kinosaki; in Kyushu? Beppu/Yufuin/Kurokawa), the style you're after (serious water quality, snowy photo scenes, or rural rotenburo), and the journey (doable as a day trip, or better as an overnight). We've put all of this in every card below, with a link into each town's own guide so you can dig deeper.
Scan for the one that fits fast — compare region, the highlight/water style, travel time from the nearest big city, and who each suits, then scroll down to read the full card for any town you like.
| Town | Region | Known for / water | Access (from big city) | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HakoneHakone · Kanagawa | Kanto | Easy access, varied waters, lake + museums | ~85 min from Tokyo | First-timers / Tokyo trips |
| KusatsuKusatsu · Gunma | Kanto | Strong acidic-sulfur water, famed as Japan's best | ~3–4 hrs from Tokyo | Serious onsen lovers |
| GinzanGinzan · Yamagata | Tohoku | Taisho-era wooden ryokan, gas lamps by the river | ~3.5 hrs Shinkansen + bus | Winter / photography |
| NoboribetsuNoboribetsu · Hokkaido | Hokkaido | Jigokudani 'hell valley', 9 water types | ~1 hr from Sapporo | Hokkaido trips |
| NozawaNozawa · Nagano | Chubu | Ski + onsen, 13 free public baths | ~2.5 hrs Shinkansen + bus | Skiing / winter |
| GeroGero · Gifu | Chubu | One of Japan's 3 finest, alkaline silky-skin water | ~1.5 hrs from Nagoya | Central Japan / smooth-skin water |
| ArimaArima · Kobe | Kansai | Japan's oldest onsen, 'gold' (iron) + 'silver' water | ~30–60 min from Kobe | Kansai day trips |
| KinosakiKinosaki · Hyogo | Kansai | Stroll in a yukata between 7 bathhouses, by the canal | ~2.5 hrs from Osaka/Kyoto | Strolling in a yukata |
| BeppuBeppu · Oita | Kyushu | Most hot-spring water in Japan, 8 Hells tour, sand baths | ~2 hrs from Fukuoka | Lovers of variety |
| YufuinYufuin · Oita | Kyushu | Arty-chic, Mt Yufu backdrop, Lake Kinrin | ~1 hr from Beppu | Couples / laid-back |
| KurokawaKurokawa · Kumamoto | Kyushu | Several rotenburo via a wooden pass, no neon | Bus from Fukuoka/Aso | Rotenburo / rural |
| DogoDogo · Ehime | Shikoku | Japan's oldest bathhouse (Honkan), in the city | City tram in Matsuyama | History / Shikoku |
Loosely ordered from closest to Tokyo down to Kyushu — read what each town is best known for and the kind of atmosphere it has, then tap into the guide for any town you like to see hotels, sights, and how to get there in full.
♨️ Kanagawa · Kanto1
If it's your first trip and you're based in Tokyo, this is the easiest place to start — just over an hour on the Romancecar from Shinjuku and you're there. It has everything: ryokan, baths with several water types, Lake Ashi and the pirate ship, the steaming Owakudani valley, and an open-air museum. Easy as either a day trip or an overnight.
Hakone Guide → Best Hakone Ryokan + Onsen →
♨️ Gunma · Kanto2
The Japanese often crown Kusatsu the country's "best water" onsen — the acidic-sulfur water is so potent that locals joke it can cure anything but lovesickness. At the heart of town is the Yubatake, a hot-water field steaming away in the centre, plus the traditional "yumomi" show where performers cool the water by stirring it with long wooden paddles.
Gunma Prefecture Guide →
♨️ Yamagata · Tohoku3
The onsen town many describe as "stepping into an animation" — three- and four-storey Taisho-era wooden ryokan (around the 1920s) line both sides of the stream running through town. Come nightfall, gas lamps flicker the length of the stone street, and when snow blankets everything in winter it turns into the dreamlike scene so many people picture.
Yamagata Prefecture Guide →
♨️ Hokkaido · Hokkaido4
One of Hokkaido's top onsen towns, headlined by Jigokudani — the "hell valley," a red volcanic crater venting sulfur steam across the whole basin, with wooden walkways looping around it. It's famous for offering as many as 9 different water types in a single town, and it's an easy trip from Sapporo or New Chitose Airport.
Hokkaido Guide → Onsen in the Sapporo Area →
♨️ Nagano · Chubu5
A village that rolls the two things that go best together in winter into one place — ski by day, soak away the cold in the evening. The real charm is the 13 free public baths (sotoyu), looked after by the residents themselves; you wander the village and dip into one after another as you go.
Nagano Prefecture Guide →
♨️ Gifu · Chubu6
Gero has been counted among Japan's "three finest onsen" since ancient times. The draw is its slick alkaline water that leaves your skin soft and smooth — earning it the name bihada no yu ("beautiful-skin water"). Stroll along the Hida River and you'll find free foot baths to dip into here and there, in an easy small-town setting.
Gifu Prefecture Guide →
♨️ Kobe · Kansai7
One of the oldest onsen in Japan, tucked behind the mountains above Kobe. Its signature is two-coloured water — "kinsen," the reddish-brown gold water rich in iron, and "ginsen," the clear silver water from carbonate. Best of all it's close to Kobe, Osaka, and Kyoto, so you can soak on a comfortable half-day trip.
Kobe Guide →
♨️ Hyogo · Kansai8
An onsen town where the whole place is a playground for people in yukata — change into one and stroll along the willow-lined canal, dipping into the 7 public bathhouses (soto-yu) one by one. The clack of wooden geta echoes through town, and in winter it's snow-crab season, with plump Matsuba crab to eat your fill of.
Hyogo Prefecture Guide →
♨️ Oita · Kyushu9
This is the real onsen capital of Kyushu, with more hot-spring water than anywhere else in Japan — steam drifts up across the whole city. The headline is the tour of the 8 "Hells" (jigoku), strikingly coloured hot ponds you look at but don't bathe in, plus the hard-to-find-elsewhere experience of a hot sand bath. It's a town with a huge variety of ways to soak.
Beppu Guide → Best Ryokan in Kannawa →
♨️ Oita · Kyushu10
If Beppu is the loud, all-out onsen, Yufuin — just an hour away — is the calm, arty, chicer side. Its little main street is packed with cafés, galleries, and cute shops, backed by the twin peaks of Mt Yufu, plus Lake Kinrin, where morning mist drifts over the water. It's a firm favourite with couples and the laid-back crowd.
Oita Prefecture Guide →
♨️ Kumamoto · Kyushu11
An onsen village in a valley in the Aso area that has deliberately kept out neon signs and modern buildings to preserve its traditional feel. The star is the wooden pass (tegata): a single one lets you wander and pick from up to 3 open-air rotenburo across different ryokan. Fans of rural rotenburo say with one voice that this is the place.
Kumamoto Guide → Best Kurokawa-Aso Ryokan →
♨️ Ehime · Shikoku12
Dogo sits in the city of Matsuyama on Shikoku and claims to be the oldest bathhouse in Japan, with legends stretching back over a thousand years. The stately wooden Dogo Onsen Honkan is said to have inspired the bathhouse scenes in the film Spirited Away, and getting around town on the old streetcar adds to the retro mood.
Ehime Prefecture Guide →See clearly where each town sits — from Noboribetsu at the top of Hokkaido all the way down to Beppu, Yufuin, and Kurokawa on Kyushu — so it's easier to match an onsen town to your trip route.
Still can't decide? Pick the thing that matters most to you, then start with the town we've matched to it.
Read this first if you're new — how to bathe step by step, the etiquette, the tattoo question, and the water types, all on one page.
Onsen Guide →Your first ryokan night without the confusion — per-person pricing, kaiseki, how to wear a yukata, and what one night looks like.
Ryokan Guide →The onsen town closest to Tokyo — Lake Ashi, Owakudani, where to stay, and how to get there in full.
Hakone Guide →The onsen capital of Kyushu — the 8 Hells tour, sand baths, the Kannawa district, and where to stay in town.
Beppu Guide →Home of Nozawa Onsen — skiing, hot springs, and the mountain sights of Nagano Prefecture.
Nagano Guide →Every region and city, with links into city guides, hotels, and attractions across Japan.
Japan Guide →The heart of an onsen trip is staying overnight in a ryokan — soaking both evening and morning, eating kaiseki, and strolling about in a yukata. Read the guide to your first ryokan night without the confusion, or start hunting for a place to stay in the onsen town you've got your eye on.