Just a 3-minute walk from Nishiarai Station! Enjoy our natural hot springs and Japanese hospitality, with an abundant menus for relaxation
A complex hot spring facility with the concept of Chichibu's famous festival, boasting a hot spring, food court, and shopping area.
A public bath which is located two-minute walk away from the Shiinamachi Station on the Seibu Ikebukuro Line, which is one station away from Ikebukuro Station. This public bath is opened until 1:00 a.m.
One of the best natural hot springs in Tokyo, boasting a yield of 150 tons a day!
Please check the business status on the official website.
About thirty-minute train ride from Tokyo Station. A hot spring theme park where you can wear a yukata(a casual version of the kimono) and enjoy the hot springs and Japanese food.
A popular onsen(hot springs) facility in Yokohama. Enjoy four different types of relaxation: onsen(hot springs), dining, healing and lodging.
Just a 15-minute walk from Chitose-Funabashi Station! An intimate, natural hot spring in the heart of Tokyo! You can fully enjoy a range of baths and saunas!!
Natural gensen kakenagashi style (continuous flow from source) hot spring
The foot bath commemorating Tokugawa Ieyasu’s visit to the Atami hot springs
A stylish sento (public bathhouse) with various baths including a Jacuzzi that you can visit empty-handed.
Known for its low-temperature bubble bath, Kotobuki-yu (Happy Bath) is a retro-style public bathhouse with a tank of colored carp.
Public bathhouse often used as filming location for television dramas, with beautiful circular murals.
Ume-no-yu, built in 1927, is a traditional Japanese sento (public bathhouse) that has been featured on television both in Japan and overseas.
It is a locally well-established public bathhouse with the motto of “an oasis in the town.” Its cleanliness with the friendly atmosphere is attractive.
Jakotsuyu is a sento (public bathhouse) that dates from the Edo Period. Its convenient location in Asakusa make it an excellent stop after a day of sightseeing. Enjoy the natural hot spring and open-air baths.
A bathhouse with a simple and stylish atmosphere. The baths utilize soft water, which has the beneficial effects of heat retention and moisturization. There are also sauna facilities.
A long established public bathhouse, built in 1863, in Tokyo's Ginza district. The pictures of Japanese koi (carp), seasonal flowers and birds on the tiles are a must-see.
This is a bathhouse with the theme of Shichifukujin (the Seven Deities of Good Fortune). You can enjoy Jacuzzis, earthen tubs and herbal baths.
There are two baths, Tsuki-no-yu and Hi-no-yu (alternating for men and ladies). Enjoy a typical Japanese sento (public bathhouse) complete with mural of Mt. Fuji.
This is the only building registered as a tangible cultural asset in Tokyo so it is very atmospheric. You can find hospitality in clean white noren (store curtain) and beautiful ikebana (Japanese flower art). Most of the public baths are opened from the late afternoon but Tsubame-yu is open from 6:00 a.m. in the morning to provide a refreshing morning public bath service called asa-yu.