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!!
3 minutes walk from Ogikubo Station on the JR Chuo Line! You can enjoy “alkaline simple hot spring” which is rare in Tokyo and sauna.
A complex hot spring facility with the concept of Chichibu's famous festival, boasting a hot spring, food court, and shopping area.
Hot water is brought in from Atami and Yugawara hot springs with a tanker truck every day. You can enjoy real hot springs all day while you are in the city.
Natural gensen kakenagashi style (continuous flow from source) hot spring
The foot bath commemorating Tokugawa Ieyasu’s visit to the Atami hot springs
Ume-no-yu, built in 1927, is a traditional Japanese sento (public bathhouse) that has been featured on television both in Japan and overseas.
Public bathhouse often used as filming location for television dramas, with beautiful circular murals.
Known for its low-temperature bubble bath, Kotobuki-yu (Happy Bath) is a retro-style public bathhouse with a tank of colored carp.
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 stylish sento (public bathhouse) with various baths including a Jacuzzi that you can visit empty-handed.
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.
The concept is ”festival.” There's lots to enjoy after bathing too
A natural hot spring at the foot of Mt. Takao
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.
This is a bathhouse with the theme of Shichifukujin (the Seven Deities of Good Fortune). You can enjoy Jacuzzis, earthen tubs and herbal baths.
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.
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.
A one-day onsen (hot spring) facility, Keio Takaosan Onsen, Gokurakuyu, which is next to Takaosanguchi station. The natural hot spring water wells up from about 1,000 meters underground, and is quite clear and soft to the touch. The open-air bath made of rocks is divided into two pools that you can choose between: the lukewarm water at 40 degrees Celsius, and the hot water set at 43 degrees Celsius. In this facility, various types of bath are available, where you can enjoy the ever changing scenery of Mt. Takao to your heart's content.