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.
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!!
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.
A complex hot spring facility with the concept of Chichibu's famous festival, boasting a hot spring, food court, and shopping area.
One of Kyoto's most famous hot springs, famous as “hot water for beautiful skin,” the water has a thick texture and makes your skin very smooth.
Natural gensen kakenagashi style (continuous flow from source) hot spring
The foot bath commemorating Tokugawa Ieyasu’s visit to the Atami hot springs
One of Japan's three major onsen, with a history dating back about 1,500 years. Indulge in a soak with a magnificent view of the valley.
A colorless hot spring on a small, quiet road. The ”silver spring” is both carbonated and enriched with radium
Immerse yourself in a picturesque Japanese setting
An onsen facility in the woods at the base of Mt. Zao
Known for its low-temperature bubble bath, Kotobuki-yu (Happy Bath) is a retro-style public bathhouse with a tank of colored carp.
Drawing from two historic sources of water, this open air bath has a nostalgic atmosphere typical of traditional public baths
A seaside resort hotel where every room overlooks the ocean and you can relax at the beauty salon or the pool
A stylish sento (public bathhouse) with various baths including a Jacuzzi that you can visit empty-handed.
A variety of fascinating baths are available, including a large one resembling the Kurhaus
The entire place has a classic feel. This public bath is filled with unrivaled nostalgia
Arima Hot Spring, located an hour's trip away from Osaka, is known as a retreat in the Kyoto, Osaka and Kobe areas. It is famous for being one of Japan's three oldest 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.
An isolated inn with a mysterious atmosphere, located deep in the mountains