Onsen, According to Japanese Onsen People: Where They Soak, How They Book, and What They Skip
日本の温泉好きが語る温泉:どこに浸かり、どう予約し、何を避けるか
“A solo onsen trip only feels like a big deal until you've done it once — the hurdle drops all at once.”
Most onsen guides are written by visitors who went once. This one is aggregated from the people who go monthly: Japanese comment sections where regulars name the baths they actually use, correct the listicles, flag what's closed, and hand over their booking tricks — every number below is a real like-count from a translated Japanese comment.
Japan's onsen conversation among Japanese travelers looks nothing like the international one. It isn't about Hakone versus Kusatsu; it's about which famous bath got too crowded to bother with, which unglamorous neighbor inherited its regulars, whether the inn takes single guests at all, and who has quietly closed since the last guidebook shipped. This guide stitches together our consensus roundups on exactly those questions.
The mindset: going alone is the institution
Start with how the regulars actually travel: alone, on a weekday, often without booking dinner. The most-liked testimony in our solo-onsen roundup (166 likes) says the hurdle collapses after one trip; a 130-like monthly regular's formula is paid leave, a no-meals booking, and an evening drinking through the onsen town. Their favorite structural trick: stay two nights, because on the middle day you get the baths while the day-trippers are gone.
- Solo onsen trips: how Japanese regulars do itThe playbook — plus where solo guests are simply normal (Beppu, Nyuto, Sukayu).
- Can you stay at a ryokan alone?Why inns refuse single guests (economics, not superstition) and the booking workarounds.
Near Tokyo: the quiet circuit locals use instead of Hakone
Hakone itself produced our clearest 'the famous one got crowded' verdict: a 30-year regular of Tenzan, its most famous day-bath, says it has "sadly become a bath full of overseas visitors" — and names the quiet baths-only annex he uses now. Zoom out and the pattern repeats across the whole Kanto region: under a roundup of little-known onsen within reach of Tokyo, commenters added more than 20 of their own by name, from Gunma river valleys to ocean-view anglerfish-hotpot inns on the Ibaraki coast. The recurring caveats: 'near Tokyo' realistically means two hours, and most of these places assume a car.
- The quiet onsen where Kanagawa locals actually soakHakone's escape hatch, from a 30-year Tenzan regular.
- Quiet onsen near Tokyo: 20+ picks from the commentsTakaragawa's 118-like endorsement, the Gyoza-chain inn at Oigami, and the car problem.
Kansai: deeper, stranger, and fact-checked by locals
Kansai's onsen depth is south of the tourist axis — the Yoshino mountains and the Wakayama coast. When a 'secret Kansai onsen' roundup made the rounds, locals both endorsed it and corrected it: more than 25 additional springs named, at least three flagged as already closed or rebranded, and a firm verdict that Dorogawa, Totsukawa and Ryujin "are not minor." Their real picks run from a lotion-slick highland bath in Nara to a Wakayama river where you dig your own bath out of the gravel.
Before you drive: the freshness problem
The single most useful habit we've absorbed from these comment sections: verify before you commit. Rural onsen close, rebrand and change owners constantly — in one thread alone, commenters flagged an inn closed "three years ago," a spa shutting days after the video, and a facility reopened under a new name. Treat every list (including ours) as a snapshot, and check a current map listing before building a day around a remote bath.
Every number above is a real like-count from a Japanese YouTube comment section, translated and aggregated in the linked roundups, each of which links back to its source video. Nothing here is our own review; the opinions belong to the regulars.
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- #Hakone
Guide · Travel Tips & Honne
GuideThe Golden Route, Annotated by Locals: Tokyo → Hakone → Kyoto → Nara → Osaka, Stop by Stop
Every guidebook sells the same five-stop first-timer route through Japan. This version is annotated by Japanese locals instead: at each stop, what they'd skip, what's genuinely worth the crowd, and where they actually eat — pulled from our consensus roundups, each of which aggregates hundreds of translated Japanese comments with their real like-counts.
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A "Kansai's secret onsen" roundup got fact-checked by the locals in its own comment section: commenters named more than 25 hot springs of their own, and flagged at least three on or around the list as already closed or changed — one inn shut "three years ago," another closing within days of the video. The thread's verdict on the video's picks: Dorogawa, Totsukawa and Ryujin "are not minor" — one is literally World Heritage. Then they name where they actually go: a lotion-slick bath on the Soni highlands, a dig-your-own riverbed bath in Wakayama, and the spring one local calls "Kansai's strongest — I'd say Japan's best."
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♨️ Hotels & Onsen👍 166Hotels & OnsenYouTubeSolo Onsen Trips in Japan: How Japanese Regulars Do It — and Where Going Alone Is Normal
Solo onsen travel is one of Japan's quiet institutions, and this thread is the playbook, straight from the regulars: the most-liked testimony (166 likes) says the mental hurdle collapses after a single trip — and points solo men at Beppu. A 130-like monthly regular shares the formula (paid leave on a weekday, book without meals, drink your way through the onsen town), others swear by rooms with private open-air baths and the two-night trick that gets you the bath to yourself. The thread also maps where solo guests are simply normal — Nyuto, Sukayu, Beppu's ¥100 public baths — and where they aren't. Their three favorite plays close it out.
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♨️ Hotels & Onsen👍 40Hotels & OnsenYouTubeHakone's Famous Bath Is "All Overseas Visitors Now": The Quiet Onsen Where Kanagawa Locals Actually Soak
A 30-year regular of Tenzan — Hakone's most famous day-bath — says it has "sadly become a bath full of overseas visitors," and he isn't thrilled the video outed his refuge either. Under a roundup of Kanagawa's minor onsen, locals mapped the circuit they actually use: they named more than a dozen additional springs in the comments (plus two closures worth knowing), from Tanzawa-fed baths with "superb water" (31 likes) to a pH-10 mountain bathhouse best on a drizzly weekday. The spot they guard hardest sits right next door to Tenzan itself — a baths-only annex where, as one 37-like comment puts it, the families and tourists all flow to the famous place and leave the quiet to solo onsen-lovers.
195 comments