
*Ginzan Onsen's iconic Takimi Bridge and ryokan row in winter — snow-covered Taisho-era architecture illuminated by gas lamps (photo: Bruno Plus / Wikimedia Commons, CC-BY 4.0)*
Introduction
The first thing that hits you isn't the cold — it's the smell of sulfur carried on mountain air, and then the amber glow. Gas lamps, real ones burning actual gas, line the riverbanks. Snow sits thick on wooden balconies. The Ginzan River runs black between two rows of Taisho-era ryokans, their paper screens lit from inside like paper lanterns. If you're weighing the best ryokans in Ginzan Onsen, you're already asking the right question — because where you stay here shapes the entire experience.
This is Ginzan Onsen — thirteen ryokans on a 300-meter cobblestone strip in the mountains of Yamagata Prefecture. In 2026, [National Geographic named Yamagata Prefecture](https://www.nationalgeographic.com/travel/best-of-the-world-2026/article/yamagata-japan) one of its Best of the World destinations, singling out Takimikan and Fujiya ryokan. The village also happens to look uncannily like the bathhouse town in *Spirited Away* — Studio Ghibli has never confirmed the connection, but the visual resemblance is hard to shake. The combination of those two facts has driven a surge of English-language interest in a village that previously flew almost entirely under the radar.
Here's the problem: most English guides describe the atmosphere and stop there. You'll get the vibe, but not the prices, not the private-versus-shared onsen breakdown, not the booking lead times, and not the honest answer to whether a given ryokan works for a solo traveler or a honeymoon couple with tattoos. This guide covers all thirteen properties with verified pricing, per-property onsen details, and a straight answer on who each one actually suits. If you're planning a trip to one of the [best onsen towns in Japan](/blog/best-onsen-towns-japan), Ginzan belongs on your shortlist — with your eyes open about what it takes to book it.
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Why Ginzan Onsen is unlike any other ryokan village in Japan
Less than 1% of Japan's 37 million 2024 visitors made it to Yamagata Prefecture [National Geographic, 2026](https://www.nationalgeographic.com/travel/best-of-the-world-2026/article/yamagata-japan). That number is about to change. The NatGeo recognition specifically highlighted Takimikan and Fujiya ryokan as recommended stays, meaning these two properties in particular will face a step-change in demand from 2026 onward. If you're reading this after the article went viral on travel forums — which it did — winter availability is already tighter than it was a year ago.
National Geographic described Ginzan Onsen as offering "scenes more evocative of a Taisho period (1912–26) novel than a modern resort" [National Geographic Best of the World 2026](https://www.nationalgeographic.com/travel/best-of-the-world-2026/article/yamagata-japan). That framing is accurate. No competing destination in Japan replicates this particular combination of architectural preservation and working onsen infrastructure.
The village owes its existence to a silver mine. "Ginzan" means silver mountain, and the mine ran from the 16th century until it flooded in 1689. The hot springs that had been feeding the mine workers' baths stayed open. By the Taisho era (1912–1926), wealthy merchants and city workers were coming to soak, and the multi-story wooden ryokans they built line both banks of the Ginzan River to this day. A local ordinance protects the Taisho-era townscape — no modern concrete facades, no signage that breaks the period aesthetic, no cars permitted inside the hot spring area at all. What you see in photographs is what you get in person, which is rare in Japan and almost unheard of in a working onsen village. See the [Yamagata Prefecture Tourism](https://www.yamagatakanko.com/en/) site for the wider regional context.
The 300-meter strip matters for another reason: location within Ginzan Onsen is not a meaningful differentiating factor. All thirteen ryokans are within a five-minute walk of each other. What actually matters when choosing where to stay is price tier, private versus shared onsen access, English-booking ease, and meal quality. This guide is structured around those factors. For the wider context of the [best ryokans in Yamagata](/blog/best-ryokans-yamagata), Ginzan is the flagship — but the prefecture has far more to offer beyond this one valley. The [Ginzan Onsen area guide](/onsen-areas/ginzan) covers the village-level detail.
The village also shares its public bathing infrastructure. Shirogane no Yu, the public bathhouse designed by architect Kengo Kuma, is available for ¥500 per person and accessible to all guests including those at budget properties without in-house private facilities. (Note: as of research date, one of the two baths in the complex was closed — verify current status before arriving.) There's also a free riverside foot bath open year-round.
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Quick comparison: all 13 Ginzan Onsen ryokans at a glance
All prices are per person, per night, including dinner (kaiseki multi-course) and breakfast — the standard pricing convention at Japanese ryokans. A room rate for two people is roughly double the per-person figure. USD conversions use an approximate rate of ¥145/USD (at May 2026 rates); treat dollar figures as directional. Rates vary by room type and season.
| Property | Price/Person (¥, 2 meals) | Price/Person (USD approx.) | Rooms | Private Onsen | English Booking | Booking Lead Time | Best For | |---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---| | Matsumoto Ryokan | ¥20,000–25,000 | ~$138–172 | 10 | No | Basic (3rd-party) | 6–8 wks (autumn); 3–4 mo (winter) | Budget; first-timers | | Oyado Yanadaya | From ¥18,700 | From ~$129 | 4 | Unconfirmed | Not confirmed | 3–6 mo (winter) | Couples; exclusivity | | Showakan | ¥20,000–30,000 | ~$138–207 | 13 | No | Not confirmed | 1–2 mo (summer); 3–4 mo (winter) | Families; central location | | Kozankaku | From ¥26,550 | From ~$183 | 8 | Yes (rental) | Limited | 3–6 mo (winter) | Budget; groups; cash only | | Notoya Ryokan | ¥25,300–28,600 | ~$174–197 | 15 | Yes (cave + rental) | Yes (online) | 3–6 mo (winter) | History lovers; solo | | Honkan Kosekiya | Contact property | — | 14 | No | Yes | 3–6 mo (winter) | Taisho romance | | Kosekiya Bekkan | Contact property | — | 14 | No | Yes | 3–6 mo (winter) | Central; dietary needs | | Hatago Itouya | From ¥22,000 | From ~$152 | 4 | Yes (all-private) | Japanese site only | 6–12 mo (winter) | Privacy; tattoo-friendly | | Eizawa Heihachi | From ¥22,000 | From ~$152 | 7 | Yes (outdoor rental) | Limited | 6–12 mo (winter) | Couples; winter atmosphere | | Ginzanso | ¥24,000–39,600 | ~$165–273 | 40 | Yes (deluxe rooms) | Yes | 2–3 mo (autumn); 3–6 mo (winter) | Families; groups; first-timers | | Kuranoba (Clanuova) | ¥30,000 | ~$207 | 6 | Yes | Limited; cash only | 3–6 mo (winter) | Couples; food-forward | | Takimikan | ¥26,700–42,800 | ~$184–295 | 18 | Annex only | Email workable | 3–6 mo (autumn/winter) | Foodies; views | | Fujiya Inn | ¥33,000–68,000 | ~$228–469 | 8 | Yes (5 private baths) | Yes (platforms) | 6–12 mo (winter) | Couples; design lovers; luxury |

*Aerial view of Ginzan Onsen showing the 300-meter strip of 13 ryokans on both banks of the Ginzan River (photo: Wikimedia Commons, CC-BY-SA 3.0)*
Tip
**Booking platforms:** Most properties can be reached via Trip.com, Booking.com, or Expedia — the three widest-coverage platforms for Ginzan Onsen. Trip.com generally carries the most complete Japanese ryokan inventory.
[Check rates on Trip.com](#) | [Compare on Booking.com](#) | [Search Expedia](#)
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Budget tier (under ¥22,000 per person): best value picks
At this price point in Ginzan Onsen, "budget" is relative. You're still getting a tatami room, a multi-course kaiseki dinner featuring local Yamagata beef and mountain vegetables, breakfast, and access to genuine kakenagashi (source-flow, non-recycled) hot spring water. What you're typically trading off is a private in-room bath and, in some cases, English support at the front desk. The Shirogane no Yu public bath (¥500) fills the gap for onsen access.
Every property in this tier includes dinner — that's not a Ginzan-specific quirk, it's the nationwide ryokan standard. Guests who worry they're "only getting a budget ryokan" should know that even the most affordable property here is serving a dinner that would cost ¥8,000+ at a standalone restaurant in Yamagata City.
Matsumoto Ryokan
Matsumoto is the most affordable overnight option in Ginzan Onsen — recent traveler reports suggest around $100–$138 per person, though current 2025 pricing has likely settled around ¥20,000–25,000 per person with meals [haveyaseenjapan.com; HotelsCombined May rates]. It's a ten-room, family-run property directly beside the red bridge and riverside walking path, which puts you in the heart of the nightly gas-lamp spectacle without paying Fujiya prices. Rooms are traditional tatami with futon. Onsen access is through the surrounding shared facilities — no private bath. English booking works via Klook and Rakuten Travel. Tattoo policy for the shared baths is unconfirmed — contact the property directly. For a first-time ryokan experience where the village itself is the star, Matsumoto delivers without the premium. Book 6–8 weeks ahead for autumn; 3–4 months for winter.
Oyado Yanadaya
Four rooms, a maximum of four groups per night, and a dinner menu built around Obanazawa wagyu steak and shabu-shabu — Yanadaya is one of the quietest stays in the village. Pricing starts from ¥18,700 per person with meals [yanadaya.com, Japanese search summary, verified 2026-05-15], making it the most accessible entry point for exclusivity in Ginzan Onsen. The property provides colored yukata robes (most ryokans offer only the standard white or indigo), and the covered terrace serves onsen eggs and beverages — a small ritual that's pleasant on a cold evening. The bath configuration — whether private or shared — is not confirmed on the official site; contact Yanadaya directly before booking. Tattoo policy is also unconfirmed — worth a direct inquiry. With four rooms total, this fills faster than its price suggests. Best for couples who want the intimacy of a four-room inn, prime wagyu on the table every night, and a stay that costs significantly less than most private-bath properties.
Showakan
Showakan sits at the entrance to the main Ginzan Onsen area, which is convenient for guests arriving without ryokan shuttle coordination. Pricing runs approximately ¥20,000–30,000 per person with meals [Trip.com/Tripadvisor, approximate]. The standout feature is the 24-hour open-air bath on the second floor — gender-separated, fed directly from the spring, and open all night including during snowfall. The kaiseki dinner highlights Yamagata beef and sashimi; breakfast comes with safflower rice cooked in a kamado (traditional hearth pot), which is a regional specialty worth noting. At 13 rooms with capacity for 50, it's one of the easier budget-tier properties to actually get a reservation at. Tattoo policy for shared baths is unconfirmed — inquire directly before booking. Best for families or groups who want convenient access and an outdoor bath experience without the luxury price tag.

*Traditional Japanese winter architecture — similar aesthetic to budget-tier Ginzan Onsen ryokans in Yamagata (photo: Pexels, CC0)*
[Check Budget Ryokan Availability on Trip.com](#)
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Mid-range tier (¥22,000–¥43,000 per person): nine properties, clear differences
This is the widest band in Ginzan Onsen — nine of the thirteen properties start within it — and where the real differentiation work happens. Private onsen access, English-booking infrastructure, meal philosophy, and room count all vary significantly across this group. The properties are ordered here from smallest to largest to make the intimacy trade-off easy to see at a glance.
Tip
**Booking lead times by season:** Winter weekends (December–February) book out 3–6 months ahead for mid-range properties, and 6–12 months for the four-room properties (Itouya); autumn foliage peak (late October–early November) books 2–3 months ahead; spring cherry blossom week (mid-April) books 4–6 weeks ahead; summer is the most forgiving at 1–2 months. The smaller the property, the faster it fills regardless of season.
Hatago Itouya
Itouya takes the private-bath principle further than any other property in the village: every bath is private, and only four groups stay per night. That's it. The in-room onsen system means no scheduling around shared bath hours, no navigating the tattoo-policy question, and no encountering other guests in the water. The snow-viewing bath on the second floor is the signature feature — a small private tub with a direct sight line to the white-covered valley below. Pricing starts from ¥22,000 per person with meals [hatago-itouya.com, verified 2026-05-15], though the per-night figure for a two-person booking will reflect the exclusive nature of the property. The kaiseki features Obanazawa beef as the main course alongside locally sourced mushrooms and fish. The website is Japanese only, which makes this one of the harder properties to book without Japanese ability or a travel agent — third-party platforms are the practical English-language route. Given four groups maximum, winter dates require booking the moment the reservation window opens. Best for couples who want maximum privacy, and for tattooed travelers who want hot spring bathing without navigating policy variations.
Eizawa Heihachi (Nagasawa Heihachi)
Seven rooms, and the highlight is a private rental outdoor onsen bath in snow conditions — a kashikiri tub under open sky in a valley that goes silent after dinner, with no shared-bath scheduling required. The Taisho-era aesthetic reads as intimate rather than grand. The exterior and outdoor bath also photograph exceptionally well in winter, which is why the property turns up repeatedly in photography guides, but that's the consequence of being good, not the reason to stay. Pricing starts from approximately ¥22,000 per person (based on ¥44,000 per night for two people) [jalan.net, verified 2026-05-15]. English support on-site is not confirmed; limited is the safer assumption. Tattoo policy for the private outdoor bath is likely accommodating — confirm directly before booking. For couples who want the intimate scale of a small property with reliable private onsen access, Eizawa Heihachi is worth the extra coordination required to book it.
Kozankaku
Kozankaku is priced from ¥26,550 per person including two meals [gltjp.com, verified 2026-05-15], but there's a critical caveat every foreign visitor needs to know upfront: Kozankaku is cash only. No credit cards accepted. Bring enough yen before leaving Yamagata City. The property is a historic wooden inn from the early Showa period, and the interior preserves the period faithfully — retro sofas, antique clocks, wooden beams that creak reassuringly. It has two shared baths (wooden bath for women, stone bath for men) plus two private baths available to all guests on a first-come basis. Tattooed guests can use the private baths [verified via tattoo-friendly.com]. English support at reception is limited — booking through a third-party platform is the easier route. Kozankaku also has one spacious suite accommodating up to eight guests, making it one of the few Ginzan options for a small group traveling together.
Notoya Ryokan
Notoya was founded in Meiji 25 — that's 1892 — and is designated a tangible cultural property of Japan [selected-ryokan.com, 2026-05-15]. Pricing runs ¥25,300–28,600 per person with meals [selected-ryokan.com, verified 2026-05-15]. The old folk-house construction uses traditional joinery techniques that haven't changed since the Meiji era, and the cave bath — said to be the original hot spring used since the founding — is now available as a kashikiri (private rental) bath. There's also an outdoor observation bath with waterfall views. Some sources specifically cite Notoya's facade as resembling the bathhouse in *Spirited Away*, though Studio Ghibli has never confirmed any connection. Notoya was also a filming location for the NHK drama *Oshin* (1983–84). English online booking is available via the official site; phone reservations are Japanese only. Tattooed guests can use the private baths; shared bath policy is unclear — confirm directly. The on-site café serving tea and light refreshments makes it a reasonable base for an afternoon in the village even if you're only day-tripping. For overnight stays, solo travelers and history enthusiasts get the most out of Notoya's atmosphere.
Kuranoba (Clanuova)
Kuranoba opened in 2017 as the new wing of the Kozankaku property, and it does something no other ryokan in Ginzan Onsen attempts: the dinner is Italian-French cuisine using Yamagata ingredients. The owner-chef trained in Tokyo before returning to the region, and the menu is built around Obanazawa beef and Kahoku Town vegetables prepared with Italian technique, paired with Yamagata and Italian wines. At only six rooms (capacity: 12), this is the most intimate property in the village by room count. Pricing is approximately ¥30,000 per person with meals [gltjp.com, verified 2026-05-15]. The private bath on the third floor of the Kozankaku building is accessible to Kuranoba guests, and the communal bath on the first floor is also available. The name blends Italian *nuovo* (new) and *classico* (classic) — the design is Western-style rooms looking out over the historic onsen street, which is an unusual combination that works. English support is limited — same caveat as Kozankaku, book via a platform. Cash-only payment applies to Kozankaku/Kuranoba — bring yen. Best for food-forward travelers and couples seeking something that doesn't feel like every other ryokan in Japan.
Takimikan
Takimikan sits at the top of the Ginzan Onsen hillside — literally the highest-elevation property in the village — and the panoramic open-air bath up there is among the best views available from any onsen in the valley. On a clear winter day you're looking out over snow-covered rooftops with nothing blocking the horizon. The property runs ¥26,700–42,800 per person with meals [selected-ryokan.com, verified 2026-05-15], placing it across both the mid-range and upper end of this band depending on room type. The signature dish is handmade soba from Obanazawa-grown buckwheat — a specific regional variety that Takimikan makes in-house, and it's legitimately good. The kaiseki also features Obanazawa beef. National Geographic's 2026 Yamagata article specifically mentioned Takimikan as a recommended stay. It also served as a filming location for the NHK drama *Oshin* (1983–84). The main building has shared baths only; the annex *Bettei Takimitate*, set at the base of Shirogane Falls, has a private onsen for annex guests. Tattoo policy for the shared baths is not confirmed — contact the property directly before booking. Email communication in English reportedly works for shuttle booking from Oishida Station, which you must arrange in advance. Best for foodies and winter-view enthusiasts.
Ginzanso
With 40 rooms and capacity for 200, Ginzanso is the largest property in Ginzan Onsen — founded around 1900, one of the oldest establishments, and a filming location for the NHK drama *Oshin* [selected-ryokan.com, verified 2026-05-15]. The scale means you get the smoothest operational experience: an English website, international booking agencies supported, and a free shuttle from JR Oishida Station. Deluxe rooms include attached open-air hot spring baths fed by three spring types (sulfur, chloride, and sulfate), and tattooed guests can use the private baths [selected-ryokan.com]. The shared communal baths are also available. Pricing runs ¥24,000–39,600 per person with meals [selected-ryokan.com, verified 2026-05-15] — the starting price sits firmly in mid-range; the upper end reflects premium river-view deluxe rooms. Ginzanso is also the property best positioned for winter side trips: Zao Snow Monster (juhyo) viewing excursions are possible January–March. It's the most practical choice for first-time ryokan visitors who want a guaranteed smooth experience, and the only property in the village that can comfortably handle larger family groups.
Honkan Kosekiya
The main Kosekiya building holds the distinction of being the first Taisho-era structure built in Ginzan Onsen, which is a meaningful claim in a village where the architecture is the entire point. The aesthetic is retro-modern: stained glass, antique furnishings, and three room types (mountain-view, river-view, and traditional Japanese-style). Pricing is currently unverified on English-language sources — check the official site or Booking.com directly for current rates. The two indoor baths rotate by gender and run from 16:00–24:00 only; there's no open-air bath in the main building, but guests can use Ginzanso's facilities. Tattoo policy for shared indoor baths is not confirmed. Honkan Kosekiya has a free shuttle from JR Oishida Station running three times daily, which simplifies the final leg from the shinkansen. Best for travelers who want to sleep inside a piece of Japanese architectural history without paying luxury prices.
Kosekiya Bekkan (Annex)
The annex sits in the center of the historic townscape and shares the same Taisho aesthetic as its parent building. At 14 rooms for 30 guests, it's slightly roomier than the main building per guest. Pricing is also currently unverified on English-language sources. The practical standouts here are operational: Kosekiya Bekkan is one of the few Ginzan properties that explicitly accepts UnionPay (useful for Chinese visitors and some Southeast Asian cardholders) and has a documented process for dietary accommodation — allergen substitutions are available for approximately ¥1,500 extra, which must be requested at booking. Free Wi-Fi throughout. Three daily shuttles from Oishida Station. Shared baths only — no private onsen access — and tattoo policy for shared baths is not stated; inquire directly. Best for travelers who need dietary flexibility or are coming from destinations where UnionPay is the primary card.
*Traditional yukata robe — standard evening wear at all Ginzan Onsen ryokans (photo: Wikimedia Commons, CC-BY-SA 3.0)*
[Check Mid-Range Ryokan Rates — Trip.com](#) | [Booking.com](#) | [Expedia](#)
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Luxury tier (¥33,000–¥68,000 per person): Ginzan's top end
The honest case for spending at the top of Ginzan's price range: a private in-room or reserved onsen bath, a kaiseki menu at the level of standalone high-end restaurants, and a room count so small the property functions more like a private house than a hotel. Compared to luxury ryokans in Kinosaki or Hakone, Ginzan's top tier is often priced 20–30% lower for a comparable experience, partly because it hasn't been on the international radar until now.
That won't last. Book accordingly.
*Snow-viewing onsen bath — the quintessential winter hot spring experience at luxury Ginzan properties (photo: Unsplash, CC0)*
Fujiya Inn
Fujiya Inn is the property that most directly put Ginzan Onsen on the international map, and the [National Geographic Best of the World 2026](https://www.nationalgeographic.com/travel/best-of-the-world-2026/article/yamagata-japan) article named it explicitly. The origins trace to the Edo period, but the current building was completely redesigned in 2006 by architect Kengo Kuma — the same designer responsible for the Tokyo National Stadium and the Shirogane no Yu public bath down the street. Kuma used bamboo *sumushiko* screens and *Dalle de Verre* stained glass to create a space that feels simultaneously ancient and severe. There are only eight rooms (capacity: 21), and dinner is served in-room. The five private hot spring baths — available 24 hours, free of charge — are the entire bathing setup here; there is no shared communal bath at all. That means tattooed guests are fully unrestricted at Fujiya, which is a rare and explicit advantage. Pricing runs ¥33,000–68,000 per person with meals [selected-ryokan.com / gltjp.com, verified 2026-05-15]. The range is wide because the three room types (Type A with private bath, Type B, and Type C with covered porch) vary significantly. For winter dates, book 6–12 months ahead — this is not an exaggeration. The ryokan runs a shuttle from Oishida at approximately 13:30 and 15:30, but you must reserve in advance. Best for couples, architecture enthusiasts, and anyone who wants the Ginzan Onsen experience distilled to its most intentional form.
[Check Availability — Books Fast in Peak Season — Trip.com](#) | [Booking.com](#)
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Which ryokan is right for you? Recommendations by traveler type
First-time ryokan guests: Go with Ginzanso. The English website, international booking infrastructure, airport-style shuttle service, and large staff make the learning curve manageable. You'll still get the full tatami-and-kaiseki experience without the communication friction that smaller properties can involve. Read the [first-time ryokan guide](/blog/first-time-ryokan-guide) before arriving.
Couples on a honeymoon or anniversary: Fujiya Inn or Hatago Itouya. Both have entirely private bathing, which removes the shared-bath social dynamic entirely. Fujiya brings Kengo Kuma architecture and a specific refinement that justifies the top-end pricing. Itouya brings the snow-viewing bath and maximum seclusion at a mid-range starting price. If budget is a factor, Eizawa Heihachi offers the same private outdoor bath intimacy for a similar starting price.
Solo travelers: Notoya Ryokan. The history is genuine (1892, designated cultural property), the pricing is reasonable at ¥25,300–28,600, and the village is small enough that solo evening strolls along the gaslit riverbank are the entire experience — which is exactly what solo travelers come here for. The cave bath is a singular detail that stays with you.
Winter photography enthusiasts: Notoya and Eizawa Heihachi for exterior architecture; Takimikan for the elevated panoramic outdoor bath with rooftop views over the snow-covered village. All three photograph differently and are within a three-minute walk of each other.
Families with children: Ginzanso. It's the only property with the room count and operational infrastructure to handle the logistics of a family stay. Confirm children's pricing and meal arrangements at booking — ryokan meal portions and formats are designed for adults, and most properties ask that you notify them in advance.
Tattooed travelers: Fujiya Inn (all baths private — unrestricted) or Hatago Itouya (all baths private — unrestricted). Ginzanso and Notoya offer private baths for tattooed guests if you can't get into the former two. Kozankaku also has private bath access for tattooed guests, but remember the cash-only payment requirement.
Food-forward travelers seeking something different: Kuranoba (Clanuova) for Italian-French kaiseki with Yamagata ingredients — the most unusual dining option in the village. Takimikan for the homemade soba from Obanazawa buckwheat. Oyado Yanadaya for wagyu steak and shabu-shabu at one of the village's smallest and most intimate properties.
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Ginzan Onsen in winter vs other seasons: when to visit and what to book
Winter (December–February) is peak season, and the photos that circulate on Instagram every January are why. Snow on wooden rooftops, gas lamps burning amber over the frozen river, outdoor baths in falling snow — this is the Ginzan Onsen winter ryokan experience that drives most international searches. It's real, and it's worth the extra planning. The caveat: visitor management is now formal. From December 20 to March 1, day visitors are capped at 100 per hour after 5 PM; after 8 PM, only overnight guests are permitted in the village. Day-trippers must park at the Taisho Romakan visitor center (approximately 2km out) and take a paid shuttle (¥1,150) into the village. If you're staying overnight, you enter as a guest and none of this applies to you — which is the strongest possible argument for booking a room rather than day-tripping.
Booking lead time for winter: 3–6 months ahead for most mid-range properties. Fujiya Inn and Hatago Itouya: 6–12 months. Some ryokans open winter reservations approximately one year prior to the date.
Autumn foliage (September–November) is widely called the most underrated season. Fiery orange and red kaede maple leaves cover the hillsides above the ryokan strip, and the visual contrast with white plaster walls and dark timber frames is sharp. Late October through early November is peak foliage. Book 3–6 months ahead.
Spring (March–May) brings cherry blossoms along the Ginzan River — typically mid-April — and the Shirogane Falls runs at full flow after the winter thaw. Crowds are smaller than winter or autumn. The snow-viewing magic is gone, but the green valley shows a different, quieter character. Book the cherry blossom peak 4–6 weeks ahead; the rest of spring is more forgiving.
Summer (June–August) is the quiet season. The mountain location keeps temperatures noticeably cooler than urban Japan's brutal August. Easiest availability, often lowest prices. The gas lamps have less drama without snow, but the hiking trails above the village are fully open, and yukata evening strolls without winter gear are genuinely pleasant. 1–2 months' lead time is typically sufficient.
Golden Week (late April–early May) and Obon (mid-August): book 6 months ahead or reconsider your dates entirely. These national holiday windows compress the entire country into the same destination at once.
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How to get to Ginzan Onsen from Tokyo and Yamagata
Getting here is straightforward once you know the route. The [Japan Rail Pass guide](/blog/japan-rail-pass-guide) covers the shinkansen booking side of things — the Yamagata Shinkansen is JR-operated and JR Pass holders pay no additional fare for the train portion.
From Tokyo: 1. Take the JR Yamagata Shinkansen "Tsubasa" from Tokyo Station to Oishida Station (大石田駅). Journey time approximately 200 minutes (3 hours 20 minutes); trains run every 1–2 hours. One-way fare approximately ¥13,780 without a JR Pass [selected-ryokan.com access guide, verified 2026-05-15]. 2. From Oishida Station, take the Yamagata Kotsu (山交バス) local bus to Ginzan Onsen. Journey time 35 minutes, fare ¥1,000 one-way, frequency approximately every 1–2 hours. 3. Most ryokans offer a free shuttle from Oishida Station — confirm and reserve this when booking. Total door-to-door from Tokyo: approximately 3 hours 20 minutes to 3 hours 50 minutes.
From Yamagata Airport: Direct bus to Ginzan Onsen (no reservation required): 75 minutes, ¥2,000. Shared taxi (reserve by 5 PM the prior day): 60 minutes, ¥4,800–5,300.
From Sendai: Highway bus to Obanazawa then local bus, approximately 2 hours 10 minutes, ¥2,760–2,790.
Driving in winter: Private cars cannot enter the Ginzan Onsen hot spring area from December 20 through March 1 (non-staying visitors). If you're an overnight guest, the ryokan will advise on parking — the lot is a 5–10 minute walk from the strip, and ryokans offer pickup service. Come with winter tires fitted.
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What to expect when you arrive: ryokan etiquette for Ginzan Onsen
First-time ryokan guests sometimes spend the first hour unsure of what they're supposed to do. Here's the sequence.
- Check-in is typically between 14:00 and 15:00 (Showakan offers a later 14:00, Kozankaku from 14:30). Remove your shoes in the entryway (genkan) and you'll be led to your room in slippers. - Yukata robes are provided and are worn in your room, in common areas, and for evening walks along the riverside. This is normal and expected — you'll see everyone doing it. - Dinner is typically served between 18:00 and 19:00, either in your room or a private dining room. The meal is kaiseki-style — multiple courses arriving sequentially. Notify the ryokan of dietary restrictions at booking, not on the day. - Onsen etiquette: Wash and rinse your body thoroughly at the shower stations before entering any communal bath. Towels should not touch the water. Keep the atmosphere quiet. Most properties ask guests not to use the baths after drinking. - Check-out is typically 10:00–11:00 (Kozankaku 10:00, Showakan 12:00). Breakfast is served at 07:30–09:00 depending on property. - Payment: Most properties accept major credit cards. Kozankaku and Kuranoba (Clanuova) are cash only — bring yen. Kosekiya Bekkan accepts UnionPay.
The village itself is 300 meters long. The gas lamps ignite at dusk. After dinner, a slow walk in your yukata along the riverbank — even in temperatures well below zero — is the point of coming here.
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Ginzan Onsen ryokan FAQs
How many ryokans are in Ginzan Onsen?
Exactly 13 ryokans operate in Ginzan Onsen, ranging from around ¥18,700 per person at the budget end to over ¥68,000 per person per night at the luxury end. All 13 line the banks of the Ginzan River along a single 300-meter strip [ginzanonsen.jp].
There's no meaningful location difference between properties — the entire strip is a five-minute walk end to end. What separates them is price, private versus shared onsen access, and English-booking ease.
What is the best ryokan in Ginzan Onsen?
For couples prioritizing privacy and design, Fujiya Inn is the standout — 8 rooms, 5 all-private hot spring baths, Kengo Kuma architecture, and a National Geographic 2026 mention. For first-time visitors wanting a smooth English-friendly experience, Ginzanso is the most practical choice. Budget travelers get honest value from Notoya, a 130-year-old designated cultural property priced from ¥25,300 per person.
No single property works for every traveler. The tattooed-traveler section and the tier breakdowns above will narrow it down faster than any ranking.
How far in advance should I book a Ginzan Onsen ryokan?
Winter weekends (December–February): 6–12 months for small luxury properties; 3–4 months for mid-range. Autumn foliage peak (late October–November): 3–6 months. Spring cherry blossoms: 4–6 weeks. Summer: 1–2 months. Golden Week and Obon: 6 months minimum.
Most properties hold 4–18 rooms. They fill faster than hotel logic suggests — the smallest places have fewer rooms than some hotel floors. Book the moment you have confirmed dates.
Do Ginzan Onsen ryokans have private onsen baths?
Several properties offer kashikiri-buro (private reserved onsen) or in-room hot spring baths. Fujiya Inn and Hatago Itouya have exclusively private baths — no shared communal bath at all, making both fully tattoo-friendly. Budget properties use shared gender-separated communal baths plus the public Shirogane no Yu (¥500).
See the comparison table above for the per-property private onsen breakdown. For tattooed travelers, the recommendations section has a dedicated subsection.
Is Ginzan Onsen worth visiting in winter?
Yes — winter is peak season for real reasons. Snow transforms the Taisho-era wooden facades into a landscape that shares an uncanny resemblance with the bathhouse town in *Spirited Away* (Studio Ghibli has never confirmed this connection). Yamagata Prefecture was named to [National Geographic's Best of the World 2026](https://www.nationalgeographic.com/travel/best-of-the-world-2026/article/yamagata-japan). Overnight guests bypass the day-visitor restrictions entirely.
The main practical caveat: winter weekends at small properties book 6–12 months ahead. Weekday stays are far less competitive and noticeably less crowded.
How do I get to Ginzan Onsen from Tokyo?
Take the JR Yamagata Shinkansen "Tsubasa" from Tokyo Station to Oishida Station (approximately 3 hours 20 minutes, ¥13,780 one-way; JR Pass valid for shinkansen portion). Then take the Yamagata Kotsu bus to Ginzan Onsen (35 minutes, ¥1,000). Most ryokans offer a free shuttle from Oishida — book it when you reserve your room [selected-ryokan.com access guide].
Driving is possible outside winter restrictions, but December 20–March 1 non-staying visitors cannot enter the onsen area by car. Overnight guests should ask their ryokan about the parking lot and pickup service.
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Ready to book the best ryokans in Ginzan Onsen?
The best rooms at the most sought-after properties sell out 12 months in advance of peak winter dates — that's not urgency framing, it's the operational reality of a village where the largest property has 40 rooms and the smallest has four. Thirteen ryokans. One 300-meter strip. The most photographed onsen village in Japan, and as of 2026, firmly on the international radar after the National Geographic selection. Prices start below ¥20,000 per person with two meals included.

*Ginzan Onsen village — the 300-meter strip where all 13 ryokans create an unbroken Taisho-era townscape (photo: Bruno Plus / Wikimedia Commons, CC-BY 4.0)*
[Book on Trip.com](#) | [Compare on Booking.com](#) | [Search Expedia](#)
For the wider prefecture, see our guide to the [best ryokans in Yamagata](/blog/best-ryokans-yamagata) — Ginzan is the headline act, but Yamagata has a lot more onsen going on.

*冬日銀山溫泉標誌性的瀧見橋與旅館街 — 雪中大正建築在煤氣燈映照下的夜景(照片:Bruno Plus / Wikimedia Commons, CC-BY 4.0)*
前言
第一個觸動你的不是寒意,而是山風帶來的硫磺氣息,以及那片琥珀色的光暈。河岸邊排列著真正燃燒煤氣的路燈。木質陽台上積雪厚重。銀山川在兩排大正時代木造旅館之間流淌,房內燈光透過障子紙像紙燈籠一樣透出來。如果你正在考慮銀山溫泉最好的旅館要住哪一家,那你已經問對了問題——因為在這裡,住哪裡決定了整段體驗的質地。
銀山溫泉位於山形縣的深山之中,沿著一條300公尺的石板路,分布著13家旅館。2026年,[《國家地理》將山形縣評為年度最佳旅遊目的地之一](https://www.nationalgeographic.com/travel/best-of-the-world-2026/article/yamagata-japan),特別點名推薦了瀧見館和藤屋旅館。這座溫泉小鎮的景觀與宮崎駿的動畫電影《神隱少女》(日文原名:千と千尋の神隠し)中的湯屋小鎮驚人地相似——吉卜力工作室從未正式承認這種關聯,但視覺上的相似令人難以忽視。這兩件事疊加在一起,讓這個此前幾乎不為外界所知的小村莊,迎來了英語世界搜尋熱度的爆發。
問題在於:大多數英文攻略只是描述氛圍便草草結束。你能感受到那種意境,卻找不到具體價格、包租湯與共用溫泉的差異、預訂需要提前多久,以及哪家旅館對獨旅者或有刺青的蜜月情侶真正合適。本指南涵蓋全部13家旅館,提供已核實的價格、各家的溫泉設施詳情,以及每家旅館究竟適合哪類旅客的直接答案。如果你在規劃[日本最值得去的溫泉小鎮](/blog/best-onsen-towns-japan)之旅,銀山溫泉值得列入名單——但也要對預訂的難度有心理準備。
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為什麼銀山溫泉與日本其他旅館村落截然不同
2024年,日本接待了約3700萬名外國旅客,其中到訪山形縣的不足1% [《國家地理》,2026年](https://www.nationalgeographic.com/travel/best-of-the-world-2026/article/yamagata-japan)。這個數字即將大幅改變。《國家地理》的推薦特別點名了瀧見館和藤屋旅館,意味著從2026年起,這兩家旅館將面臨需求的跳躍式增長。如果你是在相關文章在旅遊論壇上瘋傳之後讀到本文的——確實已經瘋傳了——那麼冬季的空房已經比一年前緊張許多。
《國家地理》將銀山溫泉描述為「讓人想起大正時代(1912—26年)小說場景,而非現代度假村的地方」 [《國家地理》2026年度最佳旅遊目的地](https://www.nationalgeographic.com/travel/best-of-the-world-2026/article/yamagata-japan)。這個定位準確無誤。日本沒有任何其他目的地能夠同時具備這種建築保護程度與完整運營的溫泉基礎設施。
銀山溫泉的存在源於一座銀礦。「銀山」二字,字面意思就是「銀之山」。銀礦從16世紀一直開採,直至1689年湧水報廢。供礦工沐浴的溫泉泉眼隨後對外開放。到了大正時代(1912—1926年),富裕的商人和城市工人紛紛前來泡湯,他們修建的多層木製旅館至今仍矗立在銀山川兩岸。當地法規明確保護大正時代的街道風貌——禁止現代混凝土外立面,禁止破壞時代美感的招牌,完全禁止車輛駛入溫泉區域。照片中的景象與親眼所見別無二致,這在日本已屬罕見,在一個仍在運營的溫泉小鎮則幾乎聞所未聞。關於山形縣更廣泛的旅遊資訊,可參閱[山形縣旅遊官方網站](https://www.yamagatakanko.com/en/)。
這300公尺的距離還有另一層意義:在銀山溫泉,住宿位置並不是有意義的差異因素。全部13家旅館都在彼此步行5分鐘的範圍內。真正影響選擇的是價格檔次、包租溫泉與共用溫泉的差異、英文預訂的便利度,以及餐飲品質。本指南正是圍繞這些因素構建的。若想了解[山形縣最值得住的旅館](/blog/best-ryokans-yamagata),銀山溫泉是旗艦代表——但這個縣在這個小山谷之外還有更多溫泉值得探索。[銀山溫泉地區指南](/onsen-areas/ginzan)涵蓋了小鎮層面的詳細資訊。
溫泉小鎮還有共用的公共浴場。由建築師隈研吾設計的公共浴場「白銀之湯」(しろがねの湯),每人500日圓(約NT$105),包括住在沒有私人設施的平價旅館的住客也可以使用。(注:調研截止日期時,該浴場兩個浴池之一處於關閉狀態——抵達前請確認最新開放情況。)沿河還設有全年免費開放的足湯。
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快速比較:銀山溫泉13家旅館一覽
所有價格均為每人每晚含晚餐(懷石料理多道菜)和早餐的價格——這是日本旅館的標準計費方式。兩人同住的房費大約是單人價格的兩倍。美元換算使用約145日圓/美元的匯率(2026年5月匯率),僅供參考。具體價格因房型和季節而異。台幣換算參考約4.5日圓/台幣匯率。
| 旅館名稱 | 每人價格(¥,含2餐) | 每人價格(USD約) | 房間數 | 包租溫泉 | 英文預訂 | 預訂提前期 | 最適合 | |---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---| | 旅館 松本 | ¥20,000—25,000 | 約$138—172 | 10 | 無 | 有(第三方平台) | 秋季:提前6—8週;冬季:提前3—4個月 | 平價;初次體驗者 | | 御宿 弥那田屋(やなだ屋) | ¥18,700起 | 約$129起 | 4 | 未確認 | 未確認 | 冬季:提前3—6個月 | 情侶;私密體驗 | | 昭和館 | ¥20,000—30,000 | 約$138—207 | 13 | 無 | 未確認 | 夏季:提前1—2個月;冬季:提前3—4個月 | 家庭;交通便利 | | 古山閣(こざんかく) | ¥26,550起 | 約$183起 | 8 | 有(包租) | 有限 | 冬季:提前3—6個月 | 團體;僅收現金 | | 能登屋旅館 | ¥25,300—28,600 | 約$174—197 | 15 | 有(洞窟湯+包租) | 有(線上) | 冬季:提前3—6個月 | 歷史愛好者;獨旅者 | | 本館 古勢起屋 | 請聯絡旅館 | — | 14 | 無 | 有 | 冬季:提前3—6個月 | 大正風情愛好者 | | 古勢起屋別館 | 請聯絡旅館 | — | 14 | 無 | 有 | 冬季:提前3—6個月 | 飲食需求;銀聯用戶 | | 旅籠 伊藤屋(いとうや) | ¥22,000起 | 約$152起 | 4 | 有(全包租) | 僅日文官網 | 冬季:提前6—12個月 | 私密體驗;刺青友善 | | 旅館 永澤平八 | ¥22,000起 | 約$152起 | 7 | 有(露天包租) | 有限 | 冬季:提前6—12個月 | 情侶;冬日氛圍 | | 銀山莊(ぎんざんそう) | ¥24,000—39,600 | 約$165—273 | 40 | 有(豪華房) | 有 | 秋季:提前2—3個月;冬季:提前3—6個月 | 家庭;團體;初次體驗者 | | 倉乃葉(CLANUOVA) | ¥30,000 | 約$207 | 6 | 有 | 有限;僅收現金 | 冬季:提前3—6個月 | 情侶;美食愛好者 | | 瀧見館 | ¥26,700—42,800 | 約$184—295 | 18 | 僅別館 | 電子郵件可溝通 | 秋冬季:提前3—6個月 | 美食家;景觀愛好者 | | 藤屋旅館 | ¥33,000—68,000 | 約$228—469 | 8 | 有(5間私湯) | 有(預訂平台) | 冬季:提前6—12個月 | 情侶;設計愛好者;高端體驗 |

*鳥瞰銀山溫泉,銀山川兩岸300公尺內排列著全部13家旅館(照片:Wikimedia Commons, CC-BY-SA 3.0)*
Tip
**預訂平台說明:** 大多數旅館可透過 Trip.com、Booking.com 或 Expedia 預訂,這三個平台對銀山溫泉的覆蓋最為全面。Trip.com 的日本旅館庫存通常最為完整。
[在 Trip.com 查詢價格](#) | [在 Booking.com 比較](#) | [在 Expedia 搜尋](#)
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平價檔(每人¥22,000以下):最具CP值的選擇
在銀山溫泉,「平價」是相對而言的。即便是這個價位,你依然能獲得榻榻米客房、以山形牛和山野菜為特色的多道懷石料理晚餐、早餐,以及真正的「掛け流し」(源泉直流,不循環利用)溫泉水。通常需要放棄的是客房私人浴池,以及某些情況下的英文前台服務。公共浴場「白銀之湯」(500日圓,約NT$110)可彌補溫泉體驗的不足。
這個檔次的所有旅館都含晚餐——這不是銀山溫泉的特例,而是日本全國旅館的標準。擔心「只住平價旅館」的旅客不必顧慮:這裡最實惠的旅館提供的晚餐,如果在山形市的獨立餐廳點,至少要花8,000日圓(約NT$1,800)以上。
旅館 松本
松本旅館是銀山溫泉最實惠的過夜選擇,含兩餐價格約¥20,000—25,000每人(約NT$4,400—5,500) [haveyaseenjapan.com;HotelsCombined 5月價格]。這是一家10間客房的家庭經營旅館,就在紅橋旁邊,緊鄰沿河步道,讓你置身每晚煤氣燈點亮的核心地帶,卻不必支付藤屋的高昂費用。客房是傳統的榻榻米加被褥樣式。溫泉需使用周邊共用設施,無私人浴池。英文預訂可透過 Klook 和樂天旅遊完成。共用浴場的刺青政策尚未確認——請直接聯絡旅館詢問。對於第一次體驗旅館、以溫泉小鎮本身為主角的旅客而言,松本旅館物超所值。秋季需提前6—8週預訂;冬季需提前3—4個月。
御宿 弥那田屋
4間客房,每晚最多接待4組客人,晚餐以尾花澤和牛牛排和涮涮鍋為主角——弥那田屋是小鎮上最安靜的住宿之一。含兩餐價格從¥18,700/人起(約NT$4,150起) [yanadaya.com,2026年5月15日確認],是進入銀山溫泉獨特體驗的最實惠門檻。旅館提供彩色浴衣(大多數旅館只提供白色或藏青色),有頂露台供應溫泉煮雞蛋和飲品——寒夜裡的一份小儀式感。浴室是包租還是共用在官網上未有說明,預訂前請直接確認。刺青政策同樣未確認——值得直接詢問。4間客房意味著比價格所暗示的更快客滿。適合希望體驗四間客房小旅館親密感、每晚享用頂級和牛、且費用明顯低於大多數私湯旅館的情侶。
昭和館
昭和館位於銀山溫泉主區入口,對於無需協調旅館接送即可抵達的旅客而言位置便利。含兩餐價格約¥20,000—30,000/人(約NT$4,400—6,600) [Trip.com/Tripadvisor,概略價格]。最大亮點是2樓全天24小時開放的露天浴場——男女分開,直接引入源泉,包括降雪時也整夜開放。懷石晚餐以山形牛和生魚片為主;早餐有用傳統地爐(kamado,灶台)烹製的紅花米飯,這是值得一提的地方特產。13間客房、容量50人,在這個價格檔裡相對更容易訂到房間。共用浴場刺青政策未確認——預訂前請直接詢問。 適合希望便捷抵達、享受露天浴體驗而不想支付豪華價格的家庭或團體。

*日本冬日傳統建築——與山形縣銀山溫泉平價旅館相近的美學風格(照片:Pexels, CC0)*
[在 Trip.com 查詢平價旅館空房](#)
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中價位檔(每人¥22,000—¥43,000):九家旅館,各有特色
這是銀山溫泉中覆蓋範圍最廣的價格帶——13家中有9家的起價都在這個區間——也是真正需要仔細比較的地方。私人溫泉的有無、英文預訂體驗、餐飲理念和客房數量,在這組旅館中差異相當顯著。以下按客房數從少到多排列,方便你一眼看出私密感與規模的取捨。
Tip
**各季節預訂提前期參考:** 冬季週末(12月—2月),中價位旅館需提前3—6個月,4間客房的旅館(如伊藤屋)需提前6—12個月;楓葉高峰期(10月下旬—11月上旬)需提前2—3個月;春季賞櫻週(4月中旬)需提前4—6週;夏季最寬裕,提前1—2個月即可。客房數越少,無論什麼季節都訂滿得越快。
旅籠 伊藤屋
伊藤屋將私人浴池的理念發揮到極致:全部浴池均為包租,每晚僅接待4組客人。就是這樣。客房內的溫泉系統意味著無需遷就共用浴池時段,無需應對刺青政策的問題,也不會在水中碰到其他客人。2樓的雪見浴池是標誌性設施——小型私人浴缸,直接俯瞰白雪覆蓋的山谷。含兩餐價格從¥22,000/人起(約NT$4,900起) [hatago-itouya.com,2026年5月15日確認],兩人預訂的實際金額會體現出旅館的專屬性質。懷石料理以尾花澤牛為主,配以本地採摘的菇類和魚類。官網僅有日文,因此沒有日語能力或旅行社協助的情況下,透過第三方平台預訂是最實際的英文途徑。鑑於最多僅接待4組,冬季日期需要在預訂窗口開放的第一時間出手。適合追求最大私密度的情侶,以及有刺青且希望泡溫泉而不想面對政策門檻的旅行者。
旅館 永澤平八
7間客房,亮點是雪景中的露天包租湯——在萬籟俱寂的山谷中,一處仰望露天星空的專屬浴桶,晚飯後無需考慮共用浴場的時間。大正時代的建築風格流露出親密感,而非宏偉氣勢。冬日外觀與露天浴拍出來的效果極佳,因此這家旅館頻繁出現在攝影攻略中,但這是品質使然,而非選擇它的理由。含兩餐價格從約¥22,000/人起(按兩人¥44,000/晚折算,約NT$9,800/晚) [jalan.net,2026年5月15日確認]。英文現場服務未經確認,謹慎起見應視為有限。露天包租湯的刺青政策可能可以接納——預訂前請直接確認。 對於希望在小型旅館享受可靠包租溫泉的情侶而言,永澤平八值得花額外精力去預訂。
古山閣
古山閣含兩餐價格從¥26,550/人起(約NT$5,900起) [gltjp.com,2026年5月15日確認],但有一個每位外國旅客都必須提前知道的重要注意事項:古山閣僅收現金,不接受信用卡。 請在離開山形市之前準備好足夠的日圓。旅館是昭和初期的歷史性木造旅館,內部忠實還原了那個年代的風貌——復古沙發、古董鐘錶、令人踏實的木梁吱呀聲。共用浴場有兩處(女湯為木製、男湯為石製),另有兩處可供全體住客先到先用的包租浴。有刺青的客人可使用包租浴 [tattoo-friendly.com 已核實]。前台英文支持有限,透過第三方平台預訂更為方便。古山閣還有一間可容納最多8人的寬敞套房,是銀山溫泉為數不多適合小型團體同行的選擇之一。
能登屋旅館
能登屋創立於明治25年,即1892年,被指定為日本有形文化財 [selected-ryokan.com,2026年5月15日]。含兩餐價格¥25,300—28,600/人(約NT$5,600—6,400) [selected-ryokan.com,2026年5月15日確認]。老民家建築沿用了明治時代以來未曾改變的傳統榫卯技法。據說是創業時便開始使用的洞窟溫泉現在以包租形式開放,另有一處可觀賞瀑布的露天觀景浴池。部分資料特別提及能登屋的外立面與《神隱少女》中的湯屋相似,但吉卜力工作室從未正式確認這一關聯。能登屋也曾是NHK晨間劇《阿信》(おしん,1983—84年)的拍攝地。官網提供英文線上預訂,電話預訂僅接受日文。有刺青的客人可使用包租浴;共用浴場政策尚不明確——請直接確認。 館內設有供應茶飲和輕食的茶室,即便只是日歸遊,也適合在此停留休憩。在此過夜,獨旅者和歷史愛好者能最充分地感受能登屋的氛圍。
倉乃葉(CLANUOVA)
倉乃葉於2017年作為古山閣的新館開業,做了一件銀山溫泉其他旅館都未曾嘗試的事情:晚餐是使用山形食材烹製的義法融合料理。主廚兼老闆在東京修煉後返鄉,以尾花澤牛和河北町蔬菜為主料,運用義大利技法料理,搭配山形及義大利出產的葡萄酒。僅有6間客房(容量12人),是以客房數論全鎮最私密的旅館。含兩餐價格約¥30,000/人(約NT$6,700) [gltjp.com,2026年5月15日確認]。客人可使用古山閣3樓的包租浴及1樓的公共浴場。館名融合了義大利語「nuovo(新)」和「classico(經典)」——洋式客房俯瞰歷史溫泉街,這種不尋常的組合出人意料地和諧。英文支持有限,與古山閣相同,建議透過平台預訂。古山閣/倉乃葉均為現金結算——請攜帶足夠日圓。適合追求不一樣體驗的美食愛好者和情侶。
瀧見館
瀧見館位於銀山溫泉山坡的最高處——從字面意義上是全村海拔最高的旅館——那裡的全景露天浴是整個山谷中視野最開闊的溫泉體驗之一。晴朗的冬日裡,眼前是無遮擋的積雪屋頂連綿的畫卷。含兩餐價格¥26,700—42,800/人(約NT$5,900—9,500) [selected-ryokan.com,2026年5月15日確認],根據房型橫跨中價位到高價位。招牌菜是用尾花澤產蕎麥手打的蕎麥麵——瀧見館自製的這種特定地方品種確實物有所值。懷石料理同樣以尾花澤牛為主角。《國家地理》2026年山形專題特別將其列為推薦住宿。旅館也曾是NHK晨間劇《阿信》(1983—84年)的拍攝地。本館僅有共用浴場;別邸「別邸・瀧みたて」坐落於白銀瀑布腳下,別館住客可使用專屬包租溫泉。共用浴場的刺青政策尚未確認——預訂前請直接聯絡。 據悉英文電子郵件溝通可用於安排大石田站的接送,需提前預約。適合美食愛好者和冬日景觀迷。
銀山莊
銀山莊擁有40間客房、容量200人,是銀山溫泉規模最大的旅館,創立於1900年前後,也是歷史最悠久的旅館之一,曾是NHK晨間劇《阿信》的拍攝地 [selected-ryokan.com,2026年5月15日確認]。規模帶來的是最順暢的服務體驗:英文網站、國際預訂渠道全面支援,以及從JR大石田車站的免費班車。豪華客房附帶引入三種泉質(硫磺泉、氯化物泉、硫酸鹽泉)的露天溫泉浴池,且有刺青的客人可使用包租浴 [selected-ryokan.com]。公共浴場也向住客開放。含兩餐價格¥24,000—39,600/人(約NT$5,300—8,800) [selected-ryokan.com,2026年5月15日確認]——起步價處於中價位;上限對應俯瞰河景的高級豪華客房。銀山莊也是冬季周邊遊最便利的出發地:1月至3月可參加藏王樹冰(juhyo,冰樹)觀賞遊。對於希望獲得順暢體驗的初次旅館旅客,以及帶著大家庭出遊的旅客,這是全村唯一真正能滿足需求的旅館。
本館 古勢起屋
古勢起屋本館以銀山溫泉第一座大正時代建築著稱,在一座將建築視為核心價值的小鎮上,這一地位舉足輕重。美學風格兼具復古與現代:彩色玻璃、古董陳設,以及山景、河景、純和風三種客房類型。目前英文來源暫無法確認價格,請直接查閱官網或 Booking.com 獲取最新價格。兩處室內浴場男女輪換使用,僅開放16:00—24:00;本館無露天浴,住客可使用銀山莊的設施。共用室內浴場刺青政策未經確認。 從JR大石田車站每天有3班免費班車,大幅簡化了新幹線換乘後的最後一段旅程。適合想在日本建築史中留宿一夜卻無需支付豪華價位的旅行者。
古勢起屋別館
別館坐落於歷史街區的中心地帶,與本館共享同樣的大正時代美學。14間客房容納30名客人,人均空間略大於本館。價格目前同樣無法在英文來源核實。實際操作上的亮點:古勢起屋別館是銀山少數明確接受銀聯(UnionPay)的旅館(對台灣以外的華語旅客及部分東南亞持卡人尤為便利),且有書面記錄的飲食需求處理流程——過敏原替換約需額外支付¥1,500(約NT$330),須在預訂時提出申請。全館免費Wi-Fi。每天3班大石田車站班車。僅有共用浴場,無包租溫泉——共用浴場刺青政策未標注,請直接詢問。 適合有飲食限制,或需要使用銀聯的旅行者。
*浴衣——銀山溫泉所有旅館的標準晚間著裝(照片:Wikimedia Commons, CC-BY-SA 3.0)*
[在 Trip.com 查詢中價位旅館價格](#) | [Booking.com](#) | [Expedia](#)
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高端檔(每人¥33,000—¥68,000):銀山溫泉的頂級體驗
選擇銀山最高價位的真實理由:客房私湯或專屬溫泉、媲美獨立高端餐廳水準的懷石料理,以及小到像私人宅邸而非飯店的客房數量。與城崎或箱根的豪華旅館相比,銀山的高端價位通常低20—30%,部分原因是直到現在才真正進入國際旅行者的視野。
這種狀況不會持續太久。請盡早預訂。
*雪見溫泉浴——銀山溫泉高端旅館最具代表性的冬日溫泉體驗(照片:Unsplash, CC0)*
藤屋旅館
藤屋是最直接將銀山溫泉推向國際舞台的旅館,[《國家地理》2026年度最佳旅遊目的地](https://www.nationalgeographic.com/travel/best-of-the-world-2026/article/yamagata-japan)專題文章明確點名。旅館歷史可追溯至江戶時代,但現有建築由建築師隈研吾於2006年徹底重新設計——他同樣主持設計了東京國立競技場和同一條街上的「白銀之湯」公共浴場。隈研吾運用竹製「虫籠」屏風和「Dalle de Verre」彩色玻璃,創造出同時兼具古意與肅穆感的空間。僅有8間客房(容量21人),晚餐在客房內服務。5處私人溫泉浴池——24小時免費使用——是這裡唯一的入浴設施,完全沒有共用浴場。這意味著在藤屋,有刺青的客人完全不受任何限制,這是一種罕見且明確的優勢。含兩餐價格¥33,000—68,000/人(約NT$7,300—15,100) [selected-ryokan.com / gltjp.com,2026年5月15日確認]。價格區間較寬,原因在於三種房型(帶私湯的A型、B型、帶有蓋門廊的C型)差異顯著。冬季日期請提前6—12個月預訂——這不是誇大其詞。旅館在約13:30和15:30從大石田站發車接送,須提前預約。適合情侶、建築愛好者,以及希望以最有意識的方式體驗銀山溫泉精髓的旅行者。
[在 Trip.com 查詢空房(旺季極快售罄)](#) | [Booking.com](#)
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哪家旅館最適合你?按旅遊類型推薦
首次體驗旅館的旅客: 選擇銀山莊。英文網站、國際預訂渠道、準時可靠的班車接送以及充足的員工配置,都能讓初次體驗的學習曲線變得平緩。你依然能獲得完整的榻榻米加懷石料理體驗,卻不會遇到小型旅館可能存在的溝通障礙。抵達前請閱讀[旅館初次體驗指南](/blog/first-time-ryokan-guide)。
蜜月或週年紀念情侶: 藤屋或旅籠伊藤屋。兩者都有完全私密的浴場,徹底消除共用浴場的社交因素。藤屋帶來的是隈研吾建築與某種精緻感,足以讓頂級價位顯得物有所值。伊藤屋則以中價位起步提供雪見浴和最大限度的獨處體驗。若預算有限,永澤平八以相近起步價提供同樣的私人露天浴親密感。
獨旅旅客: 能登屋旅館。1892年創立的文化財認定有著貨真價實的歷史底蘊,¥25,300—28,600的價格不失合理,而這座小鎮本身的規模,恰好讓夜間獨自沿著煤氣燈亮著的河岸漫步成為整段體驗的核心——那正是獨旅旅客來此的意義所在。洞窟浴是一個令人念念不忘的細節。
冬季攝影愛好者: 建築外觀選能登屋和永澤平八;俯瞰雪中小鎮的高處全景露天浴選瀧見館。三家旅館彼此相距不過步行3分鐘,拍攝角度各不相同。
攜子家庭: 銀山莊。這是全村唯一擁有足夠房間數和運營體系來支撐家庭出遊的旅館。預訂時請務必確認兒童價格和餐食安排——旅館餐飲的分量和形式是為成人設計的,大多數旅館要求提前告知。
有刺青的旅客: 藤屋(所有浴場私人——不受限)或旅籠伊藤屋(同上)。如果前兩家訂不到,銀山莊和能登屋有供刺青客人使用的包租浴。古山閣同樣有包租浴對刺青客人開放,但請記住現金結算的要求。
注重美食且尋求不同體驗的旅客: 倉乃葉(CLANUOVA)提供使用山形食材的義法融合懷石料理——是全村最與眾不同的餐飲選項。瀧見館有用尾花澤蕎麥自製的手打蕎麥麵。御宿弥那田屋在全村規模最小、最親密的環境中每晚提供和牛牛排和涮涮鍋。
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冬季與其他季節的銀山溫泉:何時造訪,預訂什麼
冬季(12月—2月) 是旺季,每年1月在社群媒體上瘋傳的照片就是原因。木造屋頂上的積雪、籠罩在冰冷河面上的琥珀色煤氣燈、在飄雪中泡露天溫泉——這就是驅動大量國際搜尋的銀山溫泉冬日旅館體驗。它是真實存在的,值得付出額外的計畫心力。但需注意:遊客管理現已正式化。12月20日至3月1日期間,下午5點後日歸遊客每小時限額100人;晚上8點後僅允許過夜旅客進入小鎮。日歸遊客須將車停在大正浪漫館遊客中心(約2公里外),乘坐付費班車(¥1,150,約NT$260)進村。如果你是過夜旅客,這些限制對你完全不適用——這是選擇預訂房間而非日歸的最有力論據。
冬季預訂提前期: 大多數中價位旅館需提前3—6個月。藤屋和伊藤屋需提前6—12個月。部分旅館約在一年前開放冬季預訂。
秋季楓葉(9月—11月) 被普遍認為是最被低估的季節。旅館街上方山坡覆蓋著橙紅色的楓葉,與白色灰泥牆和深色木結構形成鮮明對比。楓葉高峰期為10月下旬至11月上旬。需提前3—6個月預訂。
春季(3月—5月) 銀山川沿岸盛開櫻花,通常在4月中旬;冬雪融化後,白銀瀑布水量最大。人流量少於冬季或秋季。雪見的魔幻感已消散,但翠綠的山谷呈現出不同的、更為寧靜的面貌。櫻花高峰期提前4—6週預訂;春季其餘時段相對寬裕。
夏季(6月—8月) 是淡季。山間位置使氣溫明顯低於城市的酷暑。空房最多,價格往往最低。沒有積雪襯托的煤氣燈少了幾分戲劇感,但小鎮上方的健行步道全線開放,無需冬裝的浴衣夕遊確實令人心曠神怡。通常提前1—2個月即可。
黃金週(4月底—5月初)和盂蘭盆節(8月中旬): 需提前6個月預訂,或重新考慮日期。這兩個節假日期間,全國旅行者同時湧向同一個目的地。
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從東京和山形前往銀山溫泉的交通指南
掌握路線後,前往並不困難。[日本鐵路通票指南](/blog/japan-rail-pass-guide)詳細介紹了新幹線預訂事宜——山形新幹線由JR運營,JR Pass持有者無需為新幹線部分額外付費。
從東京出發: 1. 從東京車站乘坐JR山形新幹線「翼號(Tsubasa)」前往大石田車站(大石田駅)。車程約200分鐘(3小時20分鐘),每1—2小時一班。無JR Pass的單程票價約¥13,780(約NT$3,060) [selected-ryokan.com 交通指南,2026年5月15日確認]。 2. 從大石田車站乘坐山形交通(山交バス)路線巴士前往銀山溫泉。車程35分鐘,單程¥1,000(約NT$220),約每1—2小時一班。 3. 大多數旅館提供大石田車站免費接送——預訂時請確認並預約。從東京到銀山溫泉的全程時間約3小時20分鐘至3小時50分鐘。
從山形機場出發: 直達銀山溫泉的巴士(無需預約):75分鐘,¥2,000(約NT$440)。合乘計程車(需在前一天下午5點前預約):60分鐘,¥4,800—5,300(約NT$1,060—1,180)。
從仙台出發: 乘高速巴士至尾花澤,再轉乘路線巴士,約2小時10分鐘,¥2,760—2,790(約NT$610—620)。
冬季自駕注意事項: 12月20日至3月1日,非過夜旅客的私家車無法進入銀山溫泉溫泉區域。過夜旅客請向旅館詢問停車事宜——停車場距旅館街步行5—10分鐘,旅館提供接送服務。出發前請確保車輛裝有雪地胎。
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入住須知:銀山溫泉的旅館禮儀
首次入住旅館的旅客有時在最初的一個小時內不確定該如何行動。以下是入住的基本流程。
- 入住通常在14:00至15:00之間(昭和館為14:00以後,古山閣從14:30起)。在玄關脫鞋,換上拖鞋後工作人員會引領你前往客房。 - 浴衣由旅館提供,可在客房內、公共區域及沿河夜遊時穿著。這是普遍的旅館習慣,你會看到所有人都這樣穿。 - 晚餐通常在18:00至19:00之間,在客房內或私人用餐室供應。以懷石料理形式呈現——多道菜依次送上。請在預訂時而非入住當天告知飲食限制。 - 溫泉禮儀: 進入共用浴場前,請在淋浴處將全身徹底洗淨沖淨。毛巾不可接觸浴池水面。保持安靜。大多數旅館不建議飲酒後入浴。 - 退房通常在10:00—11:00(古山閣10:00,昭和館12:00)。早餐在7:30—9:00之間供應,具體時間因旅館而異。 - 付款方式: 大多數旅館接受主要信用卡。古山閣和倉乃葉(CLANUOVA)僅收現金——請攜帶足夠日圓。 古勢起屋別館接受銀聯。
小鎮全長300公尺。煤氣燈在黃昏點亮。晚飯後,穿著浴衣沿著河岸緩緩步行——即便氣溫遠低於零度——這才是來這裡的真正意義。
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銀山溫泉旅館常見問題
銀山溫泉有幾家旅館?
銀山溫泉共有13家旅館,從平價的約¥18,700/人起(約NT$4,150),到豪華的每晚¥68,000以上/人(約NT$15,100以上)不等。全部13家旅館沿銀山川兩岸排列在一條300公尺的石板路上 [ginzanonsen.jp]。
各旅館之間的位置幾乎沒有差別——整條街從頭走到尾只需5分鐘。真正區分它們的是價格、包租與共用溫泉的選擇,以及英文預訂的便利程度。
銀山溫泉哪家旅館最好?
對於重視私密性和設計感的情侶,藤屋是最佳選擇——8間客房、5處全包租溫泉、隈研吾建築設計,以及2026年《國家地理》的點名。對於希望順暢體驗英文服務的初次旅客,銀山莊是最實際的選擇。預算有限的旅客可選擇能登屋,一座有著130年歷史的文化財認定旅館,¥25,300/人起,實至名歸。
沒有一家旅館適合所有旅客。刺青旅客專區和上文各價格帶的詳細解讀,會比任何排行榜更快幫你縮小選擇範圍。
應該提前多久預訂銀山溫泉的旅館?
冬季週末(12月—2月):小型豪華旅館提前6—12個月,中價位提前3—4個月。楓葉高峰期(10月下旬—11月):提前3—6個月。春季賞櫻期:提前4—6週。夏季:提前1—2個月。黃金週和盂蘭盆節:至少提前6個月。
大多數旅館只有4—18間客房,比飯店邏輯預示的更快客滿——規模最小的旅館客房數甚至少於有些飯店的一個樓層。日期確定後請立即預訂。
銀山溫泉的旅館有包租溫泉嗎?
多家旅館提供貸切浴(包租溫泉)或客房內溫泉浴池。藤屋和旅籠伊藤屋完全採用私湯制度,沒有任何共用浴場,因此對刺青旅客完全開放。平價旅館使用男女分開的共用浴場,以及公共浴場「白銀之湯」(500日圓)。
每家旅館的包租溫泉詳情請參見上方比較表。刺青旅客相關資訊詳見推薦指南專區。
冬季去銀山溫泉值得嗎?
值得——冬季是旺季有其充分理由。積雪將大正時代的木造建築裝扮成與《神隱少女》中的湯屋小鎮驚人相似的景觀(吉卜力工作室從未正式確認這一關聯)。山形縣被選入[《國家地理》2026年度最佳旅遊目的地](https://www.nationalgeographic.com/travel/best-of-the-world-2026/article/yamagata-japan)。過夜旅客完全不受日歸遊客限制的約束。
主要實際注意事項:小型旅館的冬季週末需提前6—12個月預訂。平日入住競爭少得多,人也明顯更少。
如何從東京前往銀山溫泉?
從東京車站乘坐JR山形新幹線「翼號」至大石田車站(約3小時20分鐘,單程¥13,780,約NT$3,060;JR Pass新幹線段有效)。然後乘坐山交巴士前往銀山溫泉(35分鐘,¥1,000,約NT$220)。大多數旅館提供大石田車站免費接送——預訂房間時請一並安排 [selected-ryokan.com 交通指南]。
冬季限制期(12月20日—3月1日)以外可自駕,但非過夜旅客的車輛無法進入溫泉區域。過夜旅客請向旅館詢問停車場及接送服務。
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準備好預訂銀山溫泉的旅館了嗎?
最熱門旅館的最佳客房在冬季旺季高峰日前12個月便已售罄——這不是營造緊迫感的話術,而是一座最大旅館僅有40間客房、最小旅館只有4間的小鎮的現實狀況。13家旅館,一條300公尺的石板路。日本被拍攝最多次的溫泉小鎮,在2026年《國家地理》的選定之後,已穩穩站上國際旅行者的視野之中。含兩餐價格從每人不足¥20,000(約NT$4,400)起。

*銀山溫泉 — 13家旅館共同構成一幅完整的大正街道風貌,全長300公尺(照片:Bruno Plus / Wikimedia Commons, CC-BY 4.0)*
[在 Trip.com 預訂](#) | [在 Booking.com 比較](#) | [在 Expedia 搜尋](#)
若想了解山形縣全境旅館,請參閱[山形最佳旅館指南](/blog/best-ryokans-yamagata)——銀山溫泉是山形的旗艦,但整個縣的溫泉資源遠不止這一個山谷。
準備好預訂了嗎?
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