
*All properties verified as of May 2026. Halal certifications and menu offerings change — confirm directly before booking.*
Finding a halal ryokan in Japan is harder than it should be — not because the options don't exist, but because information scattered across forums contradicts itself. This guide cuts through that. It explains the certification framework, flags alcohol hidden inside standard Japanese cooking, and gives you 11 verified properties with prices, phone numbers, and a copy-paste booking email.
Japan ranked in the top five non-OIC countries in the Mastercard-CrescentRating Global Muslim Travel Index 2024, and a halal tourism market projected to reach USD 598.9 million in 2025 is growing fast. [verified Future Market Insights 2026-05-09] The country had over 150 mosques nationwide by 2025. [verified The News Agency 2026-05-09] The infrastructure is here — you just need to know what to ask for.
→ [Jump to verified property profiles](#top-11-halal-ryokans)
If this is your first ryokan stay, the [first-time ryokan guide](/blog/first-time-ryokan-guide) covers check-in etiquette, yukata dressing, and how kaiseki meals are structured.
Quick pick: best halal ryokans by traveler type
Not everyone needs to read the whole guide first. Use this table if you know what you're looking for.
| Traveler Type | Best Pick | Why | |---|---|---| | Editor's Pick: Best Overall | YUZANSO (Shiga) | Halal-certified since 2014, private Lake Biwa onsen, most affordable certified option | | Best for Halal Wagyu | AYUNOSATO (Kumamoto) | Only certified halal wagyu on this list, Michelin-selected | | Best for Families | Otaru Kourakuen (Hokkaido) | 28 rooms with private onsen built in, no reservation hassle | | Best Prayer Infrastructure | Kinugawa Park Hotels (Nikko) | Purpose-built ablution room, multiple onsen styles | | Best Kyoto Base | Risshisha Machiya (Kyoto) | CrescentRating-rated, prayer mat in every room as standard | | Best Free Private Bath | Spa Village KAMAYA (Nikko) | Family kashikiri included at no charge | | Best Luxury Setting | Yachiyo (Kyoto) | Nanzenji temple district, vegetarian kaiseki — source meals externally |
Halal-certified vs. Muslim-friendly ryokan: why the difference matters
This is the single most important distinction in this guide.
Halal-certified means a recognized certification body — Japan Halal Association (JHA), Muslim Professional Japan Association (MPJA), or Japan Halal Unit Association (JHUA), all recognized by Malaysia's JAKIM, Singapore's MUIS, Indonesia's BPJPH, and the Gulf States Approval Agency — has inspected the kitchen, verified the ingredient supply chain, and issued a certificate with a number you can look up. When you eat at a halal-certified ryokan, you are not guessing. The kitchen staff have been trained, cooking sake has been removed, mirin has been replaced with a certified substitute, and cross-contamination with non-halal preparation has been addressed systematically.
Muslim-friendly means something different: the property has made a good-faith effort to accommodate Muslim guests, typically by removing pork dishes and alcohol beverages from the menu. The kitchen itself is not certified. Cross-contamination is possible. Whether mirin — the sweet rice wine used as a base ingredient in most Japanese sauces — has been removed depends entirely on that particular kitchen's preparation. This is acceptable for many travelers, but it is not the same standard as certification.
A third informal tier exists in the luxury segment: properties offering vegetarian kaiseki on request. These contain no pork and no obvious alcohol, but they are not Muslim-friendly in any formal sense. The vegetarian category can overlap with halal dietary needs, but it is not a reliable substitute for anyone who observes halal strictly. These properties are included under Tier 3 with explicit caveats.
Tip
**Tip:** Always ask for the certificate number or certification body name when a ryokan claims halal status. Legitimate certified properties will share this information readily. If a property says "we are halal" but can't name the certifying body, treat it as Muslim-friendly at best.
The hidden alcohol problem in halal ryokan kaiseki meals
What the forum threads don't tell you matters more than most travelers realize.
Standard Japanese kaiseki cooking uses mirin — a sweet fermented rice wine — as a foundational ingredient in glazes, simmered dishes, teriyaki preparations, and dipping sauces. Hon-mirin (genuine mirin) contains 10–14% alcohol. [verified Muhammadiyah official fatwa 2026-05-09] It is not a seasoning applied lightly at the table; it is cooked into dishes from the start. Even a simple piece of grilled fish may be brushed with a mirin-based tare before it reaches you.
Cooking sake presents the same issue. It's added to broths and marinades primarily to suppress fishy odors — so it appears in fish and seafood dishes, which form the backbone of most kaiseki courses. A ryokan that says "we remove pork and alcohol from the menu" may mean they've removed the beer list and the pork belly, while the sea bream is still cooked with a sake-based marinade.
Regular soy sauce (shoyu) also contains 1.5–3% alcohol from fermentation. Indonesia's MUI considers it halal because its purpose is not as an intoxicant, but interpretations vary — at a Muslim-friendly kitchen, confirm which soy sauce is in use. [verified HalalMUI 2026-05-09]
Then there's dashi, the foundational stock. Seaweed-based (kombu) dashi is halal. Shiitake mushroom dashi is halal. But the most common dashi in Japanese cooking combines kombu with katsuobushi (bonito flakes) — a fish product that is generally permissible — but prepared in the same kitchen where alcohol-based sauces are in use, raising cross-contamination concerns.
"Mirin-style condiment" (shin-mirin) is often used as a lower-alcohol substitute, but it still contains up to 1% alcohol and appears in many kitchens that consider themselves Muslim-accommodating.
At a halal-certified kitchen, all these ingredients have been replaced and the substitution has been verified. At a Muslim-friendly kitchen, ask specifically about each one.
Tip
**What to Ask:** "Does your kitchen use mirin, cooking sake, or alcohol-based sauces?" If the answer is "we remove pork and alcohol beverages from the menu" — that is not a mirin-free kitchen. Follow up specifically: *「みりんやお酒は料理に入っていますか?」 (Mirin ya osake wa ryōri ni haitte imasu ka?)* — "Is mirin or sake used in the cooking?"
Halal onsen Japan: using private baths (kashikiri-buro) as a Muslim traveler
The word that solves the onsen question for Muslim travelers is kashikiri-buro (貸切風呂) — a fully private reserved bath.
Unlike public onsen, where guests bathe communally without clothing, a kashikiri-buro is reserved exclusively for your party for a set window of time, typically 40 to 90 minutes. [verified Japan Switch Ultimate Guide to Private Onsen 2026-05-09] The space is fully enclosed. No other guests enter. There is no staff present during the session. Female guests can wear modest swimwear or a towel wrap, and no one will see or comment. This is the standard solution used by Muslim families at Japanese ryokans, and it works well.
Sessions are often complimentary for in-house guests or carry a small surcharge of ¥1,000–¥3,000. At Spa Village KAMAYA in Nikko, the family kashikiri bath is included at no additional charge for all guests. At Otaru Kourakuen in Hokkaido, 28 of the 34 rooms have private open-air hot spring baths attached directly — no reservation process required, full privacy built into the room design.
En-suite rotenburo (outdoor baths attached directly to your room) are the premium option: you have a private outdoor onsen accessible only from your room, at any time. This configuration is available at YUZANSO in Shiga and at AYUNOSATO in Kumamoto, both halal-certified properties.
One practical note: kashikiri slots at popular ryokans fill quickly, particularly on weekends and during cherry blossom season (late March to mid-April). Book at least 2–3 months ahead during peak periods — the bath slot is as important to reserve as the room itself.
Tip
**Booking Tip:** When emailing ahead, specify both your halal meal requirement and your bath preference in the same message. Write: "We would like to reserve a private onsen session (kashikiri-buro). Could you confirm availability and any additional cost?" Not all ryokans have private baths — this is a filter criterion to apply before booking, not something to arrange on arrival.
For a wider selection of properties with guaranteed private bath access, see our guide to [private onsen ryokans in Japan](/blog/ryokan-private-onsen).
Prayer facilities at Japanese ryokans: what to expect
Dedicated prayer rooms are uncommon but no longer exceptional. Both YUZANSO (Shiga) and Kinugawa Park Hotels (Nikko) have purpose-built prayer rooms with ablution facilities. Spa Village KAMAYA has a prayer room. Risshisha Machiya Hotels in Kyoto provides prayer mat, qibla mark, qibla compass, and prayer clothing in every single room — you don't need to ask.
Most Muslim-friendly properties stop at the prayer mat and a qibla direction note. Bathroom sinks work well for wudu. Some properties with dedicated prayer rooms have low taps specifically for ablution — ask at check-in whether a qibla direction card is available. The standard phrase: *「メッカの方角を教えてください。」 (Mekka no hōgaku o oshiete kudasai.)* — "Please tell me the direction of Mecca."
From anywhere in Japan, the qibla direction is northwest. Tokyo faces approximately 293°; Kyoto approximately 292°; Osaka approximately 293°. A phone app like Muslim Pro or Athan handles this reliably. Bring a backup compass if you're staying in remote mountain onsen towns, which frequently have limited connectivity.
Pack these regardless of property tier: a compact travel prayer mat, a downloaded qibla app with offline function, and modest swimwear for private onsen use.
Top 11 halal and Muslim-friendly ryokans in Japan (2026)

The 11 properties below are organized into three tiers based on halal status. Read the tier explanation before choosing based on price or location alone.
| Property | Region | Halal Status | Private Onsen | Est. Price/Person | |---|---|---|---|---| | YUZANSO | Shiga | Certified | In-room | ¥7,150 (meal) | | AYUNOSATO | Kumamoto | Certified | In-room | ¥16,000+ | | Otaru Kourakuen | Hokkaido | Muslim-friendly | 28 rooms | ¥7,000+ | | Bentenkaku | Miyagi | Muslim-friendly | Private baths | ¥1,000 day-use | | Kinugawa Park Hotels | Tochigi | Muslim-friendly | Yes | ¥864 day-use onsen | | Spa Village KAMAYA | Tochigi | Muslim-friendly | Free kashikiri | Check Trip.com | | Risshisha Machiya | Kyoto | CrescentRating | No onsen | Check Trip.com | | Hotel ROAN | Ishikawa | Muslim-friendly | Free 50 min | Check Trip.com | | Yachiyo | Kyoto | Vegetarian only | Semi-private | ¥132,000+/night | | Hozugawatei | Kyoto area | Request-based | Unconfirmed | ¥56,600+/night | | Fufu Kyoto | Kyoto | Vegetarian only | Onsen on-site | ¥91,300+/night |
1. Satoyu Mukashibanashi YUZANSO — Shiga (halal-certified) ⭐ Editor's Pick: Best Value Certified
YUZANSO has held its halal certification since May 2014 — one of the longest-running certified ryokans in Japan, a meaningful trust signal when so many properties make recent or unverifiable claims. The kitchen operates with separated halal kitchenware and storage, priority-sourced halal ingredients, and a Muslim staff member assigned to assist at halal dinners.
The in-room baths overlook Lake Biwa, Japan's largest freshwater lake. Travelers who have stayed here consistently note that the halal kaiseki at YUZANSO feels indistinguishable from a standard multi-course ryokan dinner — the lacquerware, the pacing, and the seasonal presentation remain unchanged. The kitchen substitutes mirin with halal-compliant alternatives without compromising presentation. The halal dinner course runs approximately ¥7,150 per person [verified Food Diversity Today 2026-05-09], making this the most budget-accessible halal-certified option on this list. A dedicated prayer room with ablution facilities is on-site.
One transparency note: YUZANSO's English-language pages do not name the specific certifying body. Confirm the current certifier directly when booking — call 077-578-1144 and ask for the certificate details. YUZANSO's staff are accustomed to the question.
Pros: Halal certification since 2014, in-room rotenburo, prayer room on-site, most affordable certified option, close to Kyoto. Cons: Certifying body not named on English pages; smaller property means limited weekend availability.
Tip
**Scarcity note:** YUZANSO is a smaller property, and halal dinner preparation requires advance kitchen staffing. Weekends and Golden Week (late April to early May) fill fast — book 6–8 weeks ahead.
Best for: Budget-conscious travelers who need full certification without compromise, and anyone routing through Kyoto.
2. Hitoyoshi Ryokan AYUNOSATO — Kumamoto (halal-certified, Michelin-selected) ⭐ Editor's Pick: Best Halal Dining
AYUNOSATO is the only halal-certified accommodation in Kumamoto Prefecture and the only property on this list serving certified halal wagyu beef. It obtained halal certification in 2019 and sources its wagyu through Zenkaimeat, one of the few halal-certified beef processors in Japan. The standard halal meal course runs ¥16,000 + tax per person for one night with two meals; the wagyu upgrade adds ¥7,000 + tax per person. Verify current pricing directly before booking at info@ayunosato.jp or 0966-22-2171, as rates change seasonally. [verified Food Diversity Today 2026-05-09]
No other halal ryokan in Japan combines Michelin recognition (selected in 2018) with a certified halal kitchen. Every room has a private in-room hot spring, and for guests who want to use the public bath, the property provides special bathing garments. Hitoyoshi is approximately 2.5 hours from Fukuoka by train — pair it with Kagoshima or a Kyushu road trip rather than treating it as a standalone destination from Tokyo.
Pros: Only certified halal wagyu on this list, Michelin-selected, private in-room onsen in every room, bathing garments provided for public baths. Cons: Remote location (2.5 hrs from Fukuoka); 3 days' advance notice required; halal dinner limited to a handful of tables per evening.
Tip
**Scarcity note:** AYUNOSATO requires 3 days' advance notice for halal meals. Only a handful of tables per evening are set for halal service — contact as soon as your travel dates are fixed.
Best for: Travelers who want a high-end kaiseki experience with certified halal wagyu, and anyone building a Kyushu itinerary.
3. Otaru Kourakuen — Hokkaido (Muslim-friendly, 28 private onsen rooms) ⭐ Editor's Pick: Best for Families
Otaru Kourakuen is the standout option for Hokkaido, and its scale of private onsen access is unmatched on this list. Of its 34 guest rooms, 28 have private open-air hot spring baths attached directly — no reservation queue, no time limits, full privacy from the moment you check in. The property runs a dedicated halal kitchen using separate cookware, tableware, and preparation surfaces, with no alcohol used even for kitchen disinfection. Halal meal plans start from ¥7,000 + tax per person, with a Halal Shabu Shabu hot pot option and multi-course plans up to ¥10,000 + tax. [verified Otaru Kourakuen official site 2026-05-09]
Prayer rugs are provided in guest rooms, and the property includes a map of local mosques and halal restaurants in Otaru. The one caveat: no named certification body is listed on their English pages — the property is Muslim-friendly with halal-sourced meats, not a certified facility. Three days' advance booking is required for the halal meal service. For more options in the region, see our [best ryokans in Hokkaido](/en/ryokans/hokkaido) guide.
Pros: 28 rooms with private open-air onsen, dedicated halal kitchen, prayer rugs provided, halal meal plans from ¥7,000. Cons: No named certification body; 3 days' advance booking required; limited halal dining outside the ryokan in Otaru itself.
Best for: Families and groups who prioritize private onsen access; anyone combining a ryokan stay with Hokkaido's ski season or summer hiking.
4. Naruko Onsen Bentenkaku — Miyagi (Muslim-friendly, English spoken)
Bentenkaku is the most accessible Muslim-friendly ryokan in the Tohoku region. What sets it apart is the English fluency of the owner, Takenobu Kikuchi, who developed the halal program independently. "Halal food does not imply that it is only for the consumption of Muslims; everyone can enjoy halal food," Kikuchi told Visit Miyagi — a pragmatic attitude that shows in how straightforwardly the property handles special requests.
Private baths with bamboo enclosures are available, and both English and Chinese are spoken on-site. Day trips are an option: ¥1,000 includes access to a private open-air bath even without an overnight stay. [verified Visit Miyagi official tourism site 2026-05-09] One significant planning note: Bentenkaku requires 10 days' advance notice for halal meals — the longest requirement on this list. Book well ahead, not the week before departure. Phone: 0229-83-2461.
Pros: English and Chinese spoken, private bamboo-enclosure baths, day-use option from ¥1,000. Cons: 10 days' advance notice required for halal meals; no formal certification; limited halal infrastructure in surrounding Naruko Onsen town.
Best for: Travelers who want English support, who are comfortable with Muslim-friendly (non-certified) status, or who want a less-toured Tohoku onsen town.
5. Kinugawa Park Hotels — Nikko, Tochigi (Muslim-friendly, dedicated prayer room)
Kinugawa Park Hotels sits in Kinugawa Onsen, about two hours from Tokyo, and is the more infrastructure-complete of the two Nikko options for Muslim travelers. The property has a dedicated prayer room (small mosque) with purpose-built ablution facilities available at any time — not just a prayer mat in the room, an actual space. The halal-labeled ingredient menu uses separated kitchen preparation with specialized cookware and tableware. [verified Food Diversity Today 2026-05-09]
The onsen selection is extensive — cypress, Edo-inspired, wooden boat barrel, rocky, and open-air formats — and private baths are available for Muslim guests. Day-use onsen access runs ¥864 for non-guests. The proximity to Nikko's UNESCO World Heritage shrines makes this a natural base for two to three days. Advance notice is required for halal meal preparation; contact directly at 0288-77-1289 to confirm timing. For a full itinerary built around Nikko, see our [best ryokans near Nikko](/en/ryokans/nikko) guide.
Pros: Dedicated prayer room with ablution facilities, five distinct onsen formats, strong proximity to Nikko UNESCO shrines, two hours from Tokyo. Cons: No formal halal certification; advance notice required; advance notice window not published — call to confirm.
Best for: Middle Eastern travelers who prioritize formal prayer infrastructure, and anyone using Tokyo as a base and adding a Nikko excursion.
6. Spa Village KAMAYA — Nikko, Tochigi (Muslim-friendly, free private bath)
KAMAYA sits further into Oku Nikko at Yumoto Onsen, a quieter location than Kinugawa with milky-white sulfur thermal water. Step into the kashikiri bath here and the opacity stops you — the water is the color of diluted milk, and the sulfur note hangs faintly in the cold mountain air outside, a distinctly alpine contrast to the warmth of the rock surround. The halal menu uses local ingredients — yuba (bean curd skin), fresh fish, mountain vegetables, mushrooms — with separate kitchenware and storage. A prayer room is available.
The standout operational detail: the family kashikiri bath is included for all guests at no additional charge, with no advance reservation required. [verified Food Diversity Today 2026-05-09] Couples in particular tend to find KAMAYA more intimate than the larger Kinugawa Park Hotels. Rates vary by season and room type — check Trip.com or Booking.com for current pricing before booking.
Pros: Family kashikiri bath free and unreserved, halal menu with local ingredients, quieter mountain setting than Kinugawa. Cons: No formal certification; advance notice required for halal meals; limited English support confirmed.
Best for: Couples wanting a boutique feel and guaranteed private bath with no surcharge.
7. Risshisha Machiya Hotels — Kyoto (CrescentRating-rated, Muslim-friendly)
Risshisha operates a collection of traditional Kyoto machiya townhouses — long narrow buildings with internal courtyard gardens — rather than a single ryokan property. The Muslim travel credentials are among the strongest in Kyoto. Every room has a prayer mat, qibla mark, qibla compass, and prayer clothing as standard. Ablution-capable hot water taps are in all bathrooms. [verified Risshisha official halal page 2026-05-09]
The property holds a [CrescentRating](https://www.crescentrating.com) rating — the leading global Muslim travel certification recognized across Southeast Asia and the Middle East — and its halal menu is approved by the Japan Islamic Trust, including halal wagyu sukiyaki sourced from a certified slaughterhouse. Rates vary by property and season; check Trip.com or contact the property directly for current pricing. One honest note: Risshisha is a machiya hotel, not a traditional ryokan with on-site onsen. If you need both a Kyoto base and on-site private onsen access, compare against [Kyoto ryokans with private onsen](/en/ryokans/kyoto) for alternatives. Contact: info-rss@risshisha-group.com or +81-75-468-1417.
Pros: CrescentRating-rated, Japan Islamic Trust-approved menu, prayer kit in every room as standard, central Kyoto locations. Cons: No on-site onsen; machiya townhouse format differs from traditional ryokan; room rates not listed publicly.
Best for: Travelers who value globally recognized Muslim travel ratings, a Kyoto townhouse aesthetic, and a property where Muslim travel needs are built into the room design from the start.
8. Ichirino Kogen Hotel ROAN — Ishikawa (Muslim-friendly, Hakusan region)
ROAN sits in the mountains of Hakusan City, Ishikawa Prefecture, about an hour from Kanazawa by car — a natural stop for anyone traveling the Hokuriku Shinkansen route between Tokyo and Kyoto. The property uses halal-certified seasonings in an alcohol-free, pork-free kitchen, and has a dedicated Islamic prayer space with ablution area.
Two private onsen — an indoor Hinoki (cypress wood) bath and an outdoor rock bath — are exclusively reservable for Muslim guests at no charge for 50-minute sessions. [verified Japan Muslim Guide 2026-05-09] Rates vary by season and room type — check Booking.com or Trip.com for current pricing before booking. The one-week advance notice requirement is firm; this is not a property where halal meals can be arranged on short notice. The location also provides easy access to Shirakawa-go, the UNESCO World Heritage village of traditional Japanese farmhouses.
Pros: Two dedicated private onsen at no charge, prayer space with ablution area, Shirakawa-go day trip viable, Hokuriku Shinkansen route makes it practical. Cons: 1 week advance notice required; limited English support; remote mountain location means no halal dining outside the property.
Best for: Itinerary flexibility travelers doing the Tokyo–Kanazawa–Kyoto route, and those who want mountain scenery alongside onsen access.
9. Kyoto Nanzenji Garden Ryokan Yachiyo — Kyoto (luxury, vegetarian kaiseki)

Be clear-eyed about what Yachiyo offers and doesn't. The property is set in the Nanzenji temple district, one of Kyoto's most architecturally significant neighborhoods. The low wooden corridors, stone garden, and tatami rooms with garden views represent a historically significant ryokan aesthetic going back generations. Vegetarian kaiseki is available on advance request.
The trade-off is absolute: no halal kitchen, no certification body to verify, and no private bath in all room categories — this is a setting purchase, not a halal infrastructure purchase. Strictly observant travelers should arrange meals externally and use Yachiyo as accommodation only. The semi-outdoor private baths attached to room patios provide modesty for bathing, and tatami rooms work naturally as prayer spaces. Given proximity to [Kyoto's halal restaurant scene](/en/ryokans/kyoto), sourcing external halal meals for every sitting is feasible. The nightly rate starts at approximately ¥132,000 (~USD 880). [verified Halalzilla 2026-05-09]
Pros: Architecturally exceptional Nanzenji setting, semi-private patio baths, tatami rooms suitable for prayer, near Kyoto halal restaurants. Cons: No halal kitchen, no certification, not all rooms include private bath — strictly observant travelers must source all meals externally.
Best for: Luxury travelers whose primary priority is historic setting and architectural significance, who plan to source halal meals from nearby Kyoto restaurants.
10. Syoenso Hozugawatei — Kameoka, Kyoto (luxury, no-pork no-alcohol on request)
Hozugawatei sits on the Hozu River in Kameoka, west of Kyoto city, in a secluded riverside setting that sits noticeably removed from the city's tourist density. No-pork, no-alcohol meals are available on advance request, and vegetarian options are offered — but there is no formal certification and the kitchen has not been verified against a halal standard. The one limitation is that onsen access has not been independently confirmed in available sources; guests should verify bath options directly when booking.
What differentiates Hozugawatei from Yachiyo is scale and seclusion. The wooden verandas hang over the river — in autumn, foliage closes in on three sides and the water does the rest of the interior design work. Put it plainly: you sit at the low table, the sliding door frames the gorge, and nothing else competes for your attention. The large tatami rooms accommodate prayer space without difficulty. Nightly rates start at approximately ¥56,600 (~USD 380). [verified Halalzilla 2026-05-09] The property pairs naturally with a Hozu River boat excursion, which runs the gorge between Kameoka and Arashiyama — one of Kansai's more underrated half-day experiences.
Pros: Seclusion from Kyoto crowds, riverside tatami rooms suited to prayer, pairs well with Hozu River boat trip. Cons: No halal certification; onsen access unconfirmed — verify directly before booking; limited halal dining outside the property.
Best for: Luxury travelers wanting seclusion from Kyoto's crowds, who are comfortable with request-based dietary accommodation and understand its limitations.
11. Fufu Kyoto — Kyoto (luxury, near Kyoto Mosque)
Fufu Kyoto's most useful quality for Muslim travelers is geographic: the property sits near the Kyoto Islamic Cultural Center (Kyoto Mosque), which means Friday prayer and halal grocers are accessible on foot or a short taxi ride. The onsen is on-site, with natural hot spring access. Vegetarian meals can be arranged on request. Like Yachiyo and Hozugawatei, there is no halal certification — strictly observant travelers should plan meals externally.
Nightly rates start at approximately ¥91,300 (~USD 610). [verified Halalzilla 2026-05-09] Private bath arrangements are not confirmed in available sources — email the property before booking to verify kashikiri-buro availability. This is the right choice for a traveler who wants to attend Friday prayer at Kyoto Mosque and spend the rest of the weekend in a high-end ryokan setting.
Pros: Walking distance to Kyoto Mosque, on-site hot spring onsen, high-end setting. Cons: No halal certification; private bath availability unconfirmed; meals must be sourced externally for strictly observant travelers.
Best for: Luxury travelers attending Friday prayer at Kyoto Mosque who want a high-end property as a base.
How to book a halal ryokan in Japan: advance notice, platforms, and what to say
Booking a halal ryokan in Japan requires two separate actions: reserving the room and communicating your halal requirements directly. The booking platform alone is not sufficient.
Advance notice requirements by property: - Otaru Kourakuen: 3 days minimum - AYUNOSATO: 3 days minimum - YUZANSO: advance phone reservation required (call 077-578-1144) - Ichirino Kogen Hotel ROAN: 1 week minimum - Naruko Onsen Bentenkaku: 10 days minimum — plan this one first
For halal-certified properties (YUZANSO, AYUNOSATO), the certification is pre-existing — you are confirming they can accommodate your party on your specific dates, not asking them to create a halal meal from scratch. For Muslim-friendly properties, the preparation is more bespoke, which is why lead times are longer.
Platform guidance: Trip.com covers 217 of the 224 ryokans indexed on this site and has a special request field at checkout. Use it, but do not stop there — send a direct email or call to confirm. Many smaller ryokans in onsen towns do not have staff monitoring OTA special request fields in real time. Direct booking via the ryokan website allows more detailed requests in free text, and some properties (Risshisha, AYUNOSATO) prefer email contact for halal arrangements.
After sending your email, if there's no reply within 48 hours, follow up by phone. To open a call in Japanese: *「ハラールのご予約について確認したいのですが。」 (Harāru no goyoyaku ni tsuite kakunin shitai no desu ga.)* — "I would like to confirm my halal reservation."
Tip
**Copy-Paste Email Template:** Subject: Halal Meal Request — [Your Name], [Check-in Date] Dear [Ryokan Name] Team, We are a party of [number] Muslim travelers checking in on [date] and checking out on [date]. We follow a halal diet and would like to confirm the following: 1. Can your kitchen provide halal-certified meals, or meals that are strictly free from pork, alcohol, mirin, and cooking sake? 2. Is mirin or cooking sake used in any of the dishes? 3. What is your dashi stock made from? 4. Can we reserve a private onsen (kashikiri-buro) for our group? Please advise on cost and availability. 5. Is a prayer mat and qibla direction available in the room? Please let us know your advance preparation requirements. We are happy to confirm our dietary needs in writing before arrival. Thank you very much.
Useful Japanese phrases for Muslim travelers
Show these on your phone screen at check-in — Japanese script is more reliably understood by staff than romanized English. Screenshot this section before you leave home and save it offline.
| Japanese | Romaji | English | |---|---|---| | ハラールの食べ物はありますか? | Harāru no tabemono wa arimasu ka? | Do you have halal food? | | 豚肉は使っていますか? | Butaniku wa tsukatte imasu ka? | Does this contain pork? | | アルコールを使わずに調理できますか? | Arukōru o tsukawazu ni chōri dekimasu ka? | Can you cook without alcohol? | | みりんやお酒は料理に入っていますか? | Mirin ya osake wa ryōri ni haitte imasu ka? | Is mirin or sake used in the cooking? | | だしに何を使っていますか? | Dashi ni nani o tsukatte imasu ka? | What do you use for the dashi stock? | | 礼拝室はありますか? | Reihaishitsu wa arimasu ka? | Is there a prayer room? | | お祈りをする場所はありますか? | Oinori o suru basho wa arimasu ka? | Is there a place where I can pray? | | メッカの方角を教えてください。 | Mekka no hōgaku o oshiete kudasai. | Please tell me the direction of Mecca. | | 貸切風呂を予約したいです。 | Kashikiri buro o yoyaku shitai desu. | I would like to reserve a private bath. | | ハラール食を事前に予約したいのですが。 | Harāru shoku o jizen ni yoyaku shitai no desu ga. | I would like to pre-order a halal meal. |
Tip
**Pro Tip:** Japanese ryokan staff may not recognize romanized Japanese words spoken aloud. Showing the kanji column on your phone screen is the most reliable method. If you're arriving at night when English-speaking staff may not be on duty, have the phrase table ready at check-in.
Before you need these phrases, confirm your property has availability.
Staying at a halal ryokan in Japan during Ramadan
Suhoor is the first problem. Standard ryokan breakfasts run from 7am to 9am — well after Fajr. At most properties, there is no pre-dawn kitchen service by default. The workaround: the evening before, tell staff you need food prepared for an early morning meal. Most cooperative ryokans will provide a cold bento box or onigiri left outside your door. If you're at a certified halal property (YUZANSO or AYUNOSATO), note this in your booking email so they can plan ahead.
Iftar timing actually aligns well with ryokan dinner service. The standard kaiseki dinner at most ryokans is served between 5:30pm and 7pm — the earlier end of that range aligns with iftar timing during winter months, and even summer iftars in Japan (around 7pm in July) fall within or just after the service window. Ask the ryokan to serve dinner at the latest available slot if needed.
During Ramadan, Fajr in Tokyo can be as early as 3:15am in summer. Bring a dedicated prayer time app (Athan or Muslim Pro) set to your exact location rather than relying on generic prayer time tables. Ryokans are quiet between 10pm and 7am by convention, which suits the Ramadan schedule — tarawih in your room after dinner is undisturbed.
Tip
**Suhoor Request Phrase:** Tell staff the evening before: *「明日の朝、早い時間に食べ物をお願いできますか?」 (Ashita no asa, hayai jikan ni tabemono wo onegai dekimasu ka?)* — "Could you prepare food for an early morning meal tomorrow?" Most cooperative ryokans will leave a cold bento or onigiri set outside your room before dawn. Pack halal snack bars as a backup in case the request doesn't land.
What to pack for a halal-friendly ryokan stay
A few items make the difference between a smooth stay and a frustrating one at any tier of property. Pack these regardless of where you're staying:
- Compact travel prayer mat — Muslim-friendly properties increasingly provide one, but certified halal properties are the only ones guaranteed to have it - Qibla compass or downloaded qibla app with offline mode — mountain onsen towns frequently have weak signal - Modest swimwear or burkini for private onsen use — ryokans do not provide these, and there is no rental option - Printed or screenshot copies of the Japanese phrase table above — saved offline on your phone, not relying on internet access - Halal snack reserves — particularly useful if your ryokan serves only halal dinner (not lunch), or for suhoor backup during Ramadan - Halal snacks sourced from Tokyo, Osaka, or Kyoto before travel — onsen towns outside major cities have almost no halal shopping infrastructure - List of your certification body names (JHA, MPJA, JHUA) to verify any new certification claims at check-in
If you're staying at a machiya-style property like Risshisha with no on-site onsen, a small towel or furoshiki cloth serves as a practical bag for carrying bathing supplies to a nearby public facility.
Nearby halal restaurants for your Japan ryokan stay
Most Muslim-friendly ryokans serve halal only at dinner, which leaves breakfast and lunch to source externally. Plan your regional food strategy before arrival.

Kyoto and Kansai: The densest halal infrastructure outside Tokyo. Halal Wagyu Kaiseki RIN in Gion, halal grocers near Kyoto Mosque (in the Sakyo district), and a cluster of Muslim-friendly restaurants in the Fushimi and Gion areas. If staying at Risshisha, Fufu Kyoto, or any of the Kyoto Tier 3 properties, lunch sourcing is not a problem.
Tokyo (Nikko gateway): Stock up before heading to Nikko. Tokyo's halal restaurant network in Shinjuku, Asakusa, and Akihabara is extensive — take what you need for two or three days, because Kinugawa Onsen town itself has limited options beyond the ryokan.
Hokkaido (Otaru/Sapporo): Sapporo has a growing halal scene; Otaru itself is limited. The practical approach for Otaru Kourakuen guests: stop in Sapporo first, buy supplies, then head to Otaru. The ryokan's on-site halal meals cover dinner adequately.
Hakone / Kanagawa: As of May 2026, no halal-certified ryokan in Hakone has been independently verified. For the nearest Muslim-friendly options, consider properties in Nikko (Kinugawa Park Hotels, Spa Village KAMAYA) or browse our [Hakone ryokan guide](/en/ryokans/hakone) for general recommendations. Stock up on halal provisions in Tokyo before making the trip.
Kumamoto/Hitoyoshi (AYUNOSATO area): Halal options in Hitoyoshi city are very limited. The halal wagyu dinner at the ryokan is the primary halal meal of the day. Supplement with convenience store onigiri with seaweed or umeboshi — plain rice-based items are free of pork and alcohol and available at every 7-Eleven and FamilyMart.
Ishikawa/Kanazawa (Hotel ROAN area): Kanazawa has expanded its halal restaurant offering since 2023. Check [Halal Gourmet Japan](https://www.halalgourmet.jp/en/) before arrival — it covers 3,000+ verified restaurants across Japan with certification level filters, and it works with offline maps.
Tip
**App Tip:** Download Halal Gourmet Japan and Halal Navi before your trip — both are JNTO-recommended, both work offline, and both allow filtering by certification level. HalalTrip covers prayer rooms and mosques in addition to restaurants. For remote onsen towns, these are the only reliable way to locate halal options within a reasonable radius.
Frequently asked questions: halal ryokan Japan
Is there halal food in Japanese ryokans?
Yes, but availability varies significantly. Two halal-certified ryokans — YUZANSO and AYUNOSATO — offer verified halal meals as a standard service. Several Muslim-friendly properties offer pork-free and alcohol-free meals on advance request. Otaru Kourakuen uses halal-sourced meats in a dedicated kitchen, though it holds no named facility-level certification. Strictly observant travelers should book halal-certified properties; those comfortable with Muslim-friendly accommodation have more options.
Can Muslims use onsen in Japan?
Yes — through private onsen reservations called kashikiri-buro. These are fully enclosed, time-reserved baths for your group only, with no staff present and no other guests. Modest swimwear or towel wraps can be worn. Communal onsen (public, nude, gender-separated) are not suitable for most Muslim travelers, but kashikiri options exist at most of the properties listed in this guide.
Which ryokans in Japan are halal-certified?
The two fully halal-certified ryokans verified for this guide are YUZANSO in Shiga (certified since May 2014) and AYUNOSATO in Kumamoto (certified since 2019). Risshisha Machiya Hotels in Kyoto holds a CrescentRating rating — a globally recognized Muslim travel designation — with its menu approved by the Japan Islamic Trust. These are the strongest credentials currently verified.
What is the difference between halal-certified and Muslim-friendly?
Halal-certified means a recognized certification body has inspected and verified the kitchen, ingredients, and preparation process. Muslim-friendly means the property has made an accommodation effort — typically removing pork dishes and alcohol beverages — but the kitchen has not been independently certified. The distinction matters most for mirin (cooking rice wine), cooking sake, and cross-contamination risk in preparation.
Is mirin used in ryokan food halal?
Mirin is a sweet fermented rice wine used as a base cooking ingredient throughout Japanese cuisine. Hon-mirin (traditional mirin) contains 10–14% alcohol and is not halal. [verified Muhammadiyah 2026-05-09] Mirin-style condiment (shin-mirin) contains less than 1% and its permissibility is a matter of scholarly debate. Halal-certified kitchens replace mirin entirely with certified substitutes. Muslim-friendly kitchens may or may not have done so — always ask specifically.
How far in advance do I need to request halal food at a ryokan?
Minimum three days for most properties; one week for Ichirino Kogen Hotel ROAN; 10 days for Naruko Onsen Bentenkaku. Never assume same-day or next-day halal meal preparation is possible. Make the request simultaneously with the room reservation — include it in your booking email.
Can I stay at a ryokan during Ramadan in Japan?
Yes. The main logistical challenge is suhoor — standard ryokan breakfasts begin at 7am, long after Fajr. Request a cold bento or onigiri from the ryokan the evening before, or pack halal snacks as backup. Iftar timing aligns reasonably well with ryokan dinner service, which typically runs 5:30–7pm. Certified halal properties like YUZANSO and AYUNOSATO have experience accommodating Ramadan guests; note your schedule in your booking email.
Are there private onsen options for Muslim travelers in Japan?
Yes — kashikiri-buro (private reserved onsen) are available at most properties on this list. Some ryokans go further: Otaru Kourakuen has 28 rooms with private open-air baths attached, YUZANSO and AYUNOSATO both have in-room private hot springs, and Spa Village KAMAYA includes family kashikiri at no extra charge. For a full breakdown, see our guide to [private onsen ryokans in Japan](/blog/ryokan-private-onsen).
Do halal ryokans cost more?
Not necessarily. YUZANSO's halal dinner runs approximately ¥7,150 per person and Otaru Kourakuen's halal meal plans start from ¥7,000 per person — both are budget-accessible. Luxury properties like Yachiyo (¥132,000/night) reflect their tier, not a halal premium. Certification status does not correlate with price.
Final thoughts: your halal ryokan Japan checklist

The framework is simple once you know it: halal-certified for meals, private onsen for modesty, advance communication for everything else. The anxiety that comes with first-time Muslim travel to Japan is almost entirely the product of not having that framework spelled out — once you do, the choices become straightforward.
Japan's halal tourism infrastructure has improved at a pace most travelers don't realize until they start looking. The halal tourism market was projected to reach USD 598.9 million in 2025 [verified Future Market Insights 2026-05-09], the mosque count has grown from four in the 1980s to more than 150 today, and certifications have been added in recent years across multiple regions. The Kobe Muslim Mosque, built in 1935, was the first in Japan — and the country has not stopped expanding its Muslim-friendly infrastructure since. [verified JNTO Muslim-Friendly Tourism Guide 2026-05-09]
The 11 properties listed here represent the current state of what's verified and bookable. Use this guide as your pre-booking checklist for halal ryokan Japan: certification status first, mirin question second, kashikiri-buro confirmed third. Share it with your travel group before anyone starts comparing prices — the framework takes five minutes to read and saves hours of forum searching.
Ready to book? Browse Muslim-friendly ryokans on Trip.com and filter by your preferred region.
[Browse all ryokans in Japan](/en/ryokans)

*所有信息已于2026年5月核实。清真认证和菜单内容随时可能变更,预订前请直接向旅馆确认。*
在日本寻找清真旅馆(halal ryokan)比想象中困难——不是因为没有选择,而是各类论坛上的信息相互矛盾,让人无从入手。本指南旨在厘清这些混乱:解释认证体系的运作方式,指出日本料理中隐藏的酒精成分,并提供11家经过核实的旅馆信息,包含价格、电话号码和可直接复制使用的预订邮件模板。
在万事达卡-新月评级"2024年全球穆斯林旅游指数"中,日本跻身非OIC国家前五名。清真旅游市场预计于2025年达到59.89亿元人民币(约合5.989亿美元)的规模,且仍在快速增长。[来源:Future Market Insights,2026年5月9日核实] 截至2025年,全国已有超过150座清真寺。[来源:The News Agency,2026年5月9日核实] 基础设施已然具备——你只需知道该问什么。
→ [直接跳转至经过核实的旅馆简介](#top-11-halal-ryokans)
如果这是您第一次入住旅馆,[旅馆初次入住指南](/blog/first-time-ryokan-guide)详细介绍了入住礼仪、浴衣穿法和怀石料理的用餐方式。
按旅行类型快速选择:最佳清真旅馆
如果您已经知道自己想要什么,可以直接查看下表。
| 旅行类型 | 最佳选择 | 推荐理由 | |---|---|---| | 编辑推荐:综合最佳 | YUZANSO(滋贺) | 自2014年起持有清真认证,客房内设俯瞰琵琶湖私人温泉,是认证旅馆中性价比最高的选择 | | 最佳清真和牛体验 | AYUNOSATO(熊本) | 列表中唯一提供认证清真和牛的旅馆,米其林入选 | | 最佳亲子旅游 | 小樽光陸苑(北海道) | 28间客房附设私人露天温泉,无需预约,隐私性强 | | 最佳礼拜设施 | 鬼怒川Park饭店(日光) | 专门建造的净礼室,多种温泉形式 | | 最佳京都据点 | 立志舍町屋酒店(京都) | 新月评级认证,每间客房标配礼拜毯 | | 最佳免费私人浴池 | Spa Village KAMAYA(日光) | 家庭包场浴池免费提供 | | 最佳奢华环境 | 山ちよ(京都) | 南禅寺区,素食怀石——餐食需自行在外解决 |
清真认证与"穆斯林友好型"旅馆的区别——为何重要
这是本指南最关键的区分。
清真认证意味着认可的认证机构——日本清真协会(JHA)、穆斯林专业日本协会(MPJA)或日本清真联合协会(JHUA),均获马来西亚JAKIM、新加坡MUIS、印度尼西亚BPJPH和海湾国家认可机构承认——已对厨房进行实地检查,核实食材供应链,并颁发带有可查询编号的证书。在清真认证旅馆用餐,无需猜测。厨房工作人员接受过专项培训,料酒已被移除,味醂(みりん)已被认证替代品取代,非清真食材的交叉污染问题也得到系统性处理。
穆斯林友好型含义不同:旅馆已诚意十足地为穆斯林宾客提供便利,通常是从菜单中去除猪肉菜肴和含酒精饮料。厨房本身未获认证。交叉污染仍有可能发生。味醂——绝大多数日本酱汁中作为基础原料的甜米酒——是否已被去除,完全取决于该厨房的具体操作。这对许多旅行者来说是可以接受的,但与认证标准不同。
在奢华市场还存在非正式的第三层级:应要求提供素食怀石料理的旅馆。这类料理不含猪肉和明显的酒精,但不具备任何意义上的穆斯林友好标准。素食类别与清真饮食需求有时重叠,但对于严格遵守清真规定的人而言并不可靠。此类旅馆以第三层级形式收录,并附有明确说明。
Tip
**提示:** 当旅馆声称具有清真资质时,请务必索取证书编号或认证机构名称。合法认证旅馆会毫不犹豫地提供这些信息。如果旅馆说"我们是清真的"却无法说出认证机构名称,请将其视为穆斯林友好型。
清真旅馆怀石料理中的隐性酒精问题
论坛帖子里没告诉你的,往往比大多数旅行者意识到的更重要。
日本标准怀石料理中使用味醂——一种甜味发酵米酒——作为光泽酱汁、炖菜、照烧和蘸酱的基础原料。本味醂(传统味醂)酒精含量为10–14%。[来源:穆罕默迪耶官方法特瓦,2026年5月9日核实] 它并非在餐桌上少量添加的调味料,而是从烹饪之初便加入菜肴中。即使是一块简单的烤鱼,上桌前也可能涂抹了以味醂为基础的酱汁。
料理酒(cooking sake)也存在同样的问题。它主要用于汤底和腌料以去除腥味,因此广泛出现在以鱼类和海鲜为主的怀石料理中。一家声称"去除猪肉和酒精"的旅馆,可能只是拿掉了酒水单和猪肉,而鲷鱼仍用含清酒的腌料烹制。
普通酱油(shoyu)也因发酵含有1.5–3%的酒精。印度尼西亚MUI认为其属于清真,因为其用途并非使人醉醺醺,但各方解读不一——在穆斯林友好型厨房,请确认使用的是哪种酱油。[来源:HalalMUI,2026年5月9日核实]
还有高汤(だし,dashi)。以海带(昆布)为基础的高汤是清真的。以香菇为基础的高汤也是清真的。但日本料理中最常见的高汤是昆布与鲣节(Katsuobushi,鲣鱼花)的组合——鲣鱼节作为鱼制品通常被允许食用——但若在使用含酒精酱汁的同一厨房中制作,则存在交叉污染的隐患。
"味醂风调味料"(新味醂,shin-mirin)常作为低酒精替代品使用,但仍含有高达1%的酒精,在许多自称穆斯林友好的厨房中仍有使用。
在清真认证厨房,所有这些原料均已被替代,且替代情况经过核实。在穆斯林友好型厨房,请逐一具体询问。
Tip
**应该询问的问题:**"您的厨房使用味醂、料理酒或含酒精酱汁吗?"如果回答是"我们从菜单中去除猪肉和含酒精饮料"——这并不等于不使用味醂。请进一步具体确认:*「みりんやお酒は料理に入っていますか?」(Mirin ya osake wa ryōri ni haitte imasu ka?)* ——"料理中使用了味醂或清酒吗?"
日本温泉与清真旅游:作为穆斯林旅行者使用私人浴池(贯切风吕)
解决穆斯林旅行者温泉问题的关键词是贯切风吕(貸切風呂,kashikiri-buro)——完全私人的预约制浴室。
与宾客裸体共浴的公共温泉不同,贯切风吕在规定时间段(通常40至90分钟)内为您的团队独家预约使用。[来源:Japan Switch私人温泉终极指南,2026年5月9日核实] 空间完全封闭,无其他宾客进入,使用期间无工作人员在场。女性宾客可穿着端庄的泳衣或毛巾,不会被看见或受到评论。这是穆斯林家庭在日本旅馆中使用的标准解决方案,效果良好。
包场浴池对于住店宾客通常免费,或收取¥1,000–¥3,000的小额附加费。日光Spa Village KAMAYA的家庭贯切浴池对所有宾客免费,无需额外付费。北海道小樽光陸苑34间客房中有28间直接附设私人露天温泉浴池——无需预约,隐私性从房间设计之初便得到保障。
露天风呂(rotenburo,直接连接客房的室外浴池)是高端选项:您拥有仅从客房进入的私人室外温泉,随时可用。这种配置可在滋贺的YUZANSO和熊本的AYUNOSATO找到,两者均为清真认证旅馆。
实用提示:热门旅馆的贯切风吕预约位特别是在周末和赏樱季(3月下旬至4月中旬)迅速被占满。旺季请至少提前2至3个月预订——浴池预约与客房预约同等重要。
Tip
**预订提示:** 发送预订邮件时,请在同一封邮件中同时说明清真餐食需求和浴池偏好。请写:"我们希望预约私人温泉时段(贯切风吕),请告知是否有空位及额外费用。"并非所有旅馆都提供私人浴池——这是预订前应当确认的筛选条件,而非入住后临时安排。
如需更多保证有私人浴池的旅馆选择,请参阅[日本私人温泉旅馆指南](/blog/ryokan-private-onsen)。
日本旅馆的礼拜设施:实际情况
专用礼拜室不常见,但已不再是例外。YUZANSO(滋贺)和鬼怒川Park饭店(日光)设有配备净礼设施的专用礼拜室。Spa Village KAMAYA设有礼拜室。京都立志舍町屋酒店在每间客房标配礼拜毯、朝向麦加方向标记、朝向罗盘和礼拜服——无需另外索取。
大多数穆斯林友好型旅馆只提供礼拜毯和朝向麦加的方向说明。洗手台可用于净礼(wudu)。部分设有专用礼拜室的旅馆安装了专为净礼设计的低水龙头——入住时请询问是否提供朝向卡。标准用语:*「メッカの方角を教えてください。」(Mekka no hōgaku o oshiete kudasai.)* ——"请告诉我麦加的方向。"
在日本任何地方,朝拜方向均为西北方。东京约293°,京都约292°,大阪约293°。Muslim Pro或Athan等手机应用程序能可靠处理这一问题。如果您入住偏远山区温泉小镇——这些地方信号经常较弱——请携带备用指南针。
无论旅馆级别如何,这些物品都建议随身携带:便携旅行礼拜毯、已下载具备离线功能的朝向应用,以及私人温泉使用的端庄泳衣。
日本清真及穆斯林友好型旅馆TOP 11(2026年)

以下11家旅馆按清真状态分为三个层级。请在仅凭价格或位置做选择之前,先阅读层级说明。
| 旅馆 | 地区 | 清真状态 | 私人温泉 | 参考价格/人 | |---|---|---|---|---| | YUZANSO | 滋贺 | 认证 | 客房内 | ¥7,150(餐食) | | AYUNOSATO | 熊本 | 认证 | 客房内 | ¥16,000起 | | 小樽光陸苑 | 北海道 | 穆斯林友好 | 28间客房 | ¥7,000起 | | 鸣子温泉弁天閣 | 宫城 | 穆斯林友好 | 私人浴池 | ¥1,000日间使用 | | 鬼怒川Park饭店 | 栃木 | 穆斯林友好 | 有 | ¥864日间温泉 | | Spa Village KAMAYA | 栃木 | 穆斯林友好 | 免费贯切风吕 | 请查询Trip.com | | 立志舍町屋酒店 | 京都 | 新月评级 | 无温泉 | 请查询Trip.com | | 市之濑高原饭店ROAN | 石川 | 穆斯林友好 | 免费50分钟 | 请查询Trip.com | | 山ちよ | 京都 | 仅素食 | 半私人 | ¥132,000起/晚 | | 保津川亭 | 京都周边 | 可申请 | 未确认 | ¥56,600起/晚 | | Fufu Kyoto | 京都 | 仅素食 | 场地内温泉 | ¥91,300起/晚 |
1. 里山昔话 YUZANSO(ゆうざんそう) — 滋贺(清真认证) ⭐ 编辑推荐:认证旅馆中最具性价比
YUZANSO自2014年5月起持有清真认证——是日本持证时间最长的清真旅馆之一,在众多认证资质模糊或难以核实的旅馆中,这是值得信赖的重要信号。厨房使用分开的清真炊具和储存设施,优先采购清真食材,并在清真晚宴期间配备穆斯林员工协助服务。
客房浴池俯瞰日本最大的淡水湖——琵琶湖。入住者一致反映,YUZANSO的清真怀石料理与标准多道菜旅馆晚餐几乎没有区别——漆器摆盘、上菜节奏和时令呈现方式保持不变。厨房用合规替代品代替味醂,不影响菜肴外观。清真晚餐套餐每人约¥7,150,[来源:Food Diversity Today,2026年5月9日核实]是本列表中价格最亲民的清真认证选项。场地内设有配备净礼设施的专用礼拜室。
透明度说明:YUZANSO的英文页面未注明具体认证机构。预订时请直接联系确认——拨打077-578-1144询问认证详情。YUZANSO的工作人员对这类问题早已习以为常。
优点: 自2014年起获清真认证、客房露天风吕、场地内礼拜室、认证旅馆中价格最低、距京都较近。缺点: 英文页面未注明认证机构;旅馆规模较小,周末空位有限。
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**稀缺提示:** YUZANSO规模较小,清真晚餐准备需提前安排厨房人员。周末和黄金周(4月下旬至5月初)很快订满——建议提前6至8周预订。
适合人群: 需要完整认证但注重预算的旅行者,以及行程经过京都的旅行者。
2. 人吉旅馆 AYUNOSATO(あゆのさと) — 熊本(清真认证,米其林入选) ⭐ 编辑推荐:最佳清真餐饮
AYUNOSATO是熊本县唯一获得清真认证的住宿设施,也是本列表中唯一提供认证清真和牛的旅馆。该旅馆于2019年取得清真认证,通过日本少数清真认证牛肉加工商之一的"全开肉业(Zenkaimeat)"采购和牛。标准清真餐食套餐为一泊两食,每人¥16,000含税;和牛升级每人额外加收¥7,000含税。价格随季节变动,请在预订前直接联系info@ayunosato.jp或拨打0966-22-2171确认。[来源:Food Diversity Today,2026年5月9日核实]
日本没有其他旅馆同时拥有米其林认可(2018年入选)和清真认证厨房。每间客房均设私人客室温泉,对于希望使用公共浴池的宾客,旅馆还提供专用浴衣。人吉距福冈乘火车约2.5小时——建议将其纳入鹿儿岛游览或九州公路旅行路线,而非从东京单独前往。
优点: 列表中唯一认证清真和牛、米其林入选、每间客房均设私人温泉、提供公共浴池用浴衣。缺点: 位置偏远(距福冈2.5小时);需提前3天告知;每晚清真餐饮桌位数量有限。
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**稀缺提示:** AYUNOSATO的清真餐食需提前3天告知。每晚设定清真服务的餐桌数量极少——旅行日期确定后请立即联系。
适合人群: 追求高端怀石体验并希望品尝认证清真和牛的旅行者,以及安排九州行程的旅行者。
3. 小樽光陸苑 — 北海道(穆斯林友好,28间私人温泉客房) ⭐ 编辑推荐:最佳亲子旅游
小樽光陸苑是北海道最突出的清真旅馆选择,其私人温泉覆盖率在本列表中首屈一指。34间客房中28间直接附设私人露天温泉浴池——无需排队,无时间限制,入住即享全程私密。旅馆设有专用清真厨房,使用独立的炊具、餐具和操作台,即使厨房消毒也不使用酒精。清真餐食套餐每人从¥7,000含税起,提供清真涮涮锅选项和最高¥10,000含税的多道菜套餐。[来源:小樽光陸苑官网,2026年5月9日核实]
客房内提供礼拜毯,旅馆还提供小樽附近清真寺和清真餐厅地图。需注意一点:其英文页面未注明认证机构名称——该旅馆是穆斯林友好型,使用清真食材,而非认证设施。清真餐食服务需提前3天预订。更多周边地区选择,请参阅[北海道最佳旅馆](/en/ryokans/hokkaido)指南。
优点: 28间客房附露天温泉、专用清真厨房、提供礼拜毯、清真餐食套餐从¥7,000起。缺点: 未注明认证机构;需提前3天预订;小樽当地清真餐饮选择有限。
适合人群: 优先考虑私人温泉的家庭和团队;将旅馆住宿与北海道滑雪季或夏季徒步旅行相结合的旅行者。
4. 鸣子温泉弁天閣 — 宫城(穆斯林友好,英语服务)
弁天閣是东北地区最方便的穆斯林友好型旅馆。其突出之处在于旅馆主人菊地武信独立开发了清真服务项目,且能流利使用英语。"清真食品并非只供穆斯林食用,任何人都可以享用",菊地对宫城观光部门表示——这种务实态度体现在旅馆处理特别要求时的简洁效率上。
旅馆设有竹围隔断的私人浴池,提供英语和中文服务。日间游览也是一个选择:¥1,000即可使用私人露天浴池,无需过夜。[来源:宫城官方旅游网站,2026年5月9日核实] 重要提醒:弁天閣的清真餐食需提前10天告知——是本列表中提前期最长的。请提前规划,不要在出发前一周才预订。电话:0229-83-2461。
优点: 提供英语和中文服务、竹围私人浴池、日间使用选项从¥1,000起。缺点: 清真餐食需提前10天告知;无正式认证;鸣子温泉街周边清真设施有限。
适合人群: 需要英语支持的旅行者,接受穆斯林友好(非认证)状态的旅行者,或希望体验游客较少的东北温泉小镇的旅行者。
5. 鬼怒川Park饭店 — 栃木·日光(穆斯林友好,专用礼拜室)
鬼怒川Park饭店位于鬼怒川温泉,距东京约两小时,是日光地区两家穆斯林旅游设施中基础设施更为完善的一家。旅馆设有专用礼拜室(小型清真寺),配备专门建造的净礼设施,可随时使用——不仅是客房中的礼拜毯,而是实际的专用礼拜空间。清真标识食材菜单采用独立的专用炊具和餐具进行分开烹饪。[来源:Food Diversity Today,2026年5月9日核实]
温泉种类丰富——柏木、江户风格、木桶、岩石和露天等多种形式——穆斯林宾客可使用私人浴池。非住宿宾客日间温泉入场费为¥864。旅馆邻近日光联合国教科文组织世界遗产神社,是两至三天行程的理想据点。清真餐食准备需提前告知,请直接拨打0288-77-1289确认具体时间要求。如需日光为主题的完整行程,请参阅[日光附近最佳旅馆](/en/ryokans/nikko)指南。
优点: 配备净礼设施的专用礼拜室、五种温泉形式、紧邻日光联合国教科文组织遗址、距东京两小时。缺点: 无正式清真认证;需提前告知;提前时间未公开——需电话确认。
适合人群: 重视正式礼拜设施的中东旅行者,以及以东京为据点前往日光一日游的旅行者。
6. Spa Village KAMAYA — 栃木·日光(穆斯林友好,私人浴池免费)
KAMAYA位于奥日光汤元温泉深处,比鬼怒川更宁静,以乳白色硫磺温泉水闻名。踏入贯切浴池时,水的不透明度令人眼前一亮——乳白色的泉水令人印象深刻,室外山间冷空气中飘来淡淡的硫磺气息,与温热的岩石围壁形成鲜明的山地对比。清真菜单使用当地食材——腐竹(yuba)、鲜鱼、山蔬菜、蘑菇——并使用独立炊具和储存设施。旅馆设有礼拜室。
最突出的服务细节:家庭贯切浴池对所有宾客免费提供,无需提前预约。[来源:Food Diversity Today,2026年5月9日核实] 情侣们普遍认为KAMAYA比规模更大的鬼怒川Park饭店更有亲密感。价格随季节和房型变动——预订前请在Trip.com或Booking.com查询最新价格。
优点: 家庭贯切浴池免费且无需预约、使用当地食材的清真菜单、比鬼怒川更宁静的山间环境。缺点: 无正式认证;清真餐食需提前告知;英语支持有限。
适合人群: 希望享受精品感且无附加费保证私人浴池的情侣。
7. 立志舍町屋酒店 — 京都(新月评级认证,穆斯林友好)
立志舍经营着一批传统京都町屋民宅——细长的建筑,内有庭院花园——而非单一旅馆物业。其穆斯林旅游资质是京都最强的之一。每间客房均标配礼拜毯、朝向麦加方向标记、朝向罗盘和礼拜服。所有浴室均安装了适合净礼的热水龙头。[来源:立志舍官方清真页面,2026年5月9日核实]
该旅馆持有[新月评级](https://www.crescentrating.com)认证——东南亚和中东广泛认可的全球领先穆斯林旅游认证——其清真菜单获日本伊斯兰信托认可,提供来自认证屠宰场的清真和牛涮涮锅。价格因旅馆和季节而异;请在Trip.com查询或直接联系旅馆了解当前价格。诚实说明:立志舍是一家町屋酒店,而非场地内有温泉的传统旅馆。如果您既需要京都据点又需要场地内私人温泉,请参考[京都有私人温泉的旅馆](/en/ryokans/kyoto)作比较。联系方式:info-rss@risshisha-group.com 或 +81-75-468-1417。
优点: 新月评级认证、日本伊斯兰信托认可菜单、每间客房标配礼拜套装、京都中心位置。缺点: 无场地内温泉;町屋形式与传统旅馆不同;房价未公开列出。
适合人群: 重视全球认可的穆斯林旅游评级、京都町屋美学,以及从房间设计之初便将穆斯林旅行需求融入其中的旅馆的旅行者。
8. 市之濑高原饭店ROAN — 石川(穆斯林友好,白山地区)
ROAN位于石川县白山市山中,距金泽驾车约一小时——对于乘坐北陆新干线往返东京和京都的旅行者来说,这是一个理想的停留地点。旅馆使用清真认证调味料,厨房不含酒精和猪肉,并设有专用伊斯兰礼拜空间及净礼区域。
两个私人温泉——室内桧木浴池和室外岩石浴池——专供穆斯林宾客免费预约使用,每次50分钟。[来源:Japan Muslim Guide,2026年5月9日核实] 价格随季节和房型变动——预订前请在Booking.com或Trip.com查询最新价格。提前一周告知的要求不可变通,无法临时安排清真餐食。旅馆位置还便于前往白川乡——联合国教科文组织世界遗产传统日本农家村落,适合一日游。
优点: 两个专用私人温泉免费、配净礼区域的礼拜空间、可前往白川乡一日游、北陆新干线路线上交通便利。缺点: 需提前1周告知;英语支持有限;偏远山区,旅馆外无清真餐饮。
适合人群: 安排东京–金泽–京都路线的行程灵活旅行者,以及希望在温泉体验之余欣赏山地风光的旅行者。
9. 京都南禅寺庭院旅馆山ちよ — 京都(奢华,素食怀石)

请对山ちよ提供和不提供的内容保持清醒认知。旅馆位于南禅寺区,这是京都建筑意义最重大的街区之一。低矮的木廊道、石庭和俯瞰庭院的榻榻米客房,体现了数代相传的历史旅馆美学。素食怀石料理可提前预约。
权衡之下取舍明确:无清真厨房,无可核实的认证机构,并非所有房型均设私人浴池——这是一次环境选择,而非清真基础设施选择。严格遵守清真规定的旅行者应自行在外解决所有餐食,仅将山ちよ作为住宿使用。附带半室外私人浴池的客房阳台提供入浴私密性,榻榻米客房自然适合作为礼拜空间。鉴于[京都清真餐厅](/en/ryokans/kyoto)的便利性,每餐从外部采购清真食物是可行的。每晚价格约从¥132,000起(约合美元880元)。[来源:Halalzilla,2026年5月9日核实]
优点: 南禅寺卓越建筑环境、半私人阳台浴池、榻榻米客房适合礼拜、靠近京都清真餐厅。缺点: 无清真厨房、无认证、并非所有客房设私人浴池——严格遵守清真规定的旅行者须自行解决所有餐食。
适合人群: 将历史环境和建筑价值放在首位、计划从附近京都餐厅采购清真餐食的奢华旅行者。
10. 翠嵐荘保津川亭 — 龟冈·京都(奢华,可申请无猪无酒菜单)
保津川亭位于京都西部龟冈市的保津川畔,僻静的河边环境与市内的旅游密度明显分隔。无猪无酒菜单可提前申请,素食选项也有提供——但无正式认证,厨房未经清真标准核实。温泉使用情况在现有资料中未得到独立确认,宾客应在预订时直接核实浴池选项。
保津川亭与山ちよ的区别在于规模和幽静程度。木制廊台悬于河面之上——秋季时节,枫叶从三面合围,流水承担了室内其余的装饰工作。简言之:坐在低矮的桌旁,拉门框出山谷景致,没有其他任何事物争夺您的注意力。宽敞的榻榻米客房可轻松腾出礼拜空间。每晚价格约从¥56,600起(约合美元380元)。[来源:Halalzilla,2026年5月9日核实] 旅馆与保津川游船(连接龟冈至岚山的峡谷漂流)搭配极为合适——这是关西地区颇为低调的半日体验。
优点: 远离京都人群的幽静环境、适合礼拜的河畔榻榻米客房、与保津川游船搭配游览。缺点: 无清真认证;温泉设施未确认——预订前需直接核实;旅馆外无清真餐饮。
适合人群: 希望远离京都人群、接受申请式饮食安排并了解其局限性的奢华旅行者。
11. Fufu Kyoto — 京都(奢华,邻近京都清真寺)
Fufu Kyoto对穆斯林旅行者最实用的优势在于地理位置:旅馆位于京都伊斯兰文化中心(京都清真寺)附近,步行或短程出租车即可参加周五礼拜和采购清真食材。旅馆场地内设有天然温泉。素食餐食可提前申请。与山ちよ和保津川亭一样,旅馆无清真认证——严格遵守清真规定的旅行者应计划在外自行解决餐食。
每晚价格约从¥91,300起(约合美元610元)。[来源:Halalzilla,2026年5月9日核实] 现有资料中未确认私人浴池安排——预订前请发邮件核实贯切风吕是否可用。对于希望在京都清真寺参加周五礼拜、同时在高端旅馆中度过周末的旅行者,这是合适的选择。
优点: 距京都清真寺步行可达、场地内天然温泉、高端环境。缺点: 无清真认证;私人浴池可用性未确认;严格遵守清真规定的旅行者须自行解决餐食。
适合人群: 在京都清真寺参加周五礼拜、希望以高端旅馆为据点的奢华旅行者。
如何预订日本清真旅馆:提前告知、平台选择及沟通技巧
预订清真旅馆需要两个独立步骤:预订客房,以及直接传达清真需求。仅依靠预订平台是不够的。
各旅馆提前告知要求: - 小樽光陸苑:最少3天前 - AYUNOSATO:最少3天前 - YUZANSO:需提前电话预约(077-578-1144) - 市之濑高原饭店ROAN:最少1周前 - 鸣子温泉弁天閣:最少10天前 — 请最先规划这家
对于清真认证旅馆(YUZANSO、AYUNOSATO),认证已经存在——您是在确认特定日期能否接待您的团队,而不是要求他们从头准备清真餐食。穆斯林友好型旅馆的准备工作更加定制化,这也是提前期更长的原因。
平台选择建议: Trip.com覆盖本站收录的224家旅馆中的217家,结账时有特别需求栏。请填写,但不要就此停止——请发送邮件或致电直接确认。许多温泉小镇的小型旅馆没有员工实时监控OTA特别需求栏。通过旅馆官网直接预订,可以在文本框中提出更详细的要求,部分旅馆(立志舍、AYUNOSATO)更倾向于通过邮件处理清真安排。
发送邮件后如果48小时内未收到回复,请致电跟进。用日语开场白:*「ハラールのご予約について確認したいのですが。」(Harāru no goyoyaku ni tsuite kakunin shitai no desu ga.)* ——"我想确认清真预订的相关事宜。"
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**可直接复制使用的预订邮件模板:** 主题:清真餐食申请 — [您的姓名],[入住日期] 尊敬的[旅馆名称]团队, 我们是[人数]名穆斯林旅行者,计划于[日期]入住,[日期]退房。我们遵循清真饮食,希望确认以下事项: 1. 您的厨房能否提供清真认证餐食,或严格不含猪肉、酒精、味醂和料理酒的餐食? 2. 菜肴中是否使用味醂或料理酒? 3. 您的高汤(だし)用什么食材熬制? 4. 我们能否为团队预约私人温泉(贯切风吕)?请告知费用和空位情况。 5. 客房内是否提供礼拜毯和朝向麦加方向指引? 请告知您的提前准备要求。我们乐意在抵达前以书面形式确认饮食需求。 非常感谢。
穆斯林旅行者实用日语短语
办理入住时将这些短语展示在手机屏幕上——日语汉字和假名比罗马字更容易被工作人员辨认。出发前截图保存此部分,并确保可离线查看。
| 日语 | 罗马字 | 中文含义 | |---|---|---| | ハラールの食べ物はありますか? | Harāru no tabemono wa arimasu ka? | 请问有清真食品吗? | | 豚肉は使っていますか? | Butaniku wa tsukatte imasu ka? | 这道菜含猪肉吗? | | アルコールを使わずに調理できますか? | Arukōru o tsukawazu ni chōri dekimasu ka? | 可以不使用酒精烹饪吗? | | みりんやお酒は料理に入っていますか? | Mirin ya osake wa ryōri ni haitte imasu ka? | 料理中使用了味醂或清酒吗? | | だしに何を使っていますか? | Dashi ni nani o tsukatte imasu ka? | 高汤用什么食材熬制? | | 礼拝室はありますか? | Reihaishitsu wa arimasu ka? | 请问有礼拜室吗? | | お祈りをする場所はありますか? | Oinori o suru basho wa arimasu ka? | 有可以做礼拜的地方吗? | | メッカの方角を教えてください。 | Mekka no hōgaku o oshiete kudasai. | 请告诉我麦加的方向。 | | 貸切風呂を予約したいです。 | Kashikiri buro o yoyaku shitai desu. | 我想预约私人浴池。 | | ハラール食を事前に予約したいのですが。 | Harāru shoku o jizen ni yoyaku shitai no desu ga. | 我想提前预订清真餐食。 |
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**实用提示:** 旅馆工作人员可能无法识别大声朗读的日语罗马字。在手机屏幕上展示日语列是最可靠的方法。如果您夜间抵达,可能没有英语工作人员当班,请在办理入住时提前备好短语表。
在用上这些短语之前,请先确认您的旅馆有空房。
斋月期间在日本旅馆入住
封斋前食(Suhoor)是首要挑战。标准旅馆早餐在早上7点至9点供应——远在晨礼(Fajr)之后。大多数旅馆默认不提供黎明前的厨房服务。解决方法:前一天晚上告知工作人员您需要准备早餐前的食物。大多数配合度高的旅馆会在门外留一份冷便当盒或饭团。如果您住在认证清真旅馆(YUZANSO或AYUNOSATO),请在预订邮件中注明,以便旅馆提前安排。
开斋食(Iftar)的时间与旅馆晚餐服务配合良好。大多数旅馆的标准怀石晚餐在下午5:30至7点间供应——这个区间较早的时段与冬季开斋时间吻合,即使是日本夏季(7月前后约晚7点)的开斋时间也落在服务窗口内或稍后。如有需要,请要求旅馆在最晚可用时段供应晚餐。
斋月期间,东京的晨礼时间夏季可早至凌晨3:15。请下载针对您所在位置的礼拜时间应用程序(Athan或Muslim Pro),而非依赖通用礼拜时间表。旅馆习惯上晚10点至早7点保持安静,这与斋月的作息相契合——晚餐后在房间内进行他拉威赫礼拜也不会受到打扰。
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**封斋前食申请短语:** 前一晚告知工作人员:*「明日の朝、早い時間に食べ物をお願いできますか?」(Ashita no asa, hayai jikan ni tabemono wo onegai dekimasu ka?)* ——"明天早晨,能否为我准备早餐前的食物?"大多数配合度高的旅馆会在天亮前在您的房间门外留一份冷便当或饭团。如果请求未能传达,请携带清真零食作为备用。
清真旅馆住宿行前备品清单
以下几样物品对于任何级别的旅馆都至关重要,无论住在哪里都建议携带:
- 便携旅行礼拜毯 — 穆斯林友好型旅馆提供的越来越多,但有保证的只有清真认证旅馆 - 朝向罗盘或已下载离线功能的朝向应用 — 山区温泉小镇信号常常很弱 - 私人温泉使用的端庄泳衣或布基尼 — 旅馆不提供,也无法租借 - 上述日语短语表的打印版或截图 — 离线保存在手机中,不依赖网络 - 清真零食储备 — 特别适用于旅馆只提供清真晚餐(不含午餐)的情况,或斋月期间封斋前食的备用 - 从东京、大阪或京都出发前采购清真食品 — 主要城市以外的温泉小镇几乎没有清真购物条件 - 认证机构名称列表(JHA、MPJA、JHUA)——用于在入住时核实任何新的认证声明
如果您住在无场地内温泉的町屋式旅馆(如立志舍),一块小毛巾或风呂敷布可作为实用的浴具袋,方便前往附近公共浴室使用。
旅馆住宿期间附近的清真餐厅
大多数穆斯林友好型旅馆只在晚餐提供清真餐食,早餐和午餐需要自行解决。请在抵达前规划好各地区的饮食策略。

京都及关西地区: 东京以外清真基础设施最为完善的地区。祇园的清真和牛怀石餐厅RIN、京都清真寺附近(左京区)的清真食材店,以及伏见、祇园地区聚集的穆斯林友好型餐厅。入住立志舍、Fufu Kyoto或任何京都第三层级旅馆的旅行者,午餐采购不成问题。
东京(前往日光的门户): 前往日光前请在东京备好食物。东京新宿、浅草和秋叶原的清真餐厅网络十分密集——请备足两三天的食物,因为鬼怒川温泉街本身的选择十分有限。
北海道(小樽/札幌): 札幌的清真餐饮场景不断壮大;小樽本身选择有限。对于小樽光陸苑的住客,实际做法是先在札幌停留购买食物,再前往小樽。旅馆内的清真晚餐已能充分满足需求。
箱根/神奈川: 截至2026年5月,尚无在箱根经独立核实的清真认证旅馆。距离最近的穆斯林友好型旅馆可考虑日光的选择(鬼怒川Park饭店、Spa Village KAMAYA),或参阅[箱根旅馆指南](/en/ryokans/hakone)的一般推荐。前往前请在东京备足清真食物。
熊本/人吉(AYUNOSATO周边): 人吉市的清真选择极为有限。旅馆的清真和牛晚餐是当天的主要清真餐食。可用海苔或梅干饭团补充——简单的米饭类食品不含猪肉和酒精,在每家7-Eleven和全家便利店均有销售。
石川/金泽(Hotel ROAN周边): 金泽自2023年以来已扩充清真餐厅供应。抵达前请在[Halal Gourmet Japan](https://www.halalgourmet.jp/en/)查询——该平台收录了日本全国3,000余家认证餐厅,可按认证级别筛选,并支持离线地图。
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**应用程序提示:** 出行前请下载Halal Gourmet Japan和Halal Navi——两者均为JNTO推荐、支持离线使用,并可按认证级别筛选。HalalTrip还额外覆盖礼拜室和清真寺信息。在偏远温泉小镇,这些是唯一可靠的清真选项定位工具。
常见问题:日本清真旅馆
日本旅馆有清真食品吗?
有,但供应情况因旅馆差异显著。两家清真认证旅馆——YUZANSO和AYUNOSATO——将经核实的清真餐食作为标准服务提供。多家穆斯林友好型旅馆可提前申请不含猪肉和酒精的餐食。小樽光陸苑在专用厨房中使用清真食材,但不持有任何已命名的设施级认证。严格遵守清真规定的旅行者应预订清真认证旅馆;接受穆斯林友好住宿的旅行者则有更多选择。
穆斯林可以使用日本温泉吗?
可以——通过名为"贯切风吕(kashikiri-buro)"的私人温泉预约。这是完全封闭、有时间限定的浴池,仅供您的团队使用,无工作人员在场,无其他客人。可穿着端庄泳衣或毛巾入浴。公共温泉(公共裸浴、男女分开)不适合大多数穆斯林旅行者,但本指南列出的大多数旅馆均提供贯切风吕选项。
日本哪些旅馆获得清真认证?
本指南核实的两家完全清真认证旅馆是滋贺的YUZANSO(自2014年5月起认证)和熊本的AYUNOSATO(自2019年起认证)。京都立志舍町屋酒店持有新月评级认证——东南亚和中东广泛认可的全球穆斯林旅游认证——其菜单获日本伊斯兰信托认可。这些是目前经核实的最强资质。
清真认证与穆斯林友好型有什么区别?
清真认证意味着认可的认证机构已对厨房、食材和烹饪流程进行检查并予以认证。穆斯林友好型意味着旅馆已做出配合努力——通常是去除猪肉菜肴和含酒精饮料——但厨房未经独立认证。这一区别对于味醂(料理米酒)、料理酒及烹饪过程中的交叉污染风险最为重要。
旅馆料理中使用的味醂是清真食品吗?
味醂是日本料理中广泛使用的甜发酵米酒调味料。本味醂(传统味醂)酒精含量为10–14%,不属于清真。[来源:穆罕默迪耶,2026年5月9日核实] 味醂风调味料(新味醂)酒精含量低于1%,其是否被允许食用是伊斯兰学界争议的问题。清真认证厨房完全以认证替代品取代味醂。穆斯林友好型厨房可能已替代,也可能未替代——请务必具体询问。
在旅馆申请清真食品需要提前多久?
大多数旅馆至少提前3天;市之濑高原饭店ROAN需提前1周;鸣子温泉弁天閣需提前10天。请勿假设可以当天或次日安排清真餐食准备。请与客房预订同时提出请求——将其包含在预订邮件中。
斋月期间可以在日本旅馆入住吗?
可以。主要后勤挑战是封斋前食——旅馆标准早餐从早上7点开始,远在晨礼之后。前一天晚上向旅馆申请一份冷便当或饭团,或自备清真零食。开斋时间与旅馆晚餐服务(通常下午5:30至7点)配合较好。YUZANSO和AYUNOSATO等清真认证旅馆有接待斋月客人的经验;请在预订邮件中注明您的日程安排。
日本有穆斯林旅行者使用的私人温泉选项吗?
有——贯切风吕(私人预约制温泉)可在本列表大多数旅馆使用。部分旅馆更进一步:小樽光陸苑有28间附设露天浴池的客房,YUZANSO和AYUNOSATO每间客房均设私人温泉,Spa Village KAMAYA的家庭贯切风吕免费提供。详情请参阅[日本私人温泉旅馆指南](/blog/ryokan-private-onsen)。
清真旅馆的费用更贵吗?
不一定。YUZANSO的清真晚餐每人约¥7,150,小樽光陸苑的清真餐食套餐每人从¥7,000起——两者均在可接受的价格范围内。山ちよ(¥132,000起/晚)等奢华旅馆反映的是其档次,而非清真附加费。认证状态与价格无相关性。
总结:日本清真旅馆住宿检查清单

掌握了方法框架,一切便简单明了:餐食选清真认证旅馆,隐私靠贯切风吕,其他一切提前沟通。 初次前往日本的穆斯林旅行者所感到的焦虑,几乎完全来自于没有人把这个框架清晰地呈现出来——一旦理解了,选择便变得直观。
日本的清真旅游基础设施正以大多数旅行者在开始研究之前所未意识到的速度不断完善。清真旅游市场预计于2025年达到59.89亿元人民币(约合5.989亿美元),[来源:Future Market Insights,2026年5月9日核实] 清真寺数量已从1980年代的4座增长至今天的150余座,近年来多个地区新增了清真认证。1935年建造的神户穆斯林清真寺是日本的第一座清真寺——此后这个国家的穆斯林友好基础设施便从未停止扩张。[来源:JNTO穆斯林友好旅游指南,2026年5月9日核实]
本文列出的11家旅馆代表了目前经过核实、可供预订的清真旅馆现状。请将本指南作为日本清真旅馆预订前的检查清单:首先确认认证状态,其次询问味醂问题,第三确认贯切风吕的可用性。在任何人开始比较价格之前,先将本指南分享给旅行团队——读懂这个框架只需五分钟,却能省去数小时在论坛上搜索的时间。
准备好了吗?请在Trip.com浏览穆斯林友好型旅馆,按您偏好的地区筛选。
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