Steaming sulfur vents at Jigokudani Hell Valley · the boiling Oyunuma pond & natural footbath stream · nine spring types in one town · an Edo ninja village & bear park — the classic onsen overnight, ~1h10 from Sapporo.
If Hokkaido has one onsen town everyone agrees on, it's Noboribetsu. Right above the ryokan strip sits Jigokudani — "Hell Valley" — a volcanic crater hissing with sulfur steam that feeds the town's water. What makes it special is the variety: nine different spring types bubble up in one small town, so a single ryokan bath can run from milky sulfur to iron-red. Add the boiling Oyunuma pond, a natural footbath in the forest, an Edo-era ninja village and a bear park, and you've got a place built for one good overnight. It's about 1 hour 10 minutes from Sapporo and roughly an hour from New Chitose Airport, so it slots easily into any Hokkaido trip.
Noboribetsu Onsen is one compact strip up in the hills, so almost everywhere is walkable to Hell Valley and the shops. The real choice is what kind of soak you want — a grand bathhouse with dozens of tubs, a quieter high-end ryokan, or a value base near the station. Most people stay one night, and that one night is the whole point.
The heart of town — a single street lined with big ryokan, souvenir shops and steaming drains, with Hell Valley a short walk up the top. Stay here and you can soak, wander out for snacks, and be at the footbath or the demon statues in minutes.
The famous grand ryokan here run enormous bathing floors with dozens of tubs fed by several spring types — you can spend an evening just moving from one to the next. Dinner is usually a multi-course kaiseki spread, often crab in season.
A handful of smaller, refined ryokan tuck into the slopes with garden-view baths and rooms looking onto the forest. Fewer crowds, more polish — the pick if you want a calm, grown-up soak rather than a busy bathing hall.
Down by the JR station and the coast, away from the onsen strip — handier for trains and a bit cheaper. You'll need the ~15 min bus up to Hell Valley and the baths, but it's a fine value base if the big ryokan are booked out.
Placeholder selections while our full Noboribetsu hotel guide is in development. Real, bookable ryokan with direct booking links across 3 platforms.
Most of your eating here happens at the ryokan — a big multi-course kaiseki dinner and a generous breakfast are usually part of the stay. Out on the strip, it's classic Hokkaido: crab, seafood bowls, ramen and sweet milk treats.
Taraba (king) and kegani (hairy) crab are the headline act in winter, often the star of the ryokan kaiseki dinner. Have it steamed, grilled or shabu-shabu — sweet, rich and very Hokkaido.
Winter peakA heaped bowl of uni, ikura, crab and scallop over rice — a Hokkaido staple you'll find down near the station and coast. Order it for lunch on a day-trip out of the onsen town.
Local favouriteThe big ryokan serve a long kaiseki dinner — local seafood, hot pot, sashimi and seasonal small plates, course after course. It's half the reason to book a half-board stay here.
Ryokan classicA few shops on the strip and around the station pour rich Hokkaido-style ramen — miso with corn and butter, or a clean shio. A warming lunch between the baths and Hell Valley.
Comfort bowlHokkaido's dairy is the best in Japan, and the shops here scoop it into silky milk puddings and custards. A cheap, easy treat to pick up while you wander the souvenir street.
Sweet stopRich milk soft-serve shows up everywhere on the strip — even in winter. Grab a cone after Hell Valley, or as a sweet finish before you head back to your ryokan for dinner.
Year-roundBeyond the baths, Noboribetsu has a surprising amount to do — a steaming volcanic crater, a boiling pond with a free footbath, an Edo ninja village and a mountaintop bear park. Most of it is a short walk or a quick bus from the onsen strip.
The town's star — a crater of hissing sulfur vents, reddish rock and bubbling springs right above the ryokan. Boardwalks lead you in among the steam, and it's the source of the town's water. Free, and best in the morning light.
Free · Best in morningA short walk past Hell Valley is Oyunuma, a steaming sulfur pond that boils at the surface. The river running out of it is hot enough to soak your feet in — a free natural footbath set right in the forest.
Free · FootbathA recreated Edo-era town with ninja houses, samurai streets and live ninja and oiran shows. Family-friendly and a fun change of pace from the baths — you can even rent a costume and wander in character.
Shows · Family-friendlyA ropeway climbs from the onsen strip to a hilltop park of Hokkaido brown bears, plus a viewpoint over Lake Kuttara. A bit old-school, but kids love it and the ride up the mountain is worth it.
Ropeway · Lake viewRed and blue oni (demons) are the town's mascots — you'll spot statues all along the strip, and the Enma-do shrine's demon king changes his face on the hour. In late August the Jigoku Matsuri brings a demon parade.
Free · Festival in AugA near-perfectly round crater lake a short drive from the onsen, ringed by forest and known for some of the clearest water in Japan. A quiet, scenic add-on if you have a car or extra time.
Nature · DriveA simple plan built around the overnight soak — arrive, walk Hell Valley and the footbath while it's light, then settle into your ryokan for a kaiseki dinner and baths. The next morning adds the ninja village or bear park before you move on.
Essential facts and practical steps to make your onsen trip run smoothly — whether you're coming from Sapporo, New Chitose Airport, or building it into a wider Hokkaido loop.
A Limited Express (Suzuran or Hokuto) reaches Noboribetsu Station in about 1 hour 10 minutes; from there a local bus climbs ~15 minutes up to the onsen town. From New Chitose Airport it's roughly an hour. · Japan travel tips →
Wash and rinse fully before entering the baths, leave the swimsuit behind (baths are nude and gender-separated), tie up long hair, and keep the small towel out of the water. Tattoos can be an issue at some baths — check ahead.
The onsen strip, Hell Valley, the footbath and the ropeway are all walkable from the ryokan — head uphill for the crater. Buses link the station and the strip; in winter wear grippy shoes, the slopes near Hell Valley get icy.
Activate a Japan eSIM before you fly — full 4G/5G coverage across Noboribetsu, Sapporo and the rest of Hokkaido from the moment you land.
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Whether you want a grand bathhouse with dozens of tubs, a quiet high-end ryokan with garden baths, or a value base near the station — find the right place for your onsen night, then soak away the evening.
Noboribetsu pairs naturally with Sapporo — about 1h10 by Limited Express. Ramen and seafood, Odori Park, the beer museum, and the gateway airport at New Chitose. Many travellers base in Sapporo and slot in an onsen night here.
Explore Sapporo →Dai-ichi Takimotokan for a giant 35-bath bathing floor, Hotel Mahoroba for a resort-style soak with its own springs, and Takinoya for a quiet, high-end garden-bath night. Book early for crab season in winter.
Explore Hokkaido →One night is the sweet spot — arrive in the afternoon, walk Jigokudani Hell Valley and the Oyunuma footbath, then soak in your ryokan's baths overnight. You can do it as a day-trip from Sapporo, but an onsen town is wasted without the overnight soak.
A Limited Express (Suzuran or Hokuto) takes about 1 hour 10 minutes from Sapporo to Noboribetsu Station, then a local bus climbs about 15 minutes up to the onsen town. From New Chitose Airport it's roughly an hour.
Jigokudani (Hell Valley) is a volcanic crater right above the onsen town — steaming sulfur vents, bubbling hot springs and reddish rock. Boardwalks let you walk in, and it feeds the town's nine different spring types. It's free and best in the morning light.
It's classic Hokkaido — hairy crab and king crab, seafood rice bowls, ramen, and the multi-course kaiseki dinners served in the ryokan. Plenty of places also do a soft milk pudding and Hokkaido soft-serve.
Noboribetsu Date Jidaimura is an Edo-period theme village with ninja and samurai shows, and Noboribetsu Bear Park sits at the top of a ropeway with brown bears and a lake view. The Oyunuma River natural footbath in the forest is free.
Stay overnight. The whole point of Noboribetsu is soaking in the spring water and waking up to the steam — a day-trip lets you see Hell Valley but skips the best part.
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