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🏯 Ryokan 101 · Japan Travel

What Is a Ryokan — A Guide to Your First Night

Japan's traditional inn: sleeping on a futon over tatami, soaking in an onsen, eating a seasonal kaiseki dinner — we've put every first-timer question on one page, from why the price is per person and what a night actually looks like, to yukata etiquette and how to book.

Start Here

A Ryokan Isn't Just a Bed —It's a Whole Japanese Evening

Picture this: you open the door to a room floored with tatami mats that smell faintly of fresh straw, a host brings hot tea and a sweet, you change into a yukata robe and walk down to the onsen, and when you return there's a multi-course dinner waiting. Step out for a short stroll after eating, and by the time you're back your futon has been laid out, ready for bed. All of this is a ryokan (旅館), the traditional Japanese inn that so many travellers put on their bucket list. It isn't just somewhere to crash — it's living the Japanese way from dusk till morning.

But the first time you go to book one, the questions pile up fast — why is the price per person, not per room? What time is dinner? How exactly do you wear that robe? And do you really have to bathe naked in a shared pool? This page clears it all up, one item at a time: how a ryokan differs from a hotel, what a night actually looks like, how the pricing works, and the etiquette worth knowing. Read to the end and you'll book without a second thought.

🏯 Straight up, before anything else: ryokan range from simple, budget-friendly inns to luxury places that cost tens of thousands of yen per person a night. But the heart of it is the same everywhere — tatami + futon + onsen + kaiseki + omotenashi hospitality. If you want to come home from Japan with something a soft-bedded hotel could never give you, a night in a ryokan is the one thing travellers who've done it agree you shouldn't skip.
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Sleep on a Futon over Tatami
No bed — you sleep on a futon the staff lay out over tatami mats.
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Per Person, Two Meals Included
Priced per head, usually with a kaiseki dinner and a Japanese breakfast included.
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A Yukata Is Provided
A cotton robe waits in your room — wear it to the onsen, to dinner, around town.
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Omotenashi Service
Attentive Japanese hospitality — no tipping, it's already in the room rate.
See the Difference

Ryokan vs a Regular Hotel

If you can't quite picture which to choose, this table lays it out line by line — the short version is that a ryokan sells you a whole evening, while a hotel sells you a clean, well-located bed.

AspectRyokan 旅館Regular hotel
SleepingHow you sleepFuton laid out on tatami; staff set it up in the eveningA normal bed, ready when you arrive
PricingHow it's chargedPer person, usually with dinner + breakfastPer room; meals are separate
MealsFoodKaiseki dinner + Japanese breakfast (usually included)Not included, or a paid breakfast buffet only
OnsenHot springUsually an on-site hot-spring bath (shared / private)Mostly none — just an in-room bathroom
In-house dressYukataA yukata to wear around the inn and the onsen townNone — you wear your own clothes
Check-outCheck-out timeEarly, ~10–11 am (because breakfast is included)Often later, ~11 am–noon
💡 How to read this table: the thing that trips people up most is the price — you see a ryokan rate of "¥25,000" and assume it's for the room. It's actually per person, so two people pay around ¥50,000. But don't panic, because that rate already includes a fine dinner and breakfast. Compared with a hotel plus paying for a kaiseki meal out separately, it often works out about the same — or even better value.
One Night in a Ryokan

From Check-in to Check-out, Step by Step

If you've never stayed in one, it's hard to picture what the whole evening involves. Here's the order it actually unfolds in most ryokan — read it through and you'll see there's nothing to worry about.

STEP 1
Afternoon check-in, tea + a sweet

Check-in usually starts around 2–3 pm. You take your shoes off at the entrance, a host shows you to your room and serves green tea with a welcome sweet, and you sip while they explain the meal times and the onsen — a gentle omotenashi start.

STEP 2
Change into a yukata, head to the onsen

Change into the yukata waiting in your room, then walk down to the onsen before dinner. The pre-dinner stretch is usually quiet, so you can soak in peace and work the aches out from a full day of sightseeing.

STEP 3
A multi-course kaiseki dinner

The kaiseki dinner is served around 6–8 pm — in your room at some ryokan, in a dining room at others. It's a series of courses arranged by season, built on local ingredients, and plated as beautifully as artwork.

STEP 4
Your futon is laid out while you eat

The part that surprises a lot of people — while you're out at dinner or on a stroll, staff come in and lay your futon out on the tatami. You return to a room that's ready to fall straight into. No setting up yourself.

STEP 5
Morning soak + a Japanese breakfast

In the morning, take another soak (the water's clear and the bath is quiet early), then sit down to a set Japanese breakfast — grilled fish, rolled omelette, steamed rice, miso soup, pickles — a fresh, complete start to the day.

STEP 6
Early check-out (don't fold the futon)

Check-out is usually around 10–11 am — pack up and hand back the key. Don't fold the futon away yourself; just leave it as it is, so housekeeping can change the bedding easily. That's the correct etiquette.

The 6 Elements

What Makes a RyokanSpecial, Not Just a Hotel

Ryokan differ in the details, but the things that make people fall for them come down to a handful — understand these six and you'll see why it's worth trying at least once.

A multi-course kaiseki dinner plated beautifully at a Japanese ryokan 🍱 The highlight of the night1
Kaiseki
Multi-course seasonal dinner

A multi-course dinner built around the season, served plate by plate like a series of small artworks, using the best local produce of the moment. For many travellers this is the main reason to stay in a ryokan at all — and at some, it's served right in your room.

🍽️Served: around 6–8 pm, in your room or a dining room
🍂Best part: the menu changes with the season, ingredients fresh
💡Tip: flag any allergies / vegetarian needs when you book, ahead of time
Onsen towns that eat well →
A traditional Japanese ryokan room floored with tatami mats 🛏️ The heart of the room2
Tatami room + futon
Tatami room & futon bedding

The floor is laid with tatami mats that smell of fresh straw. By day it's an open sitting room with a low table; come evening, staff lay out the futon as your bed. Sleeping low to the floor like this is a charm a bed-and-mattress hotel simply can't give you.

🧦Rule: take slippers off before stepping on tatami — bare feet / socks
🌙Futon: staff lay it out in the evening; you don't do it yourself
💡Tip: at check-out, no need to fold the futon away
Onsen 101 Guide →
A private onsen bath at a luxury ryokan in Hakone ♨️ Private relaxation3
In-room / private onsen
In-room & private onsen

Most ryokan have shared onsen baths split by gender, and some offer a private bath you can reserve for your group (kashikiri) or a room with its own bath on the balcony. If you're shy about the shared pool or have a tattoo, a private option lets you soak with complete peace of mind.

🚻Shared bath: split by gender, bathe naked, wash before getting in
🔒Private bath: kashikiri (reserved) / a bath in your room
💡Tip: rooms with their own bath cost more, but worth it if the shared pool puts you off
Luxury ryokan in Hakone →
A city ryokan with a yukata robe and omotenashi welcome 👘 Japanese atmosphere4
Yukata + omotenashi
Robe & wholehearted hospitality

Change into a yukata and you can wear it anywhere on the property — to the onsen, to dinner, or out for a wander around the onsen town. Omotenashi, meanwhile, is the attentive Japanese style of hospitality that anticipates what you'll need before you ask — and no tipping required.

👘Yukata: provided in the room, always left over right
🍵Omotenashi: thoughtful care, no tipping needed
💡Tip: wear your yukata out for a stroll along the onsen town
Ryokan in Tokyo →
Wooden ryokan lined along the river in Ginzan Onsen, Yamagata 🏔️ Onsen town5
Ryokan in an onsen town
Ryokan in an onsen town

Many ryokan sit in onsen towns where the whole town is a spa — stroll in your yukata, drop into the public bathhouses, try several baths in a single day. The image of old wooden ryokan lined along the river, like Ginzan, is the dream scene of a snowy season.

🚶Best part: stroll the town in a yukata, sample multiple baths
❄️Season: loveliest under snow (Ginzan / Kinosaki)
💡Tip: pick the town that fits your style before choosing the ryokan
Onsen towns of Japan →
An old-town Japanese ryokan in the Arashiyama district of Kyoto 🏮 Old town6
Old-town & machiya ryokan
Old-town & machiya ryokan

Not every ryokan has an onsen — in cities like Kyoto and Takayama, ryokan set in old wooden townhouses (machiya) trade on the atmosphere of a historic district. Ideal if you want a Japanese-style night but still want to step out and explore the city easily.

🏘️Location: in the heart of the old town, easy to explore on foot
🚿Onsen: some have no bath — atmosphere is the draw instead
💡Tip: Kyoto / Takayama are the hubs for old-town ryokan
Takayama Guide →
Price + How to Book

Book a RyokanWithout the Pricing Confusion

Price and booking are where first-timers get most confused, so let's clear it up — the rate is per person, meals are included, and there are a few small details worth knowing before you hit "book".

💴 The first iron rule: a ryokan rate is per person, not per room, and it's usually 1泊2食 (ippaku-nishoku) — "one night, two meals" (a kaiseki dinner + breakfast). When you see a rate of ¥25,000, always multiply it by the number of guests — but remember that figure already includes a fine dinner and breakfast, so it isn't as steep as it first looks.
💴
Priced per person
The rate you see is per head per night; two people means doubling it — and it usually already includes dinner + breakfast, before the 10% tax.
📊
Rough price ranges
Budget from ~¥5,000 · mid-range ~¥15,000–30,000 · luxury ¥30,000–50,000+ per person/night (2026 prices may change).
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Where to book
Agoda / Booking.com are easy to search and carry reviews · Japanican and the ryokan's own site for special rooms.
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Enter the right guest count
Because the price is per head and meals are prepared per guest, getting the number wrong throws off both the price and the food.
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Flag dietary needs ahead
Allergies, vegetarian, vegan, or halal — say so when you book, because kaiseki is prepared per day and can't be changed on the spot.
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Private bathing is available
Many places have a kashikiri bath you reserve by the slot, or rooms with an onsen built in — choose it at booking if you'd rather skip the shared pool.
Map

Towns Famous forRyokan, on the Map

If you want the full ryokan experience, your best bet is a town that's already known for them — these six are spread across the easy-from-Tokyo options, the old towns, and the legendary onsen towns.

Ryokan Etiquette

6 Ryokan MannersThat Put You at Ease

None of it is complicated — just knowing it beforehand means you can relax instead of second-guessing. These are the things the Japanese observe, and ryokan staff are happy to help if you're unsure.

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Shoes off at the entrance
Take your shoes off at the door and switch to the in-house slippers — but take the slippers off before stepping on tatami, and walk on the mats in bare feet or socks.
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Yukata: left over right
Always fold the left side over the right — right-over-left is for funeral dress only. Just remember "left over right" and you're fine.
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Tie the obi neatly
Once the yukata is on, wrap the obi sash around your waist and tie it snug — not so loose it slips. Then you're set to head to the onsen or dinner.
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Keep the tokonoma clear
The decorative alcove (tokonoma), which often holds a hanging scroll or a vase — don't set your bag or belongings on it. It's a culturally revered space.
Be on time for meals
Kaiseki is served at the appointed time, with hot dishes timed to match. Turning up late throws off the whole serving sequence — so be punctual.
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No tipping needed
Japan has no tipping culture; omotenashi service is already in the room rate. Don't leave a tip — a thank-you and a smile is all that's needed.
Related Guides

Read On — Onsen, Onsen Towns, and the Best Ryokan

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Onsen 101 Guide

Worried you really have to bathe naked at an onsen? How to soak step by step, the etiquette, and what first-timers need to know about tattoos.

Onsen Guide →
🏔️

Onsen Towns of Japan

12 onsen towns spread across every region — pick the one that fits your style and your route for the trip.

Onsen Towns →
💎

Luxury Ryokan in Hakone

The luxury ryokan closest to Tokyo — many with an in-room onsen, premium kaiseki, and mountain views.

Luxury Ryokan in Hakone →
🏮

Old-Town Ryokan in Takayama

Ryokan in Takayama's historic old town — genuine old-wood Japanese atmosphere, with the streets easy to explore on foot.

Takayama Ryokan →
🗻

Hakone Guide

The popular onsen town near Tokyo — Lake Ashi, Owakudani, the museums, and where to stay for the hot springs.

Hakone Guide →
🇯🇵

Full Japan Travel Guide

Every region and city, with links into city guides, hotels, and attractions across Japan.

Japan Guide →
Frequently Asked Questions

Questions AboutStaying in a Ryokan

What is a ryokan?
A ryokan (旅館) is a traditional Japanese inn. The hallmarks are tatami-mat rooms where you sleep on a futon laid out on the floor rather than a bed, an onsen (hot-spring bath) in most properties, a multi-course kaiseki dinner that changes with the season, a yukata robe to wear, and omotenashi-style hospitality. A ryokan isn't just a place to sleep — it's a genuine Japanese experience that many travellers rate as the highlight of their trip.
Is a ryokan priced per person or per room?
Most ryokan are priced per person per night, not per room the way regular hotels are, and the rate is usually 1泊2食 (ippaku-nishoku) — meaning dinner and breakfast are already included. Mid-range rates typically run about 15,000–30,000 yen per person per night; budget options start from around 5,000 yen, while luxury ryokan run 30,000–70,000 yen and up (before the 10% tax · 2026 prices may change, so check before booking). When you book, always read the rate as per person.
Do I have to use a shared naked onsen if I stay in a ryokan?
No. If you'd rather not bathe naked in a shared pool in front of others, you have several options — book a private bath for your group (kashikiri), which many ryokan offer, or choose a room with its own in-room onsen (a private bath or a rotenburo on the balcony) so you can soak in complete privacy. These rooms cost more than standard ones, but they're ideal for first-timers, couples, or anyone with a tattoo who isn't ready for the shared bath.
How do I wear a yukata in a ryokan without getting it wrong?
The single most important rule is to always fold the left side over the right (looking down at yourself, bring your left flap across over the right) — right-over-left is used only for funeral dress. Then wrap the obi sash around your waist and tie it neatly. Most ryokan leave a yukata in your room in your size; you can wear it to the onsen, to dinner, or strolling around the onsen town as normal.
Where do I book a ryokan?
You can book through several channels — international sites like Agoda and Booking.com, which are easy to search and carry reviews; Japan-specific ryokan sites like Japanican; or the ryokan's own official website. The one thing to watch is that you must enter the correct number of guests, because the price is per person and meals are prepared per head. Book well ahead for popular ryokan or high season (autumn leaves, New Year, cherry-blossom season), which fill up very fast.
Can a ryokan cater for vegetarian or food-allergy needs?
Yes, but you must tell them in advance when you book, because the kaiseki meal is prepared per day with seasonal ingredients. Many ryokan can accommodate vegetarian, vegan, or avoid-certain-foods requests (such as a seafood allergy) if you let them know ahead. Halal options are still limited and depend on the property, so the best move is to state your restrictions clearly in the booking notes or in a confirmation email directly with the ryokan.
Ready for Your First Ryokan Night

Pick One Ryokan
and Take Home a Real Japanese Experience

No more confusion now you've read this through. Start with the ryokan or onsen town that fits your trip — Hakone is the best place for first-timers, since it's the closest to Tokyo and has plenty of ryokan to choose from.

🔴 Search Ryokan in Hakone Onsen Towns