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Karuizawa

Mountain resort with a cool climate and abundant nature

About Karuizawa
Taliesin Park (Photo: Livvy Boote / JT)

Things to do in Karuizawa

Upcoming Karuizawa Events

Karuizawa Winter Festival 2024-2025

Karuizawa Winter Festival 2024-2025

Late Nov - Late Feb

Karuizawa has long been renowned as a great place to enjoy Christmas in Japan. Furthermore the area has some great winter sports...

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Where to eat in Karuizawa

Harunire Terrace

Harunire Terrace

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Haruniré Terrace, in the Hoshino Resort area, is a sweet little boardwalk type area surrounded by the spring cedar trees that ..

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Places to stay in Karuizawa

HOSHINOYA Karuizawa

HOSHINOYA Karuizawa

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Hidden away in the valley of the Yukawa River, HOSHINOYA Karuizawa is a ryokan mixed with a luxury hotel and a spa retreat, an..

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Hotel Bleston Court

Hotel Bleston Court

Hannah Warren

Hotel Bleston Court is just gorgeous. Set amongst the trees of the Hoshino Resorts complex, every aspect of is designed to make..

Latest Karuizawa Reports

Japan's Top Train Route for Tourists

Japan's Top Train Route for Tourists

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The Shinkansen that whisks you from Tokyo to Kyoto, Osaka, and beyond has long been a must-ride for first-time visitors to Japan...

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About Karuizawa

Tokyo is a great city to enjoy, with its unfinishable array of sights, shops and restaurants, but sometimes it's nice to get away for a day or two to somewhere quieter, and enjoy a more tranquil pace. Very different in feel, slightly touristy but with interesting and varied sights, Karuizawa is a good place to head away to, especially in summer, when it's cooler and less humid than the capital.

What to do and see

With a very early start, you could visit the rugged volcanic landscape of Oni-Oshi-Dashi, about 30-40 minutes drive or bus ride from Karuizawa station. The town is also known for its numerous art museums such as the Sezon Museum of Modern Art, the Hiroshi Senju Museum and the Wakita Museum of Art, and for historical sights like the Shaw Memorial House and the old Mikasa Hotel, a designated important cultural asset now open as a museum. This latter can be visited on the way to or from Shiraito Falls, a graceful waterfall a few kilometres out of town; if you don't want to venture so far for your relaxing scenery, then near the station there's the equally attractive Kumoba Pond.

Where to shop

Immediately south of the station there's the Prince Shopping Plaza, a beautifully landscaped outlet centre with stores from a wide range of fashion brands. A couple of kilometres north there's the fun Kyu-Karuizawa shopping street, where you can load up on souvenirs and locally produced foodstuffs like honeys, jams and liqueurs.

Where to eat

There's a cluster of restaurants and cafes in the Prince Shopping Plaza, and plenty more scattered throughout the town. The main road north of the station has a couple of Chinese restaurants and smaller cafes such as Conversa or, for the very sweet of tooth, the Chocolate Factory. The district south of the station has fewer places, but there's a small friendly steakhouse on the road leading directly south, while a bit further away there's the classy but affordable CoDow and the appealing Cafe Ruhe.

Where to stay

While it's perfectly possible to enjoy Karuizawa as a brisk day-trip from Tokyo, staying a night or two will give you a more leisurely experience, and there's a range of accommodation to suit every budget. Chisun Inn is a business hotel south of the station, while Hoshinoya is a luxury resort complex with beautiful grounds that are home to Harunire Terrace, a shopping area where you can find the Pure Milk Gelato Nagai Farm among other places to shop and eat. For something a little different, the Prince Hotel has some log cabins that are surrounded by greenery but perfectly comfortable; or for a complete getaway, in the mountains outside the town there's the Hotel Green Plaza, with five restaurants, an open-air hot spring and 18-hole golf course.

How to get there

Quickest and easiest is the bullet train from Tokyo or Ueno stations, which runs every half hour or so, takes about an hour, and costs ¥5910 one way. If you're in less of a hurry, there are buses from Shinagawa station that cost ¥2100 and take around three hours; if you have your own car you can drive there yourself in the same time on the Joshinetsu Highway.

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