Hokuriku Shinkansen Guide · Karuizawa Station

Best Hotels Near Karuizawa Station: Japan’s Highland Resort —
Cool Summers, Outlet Shopping & Alpine Calm

An Hour from Tokyo · Tokyo’s Favourite Highland Escape · Forests, Churches & a Huge Outlet Mall

🚄 Tokyo in ~1 hr 05 min on the Hokuriku line

🌲 A cool, leafy plateau at 1,000 m — escape from the summer heat

🛒 The vast Karuizawa Prince Shopping Plaza by the station

🚴 Cycling, waterfalls and the old Ginza street


What Kind of Area is Karuizawa? A Local’s Honest Take

Karuizawa is Japan’s original highland resort — a cool, forested plateau at about 1,000 metres that has been the summer refuge of Tokyo’s elite since Meiji-era missionaries discovered its climate. It is where the imperial family holidays, where John Lennon and Yoko Ono spent quiet summers, and where generations of Tokyoites have come to escape the heat among larch woods, churches and cycling paths. At just over an hour from Tokyo, it is astonishingly easy to reach.

The result is a resort town that manages to be both chic and calm: high-end villas and cafes, one of Japan’s largest outlet malls right beside the station, and, a little further out, the older Kyu-Karuizawa Ginza street and quiet forest trails. In winter it adds an easy ski slope and skating. It is polished and can be pricey, but few places blend nature and comfort so effortlessly.

Rent a bicycle and ride the leafy lanes to Kumoba Pond in the early morning, when mist hangs over the water and the reflections are perfect — the Karuizawa the guidebooks put on their covers, and best before the day-trippers arrive.


Getting Around from Karuizawa

🚄

Shinkansen

Tokyo ~1 hr 05 min · Nagano ~30 min · Takasaki ~15 min. Asama and Hakutaka stop; some Kagayaki pass through.

🚴

By bicycle

Karuizawa is made for cycling, with rental shops at the station and a network of forest paths linking the sights.

🚌

To Shiraito Falls & the volcano

Buses run to Shiraito Falls and toward the Onioshidashi lava fields below Mt. Asama, the active volcano that looms over the plateau.


What to See Around Karuizawa

🛒 Karuizawa Prince Shopping Plaza

One of Japan’s biggest outlet malls, spread across parkland right beside the station — a major draw in its own right, with a ski slope behind it in winter.

🌿 Kyu-Karuizawa Ginza & the Churches

The old resort high street of cafes and boutiques, and the historic wooden chapels (including the Stone Church and Shaw Memorial) tucked among the trees.

💦 Shiraito Falls & Kumoba Pond

A curtain of spring water in the forest and a mirror-still pond ringed by walking trails — the plateau’s signature nature spots.


Where Should You Actually Stay?

Karuizawa is a place to stay, and its lodging spans from luxury resorts to cozy pensions.

🏨 Resort hotels: The Prince and other resort properties around the station combine forest, spa and outlet convenience; the wider plateau hides design hotels and hot-spring retreats.

🌲 Villas & pensions: The forested districts (Naka-Karuizawa, Minamigaoka) offer quieter cottages and B&Bs among the trees.

💰 A note on price: Summer weekends and autumn foliage are peak and expensive — book early, or visit midweek for calm and value.


Overall Rating: Karuizawa Area

Category Rating Notes
Shinkansen Access ★★★★★ Asama/Hakutaka, ~1 hr from Tokyo
Around the Station ★★★★☆ Outlet mall, cafes and forest on the doorstep
Nature & Relaxation ★★★★★ Cool climate, woods, waterfalls, cycling
Hotel Choice ★★★★★ Luxury resorts to forest pensions
Charm & Atmosphere ★★★★☆ Chic yet calm — can be pricey and busy

Who Should Stay Here?

✔ Summer heat-escapers and nature lovers

✔ Cyclists and easygoing walkers

✔ Outlet shoppers

✔ Couples wanting an easy, stylish getaway from Tokyo

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