Hokuriku Shinkansen Guide · Kaga-Onsen Station
Best Hotels Near Kaga-Onsen Station: The Historic Kaga Hot Springs —
Yamashiro, Yamanaka & Lacquer Country
A New 2024 Stop · Hakutaka & Tsurugi · Four Classic Onsen Villages, Kutani Ware & Yamanaka Lacquer
🚄 Tokyo in ~2 hr 45 min on the Hakutaka
♨️ Gateway to the four Kaga Onsen-kyo hot-spring towns
🍂 The Kakusenkei gorge walk at Yamanaka Onsen
🏺 Kutani porcelain and Yamanaka lacquerware country
What Kind of Area is Kaga-Onsen? A Local’s Honest Take
Kaga-Onsen is, as its name says, a hot-spring gateway — the shinkansen door to the Kaga Onsen-kyo, a cluster of four historic hot-spring towns (Yamashiro, Yamanaka, Katayamazu and Awazu) that have drawn bathers for over a thousand years. This is refined, cultured onsen country: the gourmet Rosanjin honed his aesthetics at Yamashiro, Yamanaka is famed for its lacquerware and a beautiful gorge walk, and the whole area is steeped in Kutani porcelain and Kaga cuisine.
The station gained shinkansen service in the March 2024 extension; Hakutaka and Tsurugi stop, about 165 minutes from Tokyo. The station itself sits among fields — you arrive and ride a short bus to whichever onsen town you have chosen. It is purely a gateway, and a very worthwhile one.
Yamanaka Onsen pairs its baths with the Kakusenkei gorge — a riverside path beneath maples crossed by the striking S-shaped Ayatori Bridge. Soak, then stroll the gorge; it is one of the loveliest short walks in the Hokuriku.
Getting Around from Kaga-Onsen
🚄
Shinkansen
Tokyo ~2 hr 45 min · Kanazawa ~17 min · Fukui ~12 min. Hakutaka and Tsurugi stop; the Kagayaki passes through.
🚌
To the onsen towns
The Kaga Onsen “Canbus” and local buses loop from the station to Yamashiro, Yamanaka, Katayamazu and Awazu — the essential connection.
🏺
Craft sites
Buses also reach the Kutani porcelain kilns and Yamanaka lacquer workshops for craft-focused visits.
What to See Around Kaga-Onsen
♨️ Yamashiro & Yamanaka Onsen
The two most celebrated Kaga hot springs — Yamashiro with its restored historic bathhouse (soyu) and Rosanjin heritage, Yamanaka with its gorge and lacquer craft.
🍂 Kakusenkei Gorge
A maple-shaded riverside walk at Yamanaka, gorgeous in fresh green and autumn colour, crossed by artful bridges.
🏺 Kutani Ware & Kaga Cuisine
Vividly coloured Kutani porcelain kilns and galleries, plus the refined multi-course Kaga ryori served in the onsen inns.
Where Should You Actually Stay?
Stay in one of the onsen towns — that is the entire point of coming here.
♨️ Yamashiro or Yamanaka: The premier choices — historic ryokan with elegant baths, kaiseki dinners and craft atmosphere.
🌅 Katayamazu & Awazu: Katayamazu offers lakeside sunset views; Awazu claims one of Japan’s oldest inns — both quieter alternatives.
🏨 Station-front: Minimal — the station is for transferring to the onsen, not for sleeping beside.
Overall Rating: Kaga-Onsen Area
| Category | Rating | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Shinkansen Access | ★★★★☆ | Hakutaka/Tsurugi, ~165 min to Tokyo |
| Around the Station | ★★☆☆☆ | Rural gateway; onsen towns are a short bus |
| Onsen & Culture | ★★★★★ | Historic hot springs, lacquer, Kutani |
| Hotel Choice | ★★★★★ | Superb ryokan across four towns |
| Charm & Atmosphere | ★★★★★ | Refined, cultured onsen country |
Who Should Stay Here (at the Onsen)?
✔ Onsen and ryokan connoisseurs
✔ Craft lovers (lacquer and Kutani)
✔ Kaiseki and Kaga-cuisine diners
✔ Autumn-foliage walkers at Kakusenkei
