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Tochigi Hotel Guides · Tochigi Station
Best Hotels Near Tochigi Station: Kura no Machi &
the Storehouse Town on the Uzuma River
JR Ryomo Line × Tobu Nikko Line · “Little Edo” Merchant Quarter · River Boats · Direct from Asakusa
🏘️ Kura no Machi — streets of black-plastered Edo storehouses
⛵ Poled sightseeing boats on the willow-lined Uzuma River
🚆 Tobu limited expresses from Asakusa ~70 min; junction for Nikko
🍶 Sake breweries, jagged-roof museums & adult-quiet evenings
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What Kind of Area is Tochigi? A Local’s Honest Take
Tochigi — the town that gave the prefecture its name, then quietly lost the capital to Utsunomiya — spent the Edo period growing rich as a river port on the Reiheishi-kaido, the road imperial envoys took to Nikko. Lumber and goods moved down the Uzuma River to Edo, and the wealth built what survives today: Kura no Machi, blocks of black-plastered kura storehouses, merchant villas and sawtooth-roofed factories along the willow-hung riverbanks. Kawagoe gets the crowds; Tochigi keeps the calm.
The pleasures here are low-key and lovely. Ride the poled sightseeing boat under the stone bridges while the boatman sings; tour the Yokoyama family’s twin storehouses and the grand Okada residence; taste at sake breweries still working behind lattice fronts; and climb little Mt. Ohira for the plain-wide view Hiroshige sketched. The town’s jagged-roof adobe museums — art, history, folklore — sit inside converted kura, and “jagaimo-iri yakisoba” (potato yakisoba) is the honest local snack.
Logistics are better than the atmosphere suggests: JR Ryomo and Tobu lines share the station, Tobu limited expresses run direct from Asakusa in about 70 minutes and continue toward Nikko — making Tochigi a graceful, cheaper overnight on the Nikko route.
Stay until dusk. When the day-trippers leave, the lanterns come on along the river, the willows go silver, and you get Edo-period Kanto almost to yourself — with a sake brewery’s tasting room still open behind you.
Getting Around from Tochigi
🚆 Rail
Tobu: limited expresses to/from Asakusa (~70 min) and onward to Tobu-Nikko (~35 min). JR Ryomo Line: Oyama ~10 min (shinkansen transfer), Ashikaga and Kiryu westward.
🚶 On foot
Kura no Machi begins ten minutes north of the station — the whole quarter is an easy, flat stroll.
🚌 Nearby
Buses and the Ryomo line reach Mt. Ohira’s hydrangea steps and Iwafune’s rock-face temple.
What to See Around Tochigi
⛵ The Uzuma River boats
Thirty poled minutes past storehouse walls and carp streamers — the town’s essential experience, charming in every season.
🏘️ Kura museums & merchant houses
The Tochigi Kura no Machi Art Museum, the Okada clan’s 400-year compound and the Yamamoto-yudono lattice streets — all walkable.
⛰️ Mt. Ohira
A thousand hydrangea-lined steps to Ohirasan Shrine, dango teahouses and the “thousand-strand” view over the Kanto plain.
Where Should You Actually Stay?
Small-town stock, pleasantly placed.
🏨 Station front: Business hotels within two minutes — practical for Nikko-route overnights.
🏘️ Kura quarter: A few guesthouses in converted storehouses — the atmospheric pick, book early.
Recommended hotels
- Tochigi Grand Hotel — the town’s full-service standby between the station and the old quarter.
- Business hotels at the station — simple and fair; ideal one-night bases before Nikko.
- Kura-conversion guesthouses in Kura no Machi — sleep inside the heritage itself; limited rooms.
Overall Rating: Tochigi Area
| Category | Rating | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Transport Access | ★★★★☆ | Asakusa direct; Nikko & Oyama junctions |
| Around the Station | ★★★☆☆ | Quiet; the beauty starts ten minutes north |
| Food & Sights | ★★★★☆ | Boats, kura, sake, Mt. Ohira |
| Hotel Choice | ★★☆☆☆ | Modest — charm over quantity |
| Charm & Atmosphere | ★★★★★ | Kanto’s most underrated old town |
Who Should Stay Here?
✔ Couples wanting Little Edo without Kawagoe’s crowds
✔ Nikko-bound travelers breaking the Tobu line journey
✔ Photographers — riverside dusk is the shot
✔ Sake and heritage-architecture lovers


