Hokuriku Shinkansen Guide · Kanazawa Station
Best Hotels Near Kanazawa Station: The Jewel of Hokuriku —
Kenroku-en, Geisha Districts & Gold Leaf
2 hr 25 min from Tokyo · Japan’s “Little Kyoto” · One of the Three Great Gardens, Preserved Chaya Streets & Gold
🚄 Tokyo in ~2 hr 25 min on the Kagayaki
🌿 Kenroku-en — one of Japan’s three great landscape gardens
🏮 Three preserved geisha (chaya) districts and a samurai quarter
✨ Source of virtually all of Japan’s gold leaf
What Kind of Area is Kanazawa? A Local’s Honest Take
Kanazawa is the reason the Hokuriku Shinkansen became a phenomenon. A wealthy castle town that escaped wartime bombing, it preserves an extraordinary concentration of old Japan — Kenroku-en, ranked among the country’s three finest gardens, three intact geisha districts, a samurai quarter of earthen walls, and a lively market — alongside bold modern art and one of Japan’s most striking station buildings. It is often called a “Little Kyoto,” but with fewer crowds and its own distinct crafts culture, above all gold leaf, of which it produces almost the entire national supply.
Every Hokuriku service stops here, with the Kagayaki reaching Tokyo in 2 hr 25 min. The station’s soaring Tsuzumi-mon wooden gate and glass dome are a landmark in themselves, and the surrounding hotels make Kanazawa the natural base for the whole line. For deeper itineraries, see our full Kanazawa city guide.
Go to the Higashi Chaya district early, before the tour buses, when the wooden teahouse fronts glow in the morning light. Then try a gold-leaf-topped soft serve — gloriously over the top, and pure Kanazawa.
Getting Around from Kanazawa
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Shinkansen
Tokyo ~2 hr 25 min · Toyama ~23 min · Fukui ~30 min · Kyoto/Osaka via Tsuruga + Thunderbird. Every service stops, including the Kagayaki.
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Around the city
The Kanazawa Loop Bus and flat-fare city buses connect the station to Kenroku-en, the chaya districts and the market; the compact centre is also cycle- and walk-friendly.
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Airport
Komatsu Airport is about 40 minutes by bus — a handy open-jaw option with the Tokyo end of the line.
What to See Around Kanazawa
🌿 Kenroku-en & Kanazawa Castle
The celebrated garden — sublime in every season — beside the restored castle grounds, together forming the green heart of the city.
🏮 Higashi Chaya & Nagamachi
The preserved geisha teahouse district of Higashi Chaya, with gold-leaf and gilded rooms, and the Nagamachi samurai quarter of lanes and earthen walls.
🦀 Omicho Market & the 21st Century Museum
The bustling Omicho seafood market for crab and sushi, and the playful circular 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art — old and new Kanazawa side by side.
Where Should You Actually Stay?
Kanazawa has the deepest, most varied hotel supply on the line — from luxury to design to budget.
🏨 Station side: The landmark hotels and business chains around the Tsuzumi-mon gate are supremely convenient for arrivals and day trips.
🏮 Korinbo & Katamachi: Staying near the Kenroku-en/Korinbo centre puts you closest to the gardens, chaya districts and nightlife.
🌟 Ryokan & boutique: Kanazawa also has refined ryokan and design hotels for a more atmospheric night — book ahead in peak seasons.
Overall Rating: Kanazawa Area
| Category | Rating | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Shinkansen Access | ★★★★★ | Every service, ~2 hr 25 min to Tokyo |
| Around the Station | ★★★★★ | Iconic gate, hotels, buses to all sights |
| Sightseeing & Culture | ★★★★★ | Gardens, geisha districts, crafts, art |
| Hotel Choice | ★★★★★ | The deepest and most varied on the line |
| Charm & Atmosphere | ★★★★★ | Old Japan with modern flair |
Who Should Stay Here?
✔ First-time visitors to the Hokuriku region
✔ Garden, craft and culture lovers
✔ Foodies after crab and sushi
✔ Anyone wanting the line’s best all-round base


