Getting To Kinosaki Onsen There are direct trains to Kinosaki from Osaka and Kyoto, depending on what time you leave. I happened to have a JR pass so I wanted to get reserved seating to Kinosaki and back to Osaka. I've been in situations where seats are not available for long train rides and it's not something I wanted to experience again. I went to the JR station in Osaka to make seat reservations. Unfortunately I missed the train leaving from Osaka to Kinosaki so I had to take the train from Kyoto station. The tough part was that I had only 20 minutes to make the transfer!
Getting from Osaka to Kyoto station is easy. There are so many trains that go in that direction that it's hard to go wrong. Unfortunately, I went wrong. I took a slower train to Kyoto which left me only 10 minutes to make my transfer. Anxiety was high.
Finding the Kinosaki track with 10 minutes to spare before departing was the tough part! I got lost in the station trying to find track 31. From the Osaka trains, you have to go UP the escalator and then back down another set of escalators (this was my path, probably no escalators necessary). You won't see another sign for track 31 until FAR down after the last sign you saw. Just believe and keep walking! I made it by the time they were boarding. There were a lot of people and I'm glad I got an assigned seat.
Pack light! I don't remember if there's luggage storage on the train like the Shinkansen, but there's not much room in the car for large luggage.
It's dangerous for luggage to be in the aisle and very inconvenient for other people when they walk by. Kinosaki Onsen Town The town is pretty small. It's composed of several streets and the main street consists of mostly restaurants, cafes and gift shops. It's all they need though since I went to a restaurant, a cafe and a gift shop while in Kinosaki.
There are several hot spring (onsen) facilities in Kinosaki. I wanted to go to Goshonoyu but it was closed the day I was there. I did not plan well. It was also raining pretty hard while I was there so I rushed to pick the next best onsen available that day, Ichinoyu.
Ichinoyu Hot Spring Review When you enter the facility, you need to take your shoes off, put them in a locker and then take the key. The locker is 100JPY to use but the coin is returned to you after.
Next, you go up to the counter and pay the onsen fee. There's different prices for one-time and multiple visits. I went with the one-time pass. You'll also need a large towel and a small one for the bath. I had neither so I rented a large towel and purchased the small one.
I've visited an onsen before in Sapporo so I was familiar with the process. They had this easy to read guide before entering the locker rooms:
You are not allowed to take pictures in the hot spring. The lockers were free to use and the key wrapped around your wrist or ankle. It was day time in the middle of the week so there were only two other people using the hot spring facilities.
The hot spring was "open air" cave style, but there was very little of the open air. I thought the cave and general area was going to be much bigger but was small and confining. The cave did provide good coverage from the rain, but that water was HOT! I left after 15 minutes because that's all I could stand. I really pushed it to that 15 minutes only because the journey there took 3.5 hours.
After getting out of the hot spring, showering and changing I went to the lounge area. There are vending machines and massage chairs (for a fee). I helped myself to a yogurt drink, but purchased it because I thought...
Read more♨️ Ichinoyu Onsen – My Tip for a More Comfortable Soak Ichinoyu is one of the easiest onsens to find — it's located right in the center of Kinosaki town, in a standout yellow building with a traditional Japanese-style roof.
This bathhouse has both indoor and outdoor baths. The outdoor one is designed like a small cave, which looks interesting but feels a bit cramped. If you’ve been to Goshono-Yu before, you’ll probably find Ichinoyu less spacious and relaxing in comparison.
Like most onsen in town, the water here is very hot. My personal tip: start with the outdoor bath first — the temperature there is usually more gentle and easier to handle. Once your body adjusts, move to the indoor bath. I once tried going straight into the indoor tub and had to get out in under a minute — it was way too hot 😅
Try my approach — it might help you enjoy the...
Read moreKinosaki Onsen is one big ryokan! ♨️ There are seven public bath houses in the onsen town and admission ranges from 500 to 700 yen. But there’s an all access pass for 1500 yen and if you will stay in any of the accommodations in the area, you will get an onsen pass that will give you unlimited access to all the public bath houses from checkin to check out.
My ranking of the onsens: goshonoyu kounoyu ichinoyu (love them bec of the rotenburo)
The other baths (mandarayu, yanagiyu, jizouyu) are just ok because the onsen water was sooo hot. Even locals were not dipping into yanagiyu bath.
We weren’t able to try satonoyu since it’s currently closed for renovations.
Recommended side trip from Kyoto/Osaka. It’s about three hours limited express train ride from Osaka station, covered...
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