Ginzan Onsen
📍 Yamagata, Obanazawa
A hot-spring village that looks frozen in 1920: a narrow river lined on both banks by tall wooden Taisho-era inns, their lanterns and gas lamps reflecting in the water at dusk — Tohoku's most cinematic onsen street.
Deep in the hills of Obanazawa, around a narrow river, sits a hot-spring village that time agreed to leave alone. Ginzan Onsen lines both banks with three- and four-story wooden inns from the Taisho era (the 1910s–20s), their plaster facades and balconies facing each other across the water.
Why It’s Interesting
It is, simply, one of the most photogenic streets in Japan. By day it’s a handsome old onsen town; at dusk, when the gas lamps flicker on and warm light spills from the inns onto the river, it transforms into something out of a storybook — small wonder it’s often linked to the bathhouse town in a certain Ghibli film. Beyond the looks, it’s a real working hot spring, with public baths, street footbaths, and a short walk to a waterfall behind the village.
Best Time to Visit
Year-round. The gas-lamp evening is the magic hour in every season — snow in winter, cool green in summer. Stay overnight if you can, to have the lane after the day-trippers leave.
Getting There
Bus from Oishida Station (on the Yamagata Shinkansen) up to the village. Day visitors park outside and walk into the car-free lane.
📸 Mon-chan's camera roll
Snapshots from our very good boy on the road.
Where it is
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Nearby discoveries
Hijiori Onsen
Mogami River Boat Ride
Lina World
Yamagata Imoni Festival
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