ONSEN
秋田県
Kamihata Onsen
上畑温泉
Hot Spring
# Kamihata Onsen
In the southeastern corner of Akita Prefecture, in a district called Masuda-machi, there is a small onsen that opened in 1991 and quietly became part of the rhythm of local life. Kamihata Onsen sits roughly nineteen kilometers from the nearest train station, a distance that once required intention to cross. The water itself is a calcium-sodium sulfate spring, the kind that leaves the skin soft and carries a mild reputation for easing arterial and dermatological ailments. It was never a grand destination. It was the sort of place a family might drive to on a Sunday, or a worn body might return to across several evenings, grateful for the constancy of warm water in a cold prefecture.
Two facilities shaped the place: Sawarabi, which offered overnight stays, and Yūraku, which welcomed day visitors and hosted banquets in its halls. Together they held something of the dual nature of rural Japanese bathing culture — the quiet, restorative hours in the water, and then the louder, warmer gathering around food and drink afterward. The prefecture supported it through a third-sector arrangement before the operation passed into private hands. For a time, it worked.
By 2023, both Sawarabi and Yūraku had set aside plans to reopen, the facilities carrying damage that proved too difficult to overcome. What remains now is the outline of a place — a spring that still exists beneath the ground, a building that once smelled of sulfur and cedar and wet stone, a road that locals still know. There is something to sit with in that. Not every onsen endures, and the ones that do not leave their own kind of impression on a landscape.
In the southeastern corner of Akita Prefecture, in a district called Masuda-machi, there is a small onsen that opened in 1991 and quietly became part of the rhythm of local life. Kamihata Onsen sits roughly nineteen kilometers from the nearest train station, a distance that once required intention to cross. The water itself is a calcium-sodium sulfate spring, the kind that leaves the skin soft and carries a mild reputation for easing arterial and dermatological ailments. It was never a grand destination. It was the sort of place a family might drive to on a Sunday, or a worn body might return to across several evenings, grateful for the constancy of warm water in a cold prefecture.
Two facilities shaped the place: Sawarabi, which offered overnight stays, and Yūraku, which welcomed day visitors and hosted banquets in its halls. Together they held something of the dual nature of rural Japanese bathing culture — the quiet, restorative hours in the water, and then the louder, warmer gathering around food and drink afterward. The prefecture supported it through a third-sector arrangement before the operation passed into private hands. For a time, it worked.
By 2023, both Sawarabi and Yūraku had set aside plans to reopen, the facilities carrying damage that proved too difficult to overcome. What remains now is the outline of a place — a spring that still exists beneath the ground, a building that once smelled of sulfur and cedar and wet stone, a road that locals still know. There is something to sit with in that. Not every onsen endures, and the ones that do not leave their own kind of impression on a landscape.
ONSEN
Other Hot Springs Nearby
MATSURI
Festivals Nearby
Akita
Tsuchizaki Shinmeisha Festival Float Procession
Behind each float hangs a placard mocking the times.
Akita
Akita Kanto Festival
When night comes, the rice ripens in the air.
Akita
Nishimonai Bon Odori
The dancers keep their faces hidden.
Akita
Kakunodate Samurai District Weeping Cherries
The blossom here spills over black walls.