
Yamanaka Onsen
One of Japan's top three onsen praised by the haiku master Matsuo Basho in 1689 — "more beautiful than Arima, more mysterious than Kinosaki." The Kakusenkei gorge walk alongside the Daishoji River is Ishikawa's finest nature walk, with a suspension bridge and old roofed promenade beside the stream.
Half day–1 day
Free (gorge walk)
Main bathhouse (Kiku no Yu): 6:45–22:00, closed 2nd and 4th Tue; shops about 10:00–18:00.
Year-round (autumn foliage exceptional)
Bus from Kaga Onsen Station (30 min)
Location
Why Visit
- 1
Matsuo Basho praised this onsen as Japan's finest in 1689 — his words still grace every inn's brochure
- 2
Kakusenkei Gorge riverside walk is 1.3km of boardwalks, suspension bridges, and cedar forests
- 3
Yamanaka lacquerware (urushi) is produced here — the gloss is said to improve with use over decades
Local Tips
Soak in the Kakusenkei Gorge footbath along the riverside promenade — it is free and incredibly scenic. Rent a bamboo steamer lunch at a local inn. The gorge walkway at dusk, with lanterns lit, is especially atmospheric.
Add to your AI itinerary
Let AI build a multi-day trip around this spot.
Advertisement
More in Ishikawa

Higashi Chaya District
Kanazawa's most intact geisha teahouse quarter, established by the Maeda clan in 1820 and little changed since. The ochaya (teahouses) with their latticed facades and inner gardens still operate — some as galleries and gold-leaf shops, a few as active geisha venues accessible by reservation. Kanazawa retains more active geisha than anywhere outside Kyoto.

Kaga Onsen (Katayamazu)
A cluster of four historic spa towns (Yamanaka, Yamashiro, Awazu, Katayamazu) collectively known as Kaga Onsen. Katayamazu sits on the shore of Lake Shibayama with ryokan building over the water's edge. The combined bathing district has been operating since the 9th century and serves Noto Peninsula crab.

Kanazawa 21st Century Museum
One of Japan's most visited contemporary art museums — a circular glass building with no front or back, designed so visitors wander freely through interactive exhibitions. Leandro Erlich's Swimming Pool installation lets visitors stand both on top and below the water simultaneously.