The Hakone Open-Air Museum is Japan's first and finest outdoor sculpture park, its terraced hillside displaying major works by Picasso, Miro, Henry Moore, Rodin, and contemporary Japanese sculptors against a backdrop of Hakone's wooded mountains and volcanic hot spring steam. The Picasso Pavilion alone houses over 300 works. Hotels near the Hakone Open-Air Museum along the Hakone Tozan Railway line are ideally placed for exploring both the museum and the surrounding volcanic landscape.
A polished mountain retreat that feels more alpine lodge than traditional ryokan, with generous rooms designed for long soaks and slow mornings. Expect balconies that open to Hakone’s green ridgelines, plus an onsen-and-spa program that makes it easy to alternate sightseeing with serious downtime.
Japan’s grand old hotel in the hills: opened in 1878, Fujiya is a living museum of Meiji-era design, where carved wood, period detailing, and old-world service set the tone. It’s the rare Hakone stay where heritage atmosphere comes with modern comforts—plus multiple restaurants and the easy pleasures of a resort-style soak after a day on the ropeway.
Hakone’s benchmark luxury ryokan, famously set on the grounds of a former imperial retreat in the Gora hills. The experience is all quiet authority—immaculate service, refined seasonal cuisine, and onsen bathing that feels curated down to the last detail, especially in rooms with open-air tubs.
A modern ryokan with a high-gloss finish, where every guest room comes with its own open-air onsen—ideal for travelers who want Hakone’s hot-spring ritual without the communal-bath learning curve. Public baths are built for views, and the overall mood is contemporary comfort paired with classic Japanese hospitality.
If you want convenience without sacrificing the onsen factor, this is Hakone-Yumoto’s dependable classic—an easy walk from the station with the feel of a full-scale resort. Multiple dining options and a well-rounded bathing setup make it a smart base for first-timers tackling the Hakone loop.
A beautifully preserved wooden inn where creaking corridors, paper screens, and river views deliver the kind of time-travel romance modern ryokan can’t replicate. Come for the ambience and traditional bathing culture; stay for the sense of place that makes Tonosawa feel worlds away from Tokyo.