Hokkaido

Hokkaido

Cold mountains, quiet towns, and seafood that tastes like it came straight off the dock.

Is Hokkaido right for you?

Hokkaido suits travellers who want space, seafood, hot springs, winter snow, farm roads and mountains more than dense city sightseeing. Sapporo gives you easy food and transport, but the island makes the most sense when you leave the city and accept longer drives, thinner English support and weather that changes the plan. Niseko and Furano work for serious winter trips, while Furano, Biei, Shiretoko and the lakes reward people who like slow routes rather than attraction-hopping. You get cleaner air, wider roads and better nature than most of Japan, but you give up the effortless train coverage of Tokyo, Osaka or Kyoto. Winter snow is not decorative here; it delays trains, closes roads and makes casual driving a bad idea. Go for cold edges, big distances and food that tastes close to where it came from. Skip it if you want constant warmth, late-night city density or a Japan trip you can run entirely on English signs and short train hops.

Cottage in Hokkaido, surrounded by snow-covered mountains
Photo by Ryan Lee

Hokkaido Right Now

UPDATED 16 JULY
Weather today
30°/21°
warm and humid
July brings Hokkaido's warmest weather, with increasing humidity and occasional short rain showers that typically don't disrupt plans.
Mid Summer
Heads up

Visa fee increase for foreign nationals applying for Japanese visas, effective July 1, 2026.

Check if your nationality requires a visa for Japan, as many visa-waiver countries are unaffected.
Safety
Upcoming

Fujii Kaze - Pre: Prema Tour · Makomanai Sekisui Heim Ice Arena, Sapporo

Japanese singer-songwriter Fujii Kaze performs as part of his 'Pre: Prema Tour'.
Jul 16Festival

Niseko Jazz Festival · Setsu Niseko Courtyard & NEST813, Niseko

The Niseko Jazz Festival features 18 acts and 50 musicians across four days, with performances at Setsu Niseko's courtyard and at the summit of Grand Hirafu.
Jul 17Festival

Marine Day

A national holiday to give thanks to the ocean, Marine Day often marks the start of the summer beach season, leading to crowded coastal areas and aquariums.
Jul 20Public holiday
Popularity
Growing

Interest in travel to Hokkaido rose 21% from a year ago, suggesting demand is growing.

Google Trends travel searches · last 12 months
+21%vs last year

Best time to visit

73/100

Good time to visit🌀Typhoon season (indirect effects)

Score for July

July offers pleasant warmth with average highs around 25°C (77°F), though expect more visitors and about nine rainy days. Be aware of potential indirect effects from the typhoon season. Pack layers for cooler evenings and consider booking popular accommodations in advance.

☀️Weather76
👥Crowd Level61

SCORE BY MONTH

Visit Hokkaido from June to August for pleasant weather, with highs around 22°C (72°F) to 25°C (77°F), ideal for nature and hiking. Avoid April and November as the weather is unpredictable and cooler. While July to September can experience indirect effects from typhoons, it's generally a good time for outdoor activities.

High °CLow °CRain daysCrowd level

Visitor data: JNTO International Visitor Arrivals (2019) 2019

Day-to-day in Hokkaido

Walkability

69/100

Walkable

0255075100

Sapporo and Otaru work well on foot, but Hokkaido as a whole is too spread out for walking to carry a trip.

Sidewalks 18 / 25

Sapporo and Otaru have proper pavements; resort towns and rural roads lose them fast.

Compactness 15 / 25

Sapporo clusters food, shops and transit; countryside bases need trains, buses or a car.

Traffic safety 20 / 25

Drivers are orderly, but wide roads, winter visibility and long crossings punish careless walking.

Climate 16 / 25

A few months are tough on walkers, but the rest of the year is workable for daily outdoor time.

  • ONSEN CULTURE

    Daily life in Hokkaido often bends around baths, snow, hiking or long food stops rather than nightlife. Jozankei works as Sapporo's easy onsen run, while Noboribetsu is the bigger hot-spring town worth planning around.

  • Coworking

    $139 / month

    AFFORDABLE

    Coworking is usable in central Sapporo, especially around Sapporo Station and Odori, with spaces such as BIZcomfort, Regus and local shared offices. It is practical for desk work, not a deep social scene for nomads.

  • Gym

    $50 / month

    AFFORDABLE

    Sapporo is the only easy long-stay gym base, with Gold's Gym, Anytime Fitness and municipal sports centres doing most of the work. Outside the city, expect older public facilities or hotel gyms rather than serious drop-in choice.

Need to Know

Population
4,985,419 Statistics Bureau · 2025 Census
Currency
Japanese yen (JPY)
Language
Japanese; English workable in Sapporo, Niseko and major stations, thin elsewhere.
Tap water
Safe to drink
Time zone
JST (UTC+9)
Power plug
Type A / B, 100V
Dialling code
+81
Driving side
Left
Tipping
Not expected; use an envelope for private guides or high-end ryokan staff.
Internet
Fast in Sapporo and resort towns; 4G gets patchy in mountains and remote east Hokkaido.
Emergency
110 police, 119 ambulance and fire, 118 coast guard.

When not to go

  • Avoid winter without snow plans

    Jan – Feb

    Do not come in deep winter unless snow is the point. Hokkaido's winter is not decorative: icy roads, closed highways, delayed trains and roof-snow accidents are part of the season. Skiers, onsen travellers and snow festival people get the payoff. Everyone else should pick an easier city route.

    Go here instead:

    • Tokyo Better winter city break with easier trains and less weather risk.
    • Osaka Warmer urban base with food, nightlife and simple day trips.
    • Kyoto Cold but manageable, with less need for rural driving.

Hokkaido itineraries

Upcoming Events & Holidays

16 Jul
Fujii Kaze - Pre: Prema Tour
Makomanai Sekisui Heim Ice Arena, Sapporo
MusicNational
17 Jul
Niseko Jazz Festival
Setsu Niseko Courtyard & NEST813, Niseko
MusicInternational
More info ↗
18 Jul
JOIN ALIVE
Iwamizawa Park, Iwamizawa
FestivalNational
18 Jul
Niko Niko Summer Festival
Niseko-Yō, Niseko Village
FestivalLocal
19 Jul
Phantom Siita in Sapporo
Zepp Sapporo, Sapporo
MusicLocal
More info ↗
23 Jul
Tokyo Ska Paradise Orchestra in Sapporo
Zepp Sapporo, Sapporo
MusicNational
More info ↗
23 Jul
Sapporo Summer Festival
Odori Park, Sapporo
FestivalLocal
More info ↗
24 Jul
Kushiro Kiri Festival 2026
Kushiro Saiwaicho Ryokuchi / Earthquake-Resistant Wharf Special Venue, Kushiro
FestivalLocal
24 Jul
Otaru Ushio Festival
Otaru Port, Otaru
FestivalNational
More info ↗
25 Jul
Toshihide Baba Concert
Tokeidai Hall, Sapporo
MusicNational
25 Jul
Shuka Saitō Concert
Bessie Hall, Hokkaido
MusicNational
28 Jul
BONNIE PINK Tiny Kitchen Tour 2026
Cube Garden, Sapporo
MusicNational
28 Jul
Hokkai Heso Matsuri (Furano Belly Button Festival)
Furano
FestivalLocal
30 Jul
Asahikawa Summer Festival
Asahikawa city center and Ishikari River, Asahikawa
FestivalLocal
1 Aug
Niseko Town Tanabata Fireworks
Niseko Cho Undō Park, Niseko
EntertainmentLocal
1 Aug
Hakodate Port Festival Hakodate Shimbun Fireworks
Green Island, Hakodate Port, Hakodate
EntertainmentLocal
8 Aug
KINASHI CLASSIC in SAPPORO
Sapporo Cultural and Arts Theater hitaru, Sapporo
MusicNational
More info ↗
14 Aug
Rising Sun Rock Festival 2026 in EZO
Ishikari Bay New Port Tarukawa Wharf, Ishikari
FestivalInternational
20
JUL
Marine Day
A national holiday to give thanks to the ocean, Marine Day often marks the start of the summer beach season, leading to crowded coastal areas and aquariums.
Public holidayMedium impact Worth timing around
11
AUG
Mountain Day
Japan's newest national holiday, Mountain Day encourages appreciation for the country's mountainous terrain and often sees people heading to mountain resorts and hot springs.
Public holidayMedium impact Worth timing around
13
AUG
Obon Festival
While not an official public holiday, Obon is a significant Buddhist observance where people return to their hometowns to honor ancestors, leading to heavy domestic travel and many businesses closing.
Observance onlyHigh impact
21
SEP
Respect for the Aged Day
A national holiday to honor the elderly, this day often involves families spending time together and local communities holding events to celebrate their senior citizens.
Public holidayLow impact Worth timing around
23
SEP
Autumnal Equinox Day
This national holiday marks the autumnal equinox and is a time to remember ancestors and appreciate nature.
Public holidayLow impact Worth timing around
3
NOV
Culture Day
A national holiday dedicated to promoting culture, arts, and academic endeavor, often featuring special exhibitions at museums and cultural events.
Public holidayLow impact Worth timing around
23
NOV
Labor Thanksgiving Day
A national holiday that encourages appreciation for labor and production, and for citizens to give thanks to one another.
Public holidayLow impact Worth timing around
1
JAN
New Year's Day
The most important holiday in Japan, New Year's Day involves widespread closures of businesses and attractions as people engage in traditional customs and family gatherings.
Public holidayHigh impact
11
JAN
Coming of Age Day
A national holiday celebrating young people who have reached the age of 20, with many attending ceremonies in traditional attire.
Public holidayMedium impact Worth timing around
11
FEB
National Foundation Day
This national holiday commemorates the founding of Japan and the accession of its first emperor.
Public holidayLow impact Worth timing around
23
FEB
The Emperor's Birthday
A national holiday celebrating the birthday of the reigning Emperor, Naruhito.
Public holidayLow impact Worth timing around
20
MAR
Vernal Equinox Day
A national holiday marking the vernal equinox, it is a day to appreciate nature and living things.
Public holidayLow impact Worth timing around
29
APR
Showa Day
This national holiday honors the birthday of Emperor Hirohito and marks the beginning of Golden Week, a major travel period in Japan.
Public holidayHigh impact
3
MAY
Constitution Memorial Day
A national holiday commemorating the promulgation of Japan's constitution, falling within Golden Week and contributing to significant travel disruptions.
Public holidayHigh impact
4
MAY
Greenery Day
A national holiday dedicated to nature and the environment, it is part of Golden Week, leading to increased crowds and potential travel delays.
Public holidayHigh impact
5
MAY
Children's Day
The final holiday of Golden Week, Children's Day is a national holiday celebrating the health and happiness of children, often resulting in crowded family-friendly attractions.
Public holidayHigh impact

Dates are researched and checked, but events move. Always confirm with the official source before you book anything around them.

Getting To Hokkaido

  • From Hakodate Airport (HKD)

    About 9 km east of Hakodate Station

    Hakodate Airport is the cleanest gateway for southern Hokkaido and a sensible start if you are not going straight to Sapporo. The bus stops are outside arrivals and run to Hakodate Station, Goryokaku and Shin-Hakodate-Hokuto. Use a taxi only for direct hotel drops or late arrivals.

    • Shuttle bus to Hakodate Station: about 20 min, JPY 700 (USD 4.40)
    • Route bus to Hakodate Station: about 25 to 33 min, JPY 340 to 500 (USD 2.10 to 3.10)
    • Bus to Goryokaku: about 28 to 50 min, JPY 300 to 500 (USD 1.90 to 3.10)
    • Shuttle bus to Shin-Hakodate-Hokuto: about 40 to 56 min, JPY 1000 (USD 6.30)
    • Taxi to central Hakodate: about 15 to 20 min
  • Hokkaido Shinkansen from Honshu

    Tokyo to Shin-Hakodate-Hokuto in about 4 hours

    The Hokkaido Shinkansen is useful for Hakodate, not a fast way into Sapporo. It currently ends at Shin-Hakodate-Hokuto, where you transfer to the Hakodate Liner for Hakodate Station or the Hokuto limited express for Sapporo. Fly to CTS if Sapporo is your first stop and you are not using a rail pass.

    • Hayabusa Tokyo to Shin-Hakodate-Hokuto: about 4 hr, JPY 23760 (USD 149)
    • Hakodate Liner to Hakodate Station: about 20 min
    • Hokuto limited express to Sapporo: about 3.5 to 4 hr
    • JR East-South Hokkaido Rail Pass if rail-heavy
  • Ferries from Honshu

    Main routes arrive at Hakodate, Tomakomai or Otaru

    Ferries make sense if you have a car, a bike, a rail gap to fill or a slow-travel plan. The Aomori to Hakodate crossing is the practical short route, while Oarai to Tomakomai and Niigata or Maizuru to Otaru are long overnight crossings. Book cabins early around holidays and check weather disruptions before treating the ferry as fixed.

    • Tsugaru Kaikyo Ferry Aomori to Hakodate: about 3 hr 40 min
    • MOL Sunflower Oarai to Tomakomai: overnight crossing
    • Shin Nihonkai Ferry Niigata to Otaru: overnight crossing
    • Shin Nihonkai Ferry Maizuru to Otaru: long overnight crossing
    • Car ferry booking if driving through Hokkaido
  • From Asahikawa Airport (AKJ)

    Best airport for Biei, Furano and central Hokkaido

    Asahikawa Airport is the useful second gateway if your trip is built around Biei, Furano, Daisetsuzan or the central farm roads. It is not a replacement for New Chitose if you are staying in Sapporo, but it saves backtracking for a countryside route. A rental car is the strongest option once you leave the airport.

    • Airport bus to Asahikawa Station
    • Seasonal bus to Furano: JPY 4000 (USD 25)
    • Taxi or car to Biei
    • Rental car for Furano, Biei and Daisetsuzan
  • From Memanbetsu Airport (MMB)

    Gateway for Abashiri and Shiretoko

    Memanbetsu is the practical airport for eastern Hokkaido when Abashiri, drift ice or Shiretoko are the reason for the trip. Buses connect to Abashiri and Kitami, with seasonal links toward Shiretoko. Do not use it for a general Sapporo trip unless you enjoy wasting a day on transfers.

    • Bus to Abashiri Station: JPY 1050 (USD 6.60)
    • Bus to Kitami Bus Terminal: JPY 1200 (USD 7.50)
    • Seasonal bus to Utoro Onsen: JPY 3500 (USD 21.90)
    • Rental car for Shiretoko and eastern Hokkaido

Safety Advice

82/100

Hokkaido is generally very safe with a low crime rate, though visitors should be aware of potential risks like wildlife encounters and slippery winter roads. Be cautious when hiking, and always follow local guidance regarding natural hazards.

🛵Road safetyHokkaido78

Hokkaido's road risk is less chaotic traffic and more distance, snow, ice, wildlife, rural darkness and long gaps between services. Sapporo streets are orderly, but winter sidewalks and rural drives around Furano, Biei, Niseko and eastern Hokkaido punish casual planning. Use trains inside Sapporo and Otaru, rent a car only for the countryside, avoid night drives in winter, and take expressway closures seriously.

Last checked on: May 2026

👩Solo female safetyHokkaido83

Hokkaido is strong for solo women by global standards: low violent crime, reliable trains, orderly taxis and public streets that work late in Sapporo. The weak points are nightlife overcharging, drink spiking risk, isolated rural stops after dark and winter transport disruption. Stay near Odori, Sapporo Station or Susukino's main streets, use official taxis or rail at night, and do not follow street touts into bars.

Last checked on: May 2026

🛡️CrimeHokkaido88

Hokkaido's traveller crime pattern is low-level: lost property, occasional petty theft, nightlife billing disputes and alcohol-related trouble around Susukino. Violent street crime is uncommon, and Sapporo feels safer after dark than most large cities. Keep cards visible in bars, avoid tout-led venues, use lockers at stations and treat very cheap drink offers in Susukino as the wrong kind of discount.

Last checked on: May 2026

⚠️Tourist scam prevalenceHokkaido82

Hokkaido's scam risk is concentrated in nightlife, not daytime sightseeing. Susukino has the same basic Japan problem as other entertainment districts: touts, inflated bar bills, card fraud and drink spiking, though the worst warnings name Tokyo and Osaka more often. Ignore street invitations, pay as you go where possible, keep one card for nights out and use metered taxis or app dispatch.

Last checked on: May 2026

🏳️‍🌈LGBTQ safetyHokkaido72

Hokkaido is physically safe for most LGBTQ travellers, but legal protection lags behind the comfort level on the street. Sapporo is relatively progressive for Japan and has partnership recognition, while national law still does not recognize same-sex marriage. Public affection draws looks outside central Sapporo. Book ordinary hotels without drama, keep onsen rules in mind, and expect politeness rather than open affirmation.

Last checked on: May 2026

🌋Disaster riskHokkaido58

Hokkaido has real natural-hazard exposure: earthquakes and tsunami risk on the Pacific side, active volcanoes around Akan and Daisetsuzan, blizzards, road closures and occasional typhoon remnants. The risk is manageable because monitoring and infrastructure are strong. Download NHK World or Safety Tips, check JMA before hiking or winter driving, and move inland or uphill after a strong coastal earthquake.

Last checked on: May 2026

Common Scams

  • Bar tout overcharging

    HIGH RISK

    Trigger:A tout promises cheap drinks in Susukino

    The bar adds hidden cover charges, inflated drinks or repeated card transactions after you are inside. Drink spiking and pressure to withdraw cash are the high-consequence version of this pattern.

    How to avoid: Ignore street touts and choose bars with visible menus and prices. Pay as you go, keep one card for nights out, and leave if staff handle your card out of sight.

  • Illegal airport taxis

    MEDIUM RISK

    Trigger:A driver offers a fixed fare outside arrivals

    Unlicensed drivers around airports use private cars or unofficial pickup pitches, then inflate the fare or leave you without normal taxi protections. New Chitose is easy enough without taking the bait.

    How to avoid: Use the official taxi rank, JR train, airport bus or a pre-booked licensed transfer. Avoid drivers who approach you inside or just outside arrivals.

Mistakes to Avoid

  • Feeding wild bears

    SERIOUS CONSEQUENCE

    Feeding brown bears or leaving food unsecured in Shiretoko teaches them to approach people. A fatal Mount Rausu attack showed how fast a habituated bear can turn a hike into a rescue operation.

    Fix: Never feed wildlife, never leave food or trash exposed, and carry bear spray where local guidance recommends it. Check trail closures before hiking in Shiretoko and Daisetsuzan.

  • Treating snow as scenery

    SERIOUS CONSEQUENCE

    Hokkaido winter closes roads, delays trains and turns rural driving into real risk, especially around passes and resort towns. Casual city-trip planning breaks fast when the weather moves in.

    Fix: Use trains inside Sapporo and Otaru, rent a winter-ready car only if you can drive on snow, and build slack into airport days.

  • Underestimating travel distances

    MINOR CONSEQUENCE

    Hokkaido is Japan's largest prefecture, and map distances punish rushed routes. Sapporo to Hakodate eats most of a day, and Shiretoko is not a casual detour.

    Fix: Build routes around regions, not dots on a map. Sleep closer to Furano, Biei, Hakodate or Shiretoko instead of forcing everything from Sapporo.

  • Not carrying enough cash

    MINOR CONSEQUENCE

    Outside Sapporo, smaller eateries, guesthouses, onsen and rural taxis still refuse cards. A dead phone or card-only wallet turns dinner or a ride into a stupid problem.

    Fix: Carry several thousand yen in cash before leaving the city. Use 7-Eleven, Japan Post or major bank ATMs when you pass them.

  • Wearing swimsuits in onsen

    Most Hokkaido onsen require nude bathing, and wearing swimwear marks you as someone who ignored the rules. It causes staff intervention and annoys other bathers.

    Fix: Wash fully at the shower stations, enter without clothing, and keep towels out of the bathwater. Book a private bath if public nudity is the problem.

  • Ignoring volcanic alerts

    SERIOUS CONSEQUENCE

    Hokkaido has active volcanic areas around places such as Akan, Tokachi and Daisetsuzan. Hiking into a restricted zone can put you in ash, gas or sudden closure trouble.

    Fix: Check JMA volcano alerts before mountain days. Follow rope lines, trail closure boards and lodge advice, even when the weather looks clear.

  • Trusting rural signal

    MINOR CONSEQUENCE

    Mobile coverage drops in mountain roads, remote lakes and parts of eastern Hokkaido. Navigation, translation and bus checks fail at the exact moment you need them.

    Fix: Download offline maps, save hotel addresses in Japanese, and carry a power bank on rural drives or hikes.

Money & Payments

Carry cash outside Sapporo, use cards in cities, and reject DCC by paying in yen.

  • Cash outside Sapporo

    Cards work in Sapporo, but rural inns, small ramen shops, onsen towns and some taxis still want yen. Carry JPY 5000 to 10000 (USD 31 to 63) before leaving the city.

  • Cards in resort zones

    Visa and Mastercard work well in Sapporo hotels, department stores, chains and Niseko's resort core. Smaller bars, pensions and family-run restaurants still flip the sign to cash only.

  • Use convenience ATMs

    7 Bank, Lawson Bank and Japan Post ATMs are the practical foreign-card options, including at New Chitose Airport and around Sapporo Station. Withdraw before rural drives because small towns do not always have late-night foreign-card access.

  • Sapporo subway tap

    Sapporo Municipal Subway has contactless readers at all 49 stations, but only selected gates have them. Visa, Mastercard, JCB, American Express, Diners Club, Discover and UnionPay work, and the system charges the normal adult fare.

  • Airport exchange backup

    New Chitose has Travelex and SMART EXCHANGE counters, useful if you land with no yen at all. For normal spending money, airport exchange is usually a ripoff compared with a convenience-store ATM withdrawal.

  • Accommodation tax stacks

    Hokkaido charges JPY 100 to 500 (USD 0.60 to 3.10) per person per night, and some municipalities add their own tax. In Sapporo, the combined city and prefecture charge is JPY 300 to 1000 (USD 1.90 to 6.30) per person per night.

  • International Transfers

    To send money to a bank account in Japan, for things like rent or day-to-day expenses, services like Wise or Remitly usually offer better rates than traditional banks and faster delivery.

    You'll typically need the recipient's full name, account number, and SWIFT/BIC code. Some banks may also require a local address.

Costs in Hokkaido

71/100

Hokkaido is generally more affordable than other major Japanese cities, especially for accommodation and local transport. However, getting to the island itself can add significantly to your travel costs.

🏨Hotel 3-star (per night)Hokkaido$73
Hotel Resol Trinity Sapporo (Odori)
JPY 9500 / night
Tokyu Stay Sapporo (Odori)
JPY 12000 / night
Ibis Styles Sapporo (Nakajima Park)
JPY 13500 / night
Average (inc. tax & service)$73

Mid-range Sapporo hotels move sharply around snow events and long weekends, so this is a normal city-stay snapshot.

Last checked on: May 2026

🛏️Hostel dorm (per night)Hokkaido$15.59
plat hostel keikyu sapporo sky (Susukino)
JPY 2156 / dorm bed
plat hostel keikyu sapporo ichiba (Nijo Market)
JPY 3001 / dorm bed
Grand Hostel LDK Sapporo (Susukino)
JPY 2328 / dorm bed
Average (inc. tax & service)$15.59

Dorm beds in Sapporo are cheap outside heavy event dates, but the city has fewer hostels than Tokyo or Osaka.

Last checked on: May 2026

🍜Local restaurant mealHokkaido$6.98
Ramen Sapporo Akahoshi (Tanukikoji)
JPY 600 / ramen
Izakaya Rukku and Uohei (Tanukikoji)
JPY 800 / sashimi set
Soup Curry SAMA Odori (Odori)
JPY 1950 / soup curry
Average (inc. tax & service)$6.98

Casual Sapporo meals stay cheap if you stick to ramen, soup curry and izakaya lunch sets instead of crab counters.

Last checked on: May 2026

CappuccinoHokkaido$3.79
L'arbre Sapporo Excel Hotel Tokyu (Nakajima Park)
JPY 641 / cappuccino
Oniyama Coffee and Beer (Maruyama)
JPY 600 / cappuccino
Kitakaro Sapporo Odori Honten (Odori)
JPY 580 / coffee drink
Average (inc. tax & service)$3.79

Hotel cafes and independent espresso bars cluster around Odori, Susukino and Sapporo Station, with cappuccino near normal Japan city pricing.

Last checked on: May 2026

🍺Beer local (at a bar)Hokkaido$3.51
Izakaya Oiyo Odori Kita 1-jo (Odori)
JPY 594 / draft beer (incl. service tax)
Kitatora Sapporo Station North Exit (Sapporo Station)
JPY 539 / draft beer (incl. service tax)
Yakiniku Horumon Bar Lemon (Susukino)
JPY 550 / Sapporo Classic (incl. service tax)
Average (inc. tax & service)$3.51

Normal izakaya draft beer in Sapporo sits around JPY 550, while hotel bars cost far more.

Last checked on: May 2026

🚕Taxi / ride-share (5km)Hokkaido$13.13
Hokkaido District Transport Bureau (Sapporo taxi zone)
JPY 600 first 1.05 km, JPY 100 per 272 m
Hokuto Kotsu Taxi (Sapporo)
JPY 600 first 1.05 km, JPY 100 per 272 m
SK Taxi Group (Sapporo)
JPY 600 first 1.05 km, JPY 100 per 272 m
Average (inc. tax & service)$13.13

A normal 5 km Sapporo taxi ride is meter-based; winter, slow traffic and dispatch fees add to the bill.

Last checked on: May 2026

🏠Rent 1-bed (monthly)Hokkaido$458
Village Soen, SUUMO (Soen)
JPY 65000 / month
City Plaza Sumikawa, goo Housing (Sumikawa)
JPY 53000 / month
Sapporo short-term furnished rental post (Nishi Ward)
JPY 8500 / night
Average (inc. tax & service)$458

Local 1LDK listings in Sapporo are far below Airbnb monthly stays, but furnished short leases carry a tourist markup.

Last checked on: May 2026

💪Gym membership (monthly)Hokkaido$50
Anytime Fitness Motomachi (Motomachi)
JPY 7980 / month (incl. service tax)
Anytime Fitness Misono (Misono)
JPY 7980 / month (incl. service tax)
Anytime Fitness Sapporo Yamahana (Yamahana)
JPY 7980 / month (incl. service tax)
Average (inc. tax & service)$50

Normal 24-hour chain gyms in Sapporo publish monthly fees around JPY 7980 before joining costs.

Last checked on: May 2026

📱SIM card tourist (7-day)Hokkaido$18.04
IIJmio Japan Travel SIM Digital (FamilyMart)
JPY 2480 / 3GB
IIJmio Japan Travel SIM Digital (MINISTOP)
JPY 2980 / 6GB
Sakura Mobile travel SIM (Airport pickup)
JPY 3200 / 7 days
Average (inc. tax & service)$18.04

Convenience-store eSIMs are usually better value than airport counters for a short data-only stay.

Last checked on: May 2026

💆1-hour massageHokkaido$58.13
RITA SPA (Chuo Ward)
JPY 9000 / 60 minutes
Morino Uta Spa (Jozankei)
JPY 8800 / 60 minutes (incl. service tax)
Espoir Sapporo (Chuo Ward)
JPY 8800 / 60 minutes (incl. service tax)
Average (inc. tax & service)$58.13

Mainstream massage is not Southeast Asia cheap; Sapporo prices sit closer to urban Japan spa rates.

Last checked on: May 2026

💻Co-working space (monthly)Hokkaido$139
BIZcomfort Sapporo (Sapporo Station)
JPY 14300 / month (incl. service tax)
Regus Coworking Sapporo (Sapporo Station)
JPY 1050 / day
BIZcomfort Hokkaido area plan (Sapporo)
JPY 14300 / month (incl. service tax)
Average (inc. tax & service)$139

Sapporo coworking is concentrated near the station and Odori, with cheaper monthly passes than Tokyo but fewer serious choices.

Last checked on: May 2026

🦷Dentist checkupHokkaido$31
Sapporo Dental Association B course (Chuo Ward)
JPY 5000 / checkup and simple scaling
Sapporo Dental Association A course (Chuo Ward)
JPY 3000 / checkup
Sapporo Dental Association C course (Chuo Ward)
JPY 8000 / checkup, scaling and panoramic X-ray
Average (inc. tax & service)$31

Routine dental checkup prices are clear through the Sapporo Dental Association, while tourist-facing clinic quotes are rarely posted.

Last checked on: May 2026

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Hokkaido is easy with data in Sapporo, Otaru, Hakodate, Niseko and along main roads, but signal drops in mountains, national parks and parts of the east. Physical tourist SIMs are sold from prepaid SIM vending machines at New Chitose Airport, with 3-in-1 data SIM plans shown on the machine. Buy before leaving the airport or central Sapporo because rural convenience stores are not reliable SIM stops.

What Hokkaido is Like

Sapporo, capital of Japan's Hokkaido prefecture
Photo by Kibock Do

Step out around Sapporo Station and the first thing that lands is the width. Streets run in a grid, crossings feel less frantic, and the city has a practical northern plainness that makes Tokyo and Kyoto look fussy by comparison. Odori still fills up, Susukino still glows, and the underground passages can feel like a second city when the weather turns, but the daily rhythm is not built on crowd compression. Sapporo is a rare Japanese city where space changes how people move. You can actually breathe.

The trap is thinking Sapporo explains Hokkaido. It does not. Otaru has canal-side souvenir traffic and old warehouse corners, Hakodate looks south toward Honshu with its tram tracks and morning market, Furano and Biei run on farm roads and photo stops, while Shiretoko feels closer to bear country than to any city break. Distances stretch the island out until lazy planning starts to hurt. Hokkaido rewards people who pick a region and let it breathe.

Food is where Hokkaido makes the cleanest argument for itself. Soup curry is not delicate, it is a bowl of spice, vegetables and chicken built for cold streets and tired legs. Genghis Khan puts lamb on a domed grill with beer nearby, and seafood markets work best when you stop chasing status bowls and watch what local office workers order. The dairy is good, the corn is good, the crab is expensive and often treated like a trophy. Eat simply and you usually eat better.

Getting around Sapporo is easy because the grid, subway and underground walkways do a lot of quiet work. Getting around Hokkaido is where the romance thins out. The bullet train still stops short of Sapporo, regional trains do not stitch the island together like Honshu, and buses can turn a clean plan into waiting-room archaeology. A car opens Furano, Biei, lakes and onsen towns, but it also hands you weather, parking and long empty stretches. This is not a hop-on, hop-off island.

Winter changes the entire social rhythm of Hokkaido. Snow is not some decorative layer sitting on top of daily life here. In Niseko, ski boots stomp through convenience stores while Australians crowd ramen counters still wearing goggles on their heads, and powder talk replaces small talk by mid-afternoon. Furano feels quieter and more local, with fewer chalet investors and less of the imported ski-town bubble. The snow quality deserves the reputation, especially when storms roll in from the Sea of Japan and bury cars overnight, but the fantasy can wear thin fast if you hate driving in whiteout conditions or paying resort-town prices for mediocre burgers.

Susukino has more going on than hostess bars and bad decisions, though both are easy to find if you follow the wrong person down the wrong stairs. Tanukikoji gives you arcades, standing bars, late snacks and a useful weather shield, while smaller cocktail rooms and music basements reward people who look past the neon frontage. Precious Hall has the kind of sound-system reputation that makes serious listeners speak softly. Ignore touts, read the room, and do not turn nightlife into a card statement.

Hokkaido is not for travellers who need Japan to be compact, warm, frictionless and fully translated. It is for people who like a place with working edges: snowbanks outside convenience stores, steam rising from onsen vents, melon fields beside straight roads, bear-warning signs that are not decorative, and seafood that still feels tied to the port. Some places are now pressured by visitors, especially resort towns and photogenic farm roads, but the island is still too large to fake your way through. That is the deal.

Lavender Season

Lavender fields at Farm Tomita in Nakafurano, Hokkaido
Photo by Natsuko Aoyama

Furano's lavender season is worth seeing, but it is not the quiet purple dream people imagine from cropped photos. Farm Tomita and Nakafurano's fields can smell incredible in midsummer, that clean herbal punch mixed with melon stalls, soft-serve counters and tour-bus diesel. The problem is not the flowers. The problem is everyone stopping in the same lanes, aiming phones over the same rows, and treating working farmland like a stage set. Go early, sleep nearby, and leave before the car parks turn into a patience test.

The better trip treats Furano and Biei as a slow central Hokkaido base, not a single photo errand from Sapporo. Drive the farm roads before lunch, stop for corn or melon when the stalls open, then give Biei its own time instead of squeezing Blue Pond and Patchwork Road into the back half of a hot afternoon. The fields are at their best when you stop hunting the famous angle. Let the place be agricultural, slightly commercial, and still oddly beautiful.

Areas of Hokkaido

  • Niseko

    Skiing, resorts, English

    Niseko is Hokkaido's international snow machine, built around powder, chalets, English-speaking service and visitors who came to ski hard. It feels less like everyday Japan than anywhere else on this list, which is useful if you want smooth resort logistics and disappointing if you wanted local texture. Winter is expensive and crowded, while quieter seasons suit hikers, cyclists and people who can live with fewer open doors. Stay here for the mountain, not for Hokkaido as a whole.

    Good for: Skiing, snowboarding, resort stays, English-speaking services.

    Skip if: You want local Japan, cheap meals or a city base.

  • Hakodate

    History, trams, views

    Hakodate is the southern Hokkaido base that feels least like Sapporo, with trams, slope streets, old port buildings and a morning market that still shapes the day. Motomachi and the bay area reward slow walking, while Goryokaku and Yunokawa need tram or taxi hops. The famous night view is popular for a reason, but the better stay is about the city's slower port rhythm. Give it a night or do not bother.

    Good for: Historic streets, tram travel, seafood, southern Hokkaido starts.

    Skip if: You want one compact walking zone for every sight.

  • Otaru

    Canal, seafood, quiet nights

    Otaru is a softer overnight base than most people give it credit for, especially after the day-trippers leave the canal. The glass shops and souvenir stretch get tired fast, but the port, sushi counters and older warehouse streets work better at walking pace than on a rushed afternoon stop. Nights are much quieter than Sapporo, and that is either the point or the problem. Stay here for a slower coastal reset.

    Good for: Canal walks, seafood, slower nights, easy Sapporo access.

    Skip if: You need late nightlife or lots of dinner choice.

  • Odori Park

    Central, parks, events

    Odori Park is the clean middle ground between Sapporo Station and Susukino, with broad streets, subway access and the park strip giving the area breathing room. It works well for first-timers because you can walk to shopping arcades, TV Tower, Nijo Market and the main festival zones without committing to nightlife noise. Hotels facing the park feel calmer, while blocks closer to Susukino pick up more late foot traffic. Stay here when you want Sapporo to be easy.

    Good for: First visits, central sightseeing, festival access, families.

    Skip if: You want the cheapest beds or a strong neighbourhood feel.

  • Sapporo Station Area

    Transport, shopping, transit

    Sapporo Station Area is the practical base, not the romantic one. Airport trains, intercity rail, department stores, underground malls and winter-proof walkways all converge here, which matters when you are dragging bags through snow or using Sapporo for day trips. The trade-off is a businesslike feel, with big buildings and commuter movement replacing small-street character. Pick it for logistics, not charm.

    Good for: Airport access, train trips, shopping, bad-weather logistics.

    Skip if: You want quiet lanes, small bars or a local night routine.

  • Susukino

    Nightlife, food, neon

    Susukino is Sapporo after dark, with ramen alleys, basement bars, late food and enough neon to make bad decisions look cinematic. The main strips get loud, smoky and a little pushy, especially where touts promise cheap drinks. Stay on quieter side streets if you want the access without sleeping above the noise. This is the wrong base for early nights.

    Good for: Late food, bars, nightlife, staying close to Sapporo's after-dark core.

    Skip if: You want quiet evenings or easy early starts.

Frequently Asked Questions

Planning & moving around

  • How many days do you need in Hokkaido?

    Five to seven days is the minimum that feels like a real trip, not a Sapporo stopover with a long train ride attached. Use a week for Sapporo plus one region such as Otaru, Furano, Niseko or Hakodate. If you want Shiretoko, eastern Hokkaido or multiple corners of the island, plan closer to two weeks.

  • What are the best day trips from Sapporo?

    Otaru is the easiest day trip because the train is simple and the canal area works well for a half day. Jozankei is the better choice if you want an onsen run without changing hotels. Furano, Biei and Niseko look close on maps, but they work better as overnights unless you enjoy spending the day in transit.

  • What should first-time visitors prioritise in Hokkaido?

    Prioritise one strong region instead of chasing the whole island. Sapporo, Otaru and an onsen stop make an easy first route, while Furano and Biei need more breathing room. In winter, build the trip around snow properly or skip the performance and choose a city route elsewhere.

  • Which Hokkaido sights are overrated?

    Sapporo Clock Tower disappoints people expecting a grand landmark; it is a small old building in the middle of the city. Sapporo TV Tower is fine, but JR Tower gives the better high view. Biei's Blue Pond is worth a short stop in the right light, not a whole day built around one photo.

  • Where can you store luggage in Sapporo?

    Sapporo Station has the most useful coin lockers, especially around the main concourse, subway links and shopping levels. Large bags disappear quickly during snow events and holiday periods, so hotels are often the safer fallback. Ask your hotel first if you are returning through the same area.

  • Which ride-hailing apps work in Hokkaido?

    Uber and DiDi work in Sapporo, but they usually dispatch licensed taxis rather than private cars. In central Sapporo, flagging a taxi or using a hotel taxi call is often just as easy. Outside the city, apps get thinner and train, bus, rental car or hotel pickup planning matters more.

  • Is Hokkaido good for digital nomads?

    Hokkaido suits slow remote workers who want Sapporo comfort, outdoor weekends and fewer social distractions. It is not a deep nomad base, and winter or rural travel can make routines harder than expected. Sapporo is the practical base; Niseko is seasonal and more expensive.

  • Do you need a VPN in Hokkaido?

    You do not need a VPN to access most websites in Japan. It is still useful on hotel, airport and cafe Wi-Fi, and for banking or streaming services that complain about foreign logins. Treat it as privacy kit, not a censorship workaround.

Safety & medical

  • Are there areas in Sapporo to avoid?

    Sapporo does not have a no-go district in the usual crime sense. The only area that needs extra judgment is Susukino late at night, where touts, bar overcharging and drunk street traffic create the main traveller problems. Walk past pitches, choose your own venue and keep your card in sight.

  • Is Sapporo safe to walk at night?

    Yes, central Sapporo is safe to walk at night by big-city standards. Susukino stays bright and busy, which helps, but it also brings touts and messy drinking. The smart move is boring: stay on main streets, ignore invitations into bars and use a taxi when snow or alcohol makes walking stupid.

  • What happens if you get sick in Hokkaido?

    Sapporo has strong hospitals, including Hokkaido University Hospital and Sapporo Medical University Hospital, but English support is not automatic. Dial 119 for an ambulance in an emergency. For minor problems, big pharmacy chains can help, but bring translated medication names and travel insurance details.

  • Do you need travel insurance for Hokkaido?

    Yes, especially for skiing, snowboarding, hiking, rural driving or anything outside a simple city break. Japan's care is good, but foreign visitors still face bills, language friction and transport disruption. Check that winter sports and mountain rescue are included, not buried in exclusions.

  • How LGBTQ+ friendly is Hokkaido?

    Sapporo is one of Japan's easier cities for LGBTQ travellers, with a small scene around Susukino and a more open civic reputation than many regional cities. Japan still does not treat LGBTQ rights the way many Western travellers expect, and rural Hokkaido is quieter and more conservative. Most visitors face politeness, not open hostility.

  • What if a child gets sick in Sapporo?

    Sapporo has proper paediatric care, including larger hospitals and neighbourhood clinics, but English-speaking staff are not guaranteed. For emergencies, call 119. Bring familiar children's medicine from home and carry the child's symptoms, allergies and medicines written in Japanese on your phone.

Laws & local norms

  • Do you need a licence to rent a scooter in Hokkaido?

    Yes, for normal scooters and motorbikes you need the right licence plus an international driving permit that Japan accepts, or a Japanese licence. Do not assume small electric scooter rules cover rural Hokkaido touring. Riding without the right paperwork can invalidate insurance and turn a crash into a legal problem.

  • What are the drug laws in Hokkaido?

    Japan's drug laws are strict, and Hokkaido is no exception. Cannabis, THC products and recreational drugs are illegal, even if they are legal at home. Do not bring CBD unless you understand Japan's import rules and can prove it contains no controlled THC.

  • Can you vape in Hokkaido?

    Vaping follows the same social logic as smoking: use designated areas and do not do it while walking through stations, shops or restaurants. Nicotine e-liquids brought into Japan are restricted to personal-use quantities. In Sapporo and resort towns, assume indoor vaping is not welcome unless a venue clearly allows it.

Food & drink

  • Which Sapporo markets are worth visiting?

    Nijo Market is the easy central option, good for a quick seafood bowl if you accept the tourist markup. Sapporo Central Wholesale Market Curb Market is better for a longer morning food stop and less of a quick-photo circuit. Go early, eat simply, and avoid the counters selling status more than seafood.

  • Where do locals eat in Sapporo?

    Locals do eat in Susukino, but not only in the loudest ramen alleys. Tanukikoji's side streets, station basement food floors and neighbourhood izakayas around Odori are better bets than obvious crab counters. For seafood, the Curb Market is stronger when you go early and skip the hardest sell.

  • Where can you eat late in Sapporo?

    Susukino is the late-night food zone, with ramen shops, izakayas, yakitori counters and post-drinking snacks running later than the rest of the city. Ramen Alley is famous, but the better move is often a side-street shop without the photo queue. Odori is calmer and shuts down earlier.

  • What foods should first-timers try in Hokkaido?

    Start with soup curry in Sapporo, miso ramen, Genghis Khan lamb and whatever seafood looks freshest rather than fanciest. Hokkaido dairy, corn and melon deserve attention too, especially outside the city. Crab and uni can be excellent, but they are also where tourists overpay for bragging rights.

  • Is Hokkaido vegan-friendly?

    Sapporo is workable for vegans with planning, but Hokkaido as a whole is not easy. Dashi, dairy, meat broths and seafood seasoning show up even when a dish looks vegetable-based. Use HappyCow in the city, carry a Japanese dietary card and expect rural towns to have limited options.

  • Is Hokkaido halal-friendly?

    Sapporo has some halal-aware restaurants and Muslim-friendly listings, but Hokkaido is not an easy halal destination compared with major Southeast Asian cities. Niseko and larger hotels are more used to international dietary requests than small towns. Plan meals in advance and confirm alcohol, pork and broth ingredients directly.

Families & kids

  • Is Hokkaido good for travel with kids?

    Yes, if your family handles distance and weather well. Sapporo is easy with children, and Hokkaido's parks, trains, snow activities, farms and simple food work better than many packed city routes. The hard parts are long transfers, winter footing and trying to cover too much island in one trip.

  • Is Sapporo manageable with a stroller?

    Central Sapporo is manageable with a stroller, especially around Odori, Sapporo Station and the underground walkways. Elevators exist at major stations, but they are not always where you want them. Snow and slush are the real problem, not pavement quality.

Staying longer

  • Where should you stay in Hokkaido?

    Stay in Sapporo if this is your first trip and you want food, trains and easy airport access. Pick Odori for balance, Sapporo Station for logistics, and Susukino for late food and bars. Niseko is for snow trips, Otaru is for a slower coastal night, and Hakodate works best if southern Hokkaido is the point.

After dark

  • What changes after dark in Sapporo?

    Sapporo moves indoors after dark, especially outside warm weather. Susukino takes over for food, bars, karaoke and adult nightlife, while Odori and the station area feel more functional. The city is not wild, but it does reward people who like late eating more than club-hopping.

  • Where do nights go wrong in Sapporo?

    Nights go wrong in Susukino when travellers follow touts into bars or let staff take a card out of sight. The usual pattern is cheap drinks at the door, then cover charges, inflated rounds or pressure to pay a stupid bill. Pick your own venue and leave before politeness gets expensive.

  • What are Sapporo's best nightlife areas?

    Susukino is the main nightlife district, with izakayas, ramen, karaoke, cocktail bars and adult venues mixed together. Tanukikoji is better for a softer night of food, covered walking and smaller bars. Odori works for calmer drinks but does not carry the same late-night energy.

  • Does Sapporo have a red-light district?

    Yes, Susukino includes Sapporo's adult nightlife blocks, especially south of the station area. Expect hostess clubs, adult venues, massage signs, touts and plenty of ordinary restaurants mixed into the same streets. If it is not your scene, stay closer to Odori or Sapporo Station and walk past pitches without engaging.