Need to know
Rooms
17, including 11 suites.
Check–Out
11am. Earliest check-in, 2pm; latest check-in time, 7pm. If arriving after 7pm, please contact the hotel to let them know.
More details
Rates include a Japanese-style breakfast with local vegetables, tofu, dishes such as tuna with grated yam, pickles and other seasonal eats. And on arrival, guests are welcomed with local sweets and matcha tea.
Also
Due to the hotel's mountainous terrain and historic layout, Araya Totoan isn't best suited for guests with mobility issues.
At the hotel
Trio of hot-spring bathhouses, tea room, gallery, mountain garden, and free WiFi throughout. In rooms: TV, kettle, tea set, fridge with free soft drinks, yukatas, toothbrushes and an air-purifier.
Our favourite rooms
Each room has a large-enough-to-lie-down-in, cypress-wood onsen — topped up with natural spring water and privy to garden views — so that soothing submersion is guaranteed. Or you might find a stay in the hotel’s historic rooms even more buoying — Ochin No Ma is the oldest at the hotel (it was famed Japanese artist Rosanjin’s favourite), brightened by cherry-red walls and lacquered columns; it’s fitted with side-by-side tubs, too, for those ‘I got you, bathe’ moments. Or, the wooden Hanare Arisugawa villa was built without using nails in the late 1800s and later relocated here. Hidden amid centenarian trees, away from the hotel, it feels delightfully hermit-ty.
Spa
Partake in one of Japan’s most revered traditions: soaking in natural hot springs. The geothermal source here (which uniquely lies just a few dozen metres below ground) is generous, providing the hotel’s three bathhouses with 100,000 litres of water a day. Yakushi Ruriko Nyorai is the Buddha of Medicine and Healing, so fittingly the first and largest bathhouse, built in the mid-20th-century Shōwa era, is named in homage. The second, Gensenkaku is on the site of the garden’s old pond, with a steamy, open-air bath and murals on spring-related legends; Karasu-yu, which has two-for-one temperatures with both warm and hot baths completes the trio.
Packing tips
Bathing is traditionally done in the nude, so you won’t really need swimwear (a small modesty towel is supplied), which means all the more room in your suitcase for purchasing the aesthetically ravishing Kutani-ware pottery. The ryokan has many meditative corners, so maybe download an app before you arrive to help guide your time-outs. And this is a shoes-off hotel, so bring some you can easily slip on and off.
Also
One of Rosanjin’s most notable works here is a screen depicting a cawing crow — its inspiration is the legend that Yamashiro Onsen was built on, when 1,300 years ago a monk saw a crow dipping its wounded wing in the healing hot-spring waters.
Pet‐friendly
Dogs are not allowed at Araya Totoan. See more pet-friendly hotels in Kaga.
Children
Kids can stay (those aged 12 and up will be charged as adults) and can use the bathhouses. But this is a place of peaceful contemplation, whether you’re meditating in water or admiring ancient arts, so better suited for grown-ups.