Japan 2026

The below from an Aussie that has lived in Japan for a couple of decades -


If you're interested in central Honshu and want low key & very quiet mid week, then you need to avoid places that have been "discovered" by foreign tourists. "Central Honshu" to me means Nagano, Niigata, Gunma & Gifu Prefectures.

The following areas I would describe as "heavily discovered" : Hakuba, Nozawa Onsen, Myoko (I would include Lotte Arai in the Myoko area as a powder destination, which was largely undiscovered before COVID, but those days are gone now)

"Partly discovered" IMO are Yuzawa, Shiga Kogen, Madarao/Tangram.
- The Yuzawa area has a collection of around 15 mountains within a 20 km radius. Yuzawa town itself has quite a lot of Chinese speaking and Malaysian people in some of those mountains, but less westerners looking for powder. It means that some of the lower, easiest slopes close to town have quite a lot of people on them. But if you have a car and go further out, there are almost deserted gems. One point about Yuzawa, some of the mountains close to town are quite low at the base, so you need to take that into account. Naeba/Kagura is part of the Yuzawa area, service by a huge Prince Hotel and a few smaller places in the village nearby. The hotel itself is generally overrun by Chinese speakers, but they don't tend to ski powder even close to the hotel. The two mountains together have about 40 lifts. Kagura is generally quiet midweek and has virtually no ropes so you can skip powder anywhere, although there is a gated area where you are required to have avi gear.
- Shiga Kogen. This mountain is a collection of small areas mostly linked together, called "resorts" but I wouldn't call them that. It's big it has about 40 lifts. It's also the highest resort area in Japan so there's no quality is really good. I call it "partly discovered" because people know about it, but many Western and Chinese tourists don't go there because of the lack of western style facilities. It has only one ATM in the whole place and that's at the post office. There's one convenience store which pales in comparison to regular convenience stores and it's not open seven days a week!! Ski rental can be quite poor with a lot of places providing old equipment and almost no powder skis. Nightlife I would describe as rudimentary. It's a volcanic plateau so every place has an onsen or a sento. Pretty much every place there is ski in ski out but I'd suggest staying at the Ichinose area.
- Madarao/Tangram. It's a busier than it used to be midweek. I'd call the two of them together small to medium-sized. It's in the good location for good powder. The tree skiing there has become quite popular with western tourists but if you know your way around you can usually find powder into late morning.

Still undiscovered.
- Gunma and Gifu Prefectures.
Minakami area of Gunma you are struggling to see more than 30 or 40 people mid week. Almost no foreigners there.
- Various mountains across Nagano and Niigata Prefectures. Here's some to access by car:
Charmant Hiuchi, Itoigawa Seaside, both near the coast and can have lots and lots of powder on a WNW wind, when other places hardly have any at all.
If staying in or near Nakano, iiyama or Yudanaka, there is access to Shiga Kogen and Nozawa Onsen, but I'd be looking at skiing Ryuo, Kijimadaira, Togakushi, X-Jam, (Madarao/Tangram) and a few other undiscovered places.
 
I’m not on snow until the 28th. Looks like there will be a base at least.

I assume, living in Brisbane, you own a snorkel.

3-5ft (30-60 inches) every 5 days! :):):p:p:eusa-clap::eusa-clap::cool::cool::drool::drool:


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I assume, living in Brisbane, you own a snorkel.

3-5ft (30-60 inches) every 5 days! :):):p:p:eusa-clap::eusa-clap::cool::cool::drool::drool:

Or you could just follow WorldSkiTraveller/Project101's mantra and say "Too Much Snow!", skip Japan, and fly to the Midwest to rack multiple 300 ft molehills, skiing for only 1.5 hours in sub-zero weather, and add 6+ hours of daily driving. That's the life! :(:rolleyes::eusa-wall:

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I will believe this when I see it. I'm a pessimist by nature and I hold weather forecasts more than three days out in very low regard. That said it is typical that the area in general gets regular snow this time of year.
 
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I hope you can find a parking spot for your rental car with the amount of snow that has fallen.

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In Boston during winter 2016, street parking practically disappeared!

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I’m on the plane in a few hours but stopping in Tokyo for a couple of days before driving to the mountains.
Two things. I can’t ski that. Secondly it’ll be well tracked by the time I get there but it looks like we might get some fresh while we are there.
 
I’m on the plane in a few hours but stopping in Tokyo for a couple of days before driving to the mountains.
Two things. I can’t ski that. Secondly it’ll be well tracked by the time I get there but it looks like we might get some fresh while we are there.
what are you planning on seeing and doing in tokyo? i will be there in May
 
what are you planning on seeing and doing in tokyo? i will be there in May
Temples and shrines and bright lights and red lanterns and unagi and sushi and matcha and sake and Japanese craft beer.
Seriously though we have no hard plans. My wife has some ideas. I might post a couple of pics.
 
We’re at a little hill called Yomase for a half day. Just trying to dial the legs back in and avoid the crowds. There must be at least 30 people here.
About 20 USD for a half day ticket. A big bowl of very very good ramen about 6 USD.

Impressive snow quality for under 1200 metres ASL.
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Impressive snow quality for under 1200 metres ASL.

Of course. Almost every mountain on Hokkaido is equal or less than Yomase's 1200m - and all the majors.

The only lift-served skiing highers (Asahidake, and Daisetsuazan) are volcanos with tramways, and not traditional ski areas. They are very exposed, often closed due to heavy snow and weather, do not posses typcial trails ('tracks' in Japan), often involve ski-touring and require a guide to have a decent day.

Every major resort in Hokkaido is lower than most of Vermont, New Hampshire and North Carolina.

Again, this is why Hokkaido has a much more intense snowfall season than AltaBird, British Columbia, Baker, etc with most of it (75-80%?) concentrated in late December, January and February (60-80 days?) due to 'Ocean Effect' or some 'Ocean Enhancement' of storms. Tony has shown some winter month comparison tables and its astounding, and likely not comprehensible for most North American/Europe skiers.

You do not want to visit in March. The low elevatioin raises temperatures, the ocean effect stops, and a lot of ski areas in Hokkaido face south. Spring happens very quickly! It's not Colorado or Utah - more like a south-facing inland Northwest mountains with spring conditions.



Top 10 Highest Ski Resorts on Hokkaido​

Mountain summit vs highest lift-served elevation

RankSki ResortMountain Summit (m)Mountain Summit (ft)Highest Lift-Served Point (m)Highest Lift-Served Point (ft)
1Asahidake Ski Resort1,6005,2491,6005,249
2Daisetsuzan Kurodake Ski Area1,5204,9871,3004,265
3Niseko United1,3084,2911,1883,898
4Hoshino Resorts Tomamu1,2394,0651,0883,570
5Furano Ski Resort1,2093,9661,0743,524
6Kiroro Resort1,1803,8711,0303,379
7Sahoro Ski Resort1,0593,4741,0303,379
8Sapporo Teine1,0233,3561,0233,356
9Rusutsu Resort9943,2619943,261
10Sapporo Kokusai Ski Resort~1,100~3,6091,1003,609
 
Looks like the northeastern US. Standing by for more reports!

To me, Hokkaido feels like far north New England or Quebec, with some hills and volcanoes arising from the countryside - like a Jay Peak or Mansfield rising from the flatlands or shores of Lake Champlain.

The high-snowfall, famous SW ski areas (Niseko, Rusutsu, Kiroro) rise from the plains, with extinct volcanoes like Niseko Annapuri or Mt Yotei, the largest and most prominent peaks. Turn Mansfield or Jay into a standalone volcano, or stick one near Bromont or Sutton, and you have the infamous Ja-Pow landscape. Again, the volcanoes are much more rugged than anything in New England. But a lot of skiing is done on hills/mountains similar to those in the NE.

Again, I know this is not a popular thought, and no one wants to subscribe to it after taking the time, effort, and expense of visiting Japan, but I feel the Great Lakes ski areas can ski quite similarly to Hokkaido at their best. Of course, these ski hills only have 20-30% of the vertical. Northeast trees are denser, with more hazards (bamboo grasses in Japan, NE - stone walls, other), but the feel can be the same.

I would say Harvey, by cherry-picking optimal Lake Effect days at smaller NY State snowbelt ski areas, likely has the most similar Japan experience in the USA - cold, sudden snow, low elevations, woods, hilly topography, short, intense season, etc.

Of course, the culture, food, and experiences of Japan cannot be replicated. And no sleds/snowmobiles.

Caveat: I have not been to Central Hokkaido, where the mountains are larger (volcanic) but receive less snow. Also, Honshu has more traditional alpine scenery and larger mountains, but the lifts/resorts do not extend to the summits of the Japanese Alps for the most part.
 
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*Tree vs Alpine score = relative emphasis of skiable terrain (10 = dominant)

All values are best-available, widely cited estimates; snowfall varies year to year.



Key takeaways (this is the real story)

  • Hokkaido ≠ elevation skiing
    Snowfall, trees, and wind shelter dominate quality far more than height.
  • Kiroro + Rusutsu = deepest lift-served tree skiing in Japan.
  • Asahidake + Kurodake = true alpine feel, but weather-dependent and often touring-oriented.
  • Niseko sits in the middle: moderate elevation, big vertical, excellent balance.
  • If you’re an Alps skier:

    • Asahidake ≈ La Grave vibes (weather + exposure)
    • Kiroro/Rusutsu ≈ storm-day forests
 
Upstate, Snowbelt New York vs. Hokkaido, Japan.

One can tell the location based on image quality: a good camera vs. a 2020 iPhone.


Snowboarder comparison

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Woods comparison

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Another snowboarder in the woods side-by-side

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Overall Landscape and Vibe comparison

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Japan has larger hills/mountains, and consistently receives more snow with fewer thaws/rain. However, there is a similar ski experience, aesthetic, and vibe in both the Lake Effect and the Ocean Effect ski areas in NY State and Hokkaido, Japan.

I am sure this will be denied and dismissed by most Internet and Social Media Influencers, Ski Guides, etc ;):ROFLMAO::LOL:
 

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I am sure this will be denied and dismissed by most Internet and Social Media Influencers
Yes and no. I analogized Mt. Bohemia to Japan a long time ago. But even Bohemia (255 inches) gets only half as much snow as the optimal locations in Japan. Bohemia's peak (68 inches in January) is still less than an average month at Alta, Targhee or in the Selkirks/Monashees. Tug Hill is somewhere over 200. Is its peak more than the northern Greens?
fewer thaws/rain
This is a bigger issue. I don't think the upper Midwest gets nearly as many of these events as the Northeast. Does upstate NY gets less rain than Vermont? I suspect rain incidence is similar (more inland location of NY offset by lower altitude?).

Would ChrisC book a trip to Mt. Bohemia a month in advance? I'm fairly sure he would not to Tug Hill with the significant probability downside. The upstate NY lake effect powder is practical only for people who can hit it on short notice like Harvey.

The topography pics are interesting indeed. But the powder fall lines in upstate NY are what, 400 vertical? I'm excluding Plattekill from this discussion because nobody on this forum thinks it gets any more than 150 inches/season.

It would interesting to find someone who has skied both Mt. Bohemia and in Japan.

You do not want to visit in March.
A clear marker of lake effect being a minimal proportion is if March snowfall is similar to Jan/Feb, which it is in Utah, Vermont, in Harvey's area around Gore/Whiteface and in the Catskills. In Japan, Mt. Bohemia, Buffalo and Rochester, March snowfall is less than half January's.
 
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