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Yuzawa Kogen Ski Resort is a compact, ropeway-accessed mountain that fuses classic Echigo-Yuzawa onsen-town charm with big-mountain views, easy access and family-friendly terrain just minutes from the Shinkansen. The main ropeway — is one of the world’s largest, carrying up to 166 passengers—climbing about 500 vertical metres in a 7‑minute ride to the upper plateau, where you get sweeping views across the Tanigawa range and Echigo Sanzan.
GETTING THERE >
Yuzawa Kogen sits directly above Echigo-Yuzawa Onsen, about 80–90 minutes from Tokyo on the Joetsu Shinkansen to Echigo-Yuzawa Station. From the station it is roughly an 8-minute walk or short taxi ride (about 800 m) to the Yuzawa Kogen Ropeway base, so you can realistically step off the train and be loading the cable car in under 30 minutes.
STAY >
Yuzawa Kogen does not have a single dominating base hotel given it rises above the village; instead it plugs into the broader Echigo-Yuzawa town, where you can choose from modern hotels, ski lodges and venerable onsen ryokan all within walking distance of the ropeway. There is also a regular bus from the station upto the base station. Staying in town means you can pair ski days with serious hot-spring time, with multiple public baths and day-use onsen scattered around the station precinct (there is even one right in the train station, for that pre-train relax).
Many properties sit between the station and the ropeway, making it easy to stroll to first cable car in boots or to jump in a short taxi on storm days. For those linking Yuzawa Kogen with nearby GALA Yuzawa or Ishiuchi Maruyama on a multi-day pass, basing in Echigo-Yuzawa gives quick shuttle or train access to all three.
EAT >
At the base, you are effectively in Echigo-Yuzawa, so pre- or post-ski meals can tap into Niigata’s comfort-food canon—steaming bowls of ramen, donburi and local koshihikari rice sets in the streets radiating from the station. Inside the ropeway and slope buildings you will find the usual cafeteria mix of Japanese curry, katsu, noodles and simple set menus, geared to quick refuelling between laps.
Up on the plateau, restaurants and cafés lean into the view; you can sit over a tray of curry rice or hot chocolate looking back down to the town and the Shinkansen snaking through the valley. Because the resort connects directly with the onsen village below, it is easy to drop back down after skiing for more refined izakaya or kaiseki-style dinners without sacrificing first-tracks the next morning.
DRINK >
Après here is more low-key than rowdy, shaped by the onsen-town setting rather than big nightclubs. Expect cosy cafés and slope-side restaurants pouring beer, highballs and hot drinks during the day, then small bars around Echigo-Yuzawa Station for an evening glass of Niigata sake or local rice shochu. Try Majestic, The Swing Bar or 1059 which all offer slightly different apres experiences.
Many ryokan and hotels also serve drinks in-house, so a typical rhythm is last ropeway down, onsen soak, then a quiet bar or lounge rather than full-blown nightlife. For those who do want to stretch things out, Echigo-Yuzawa’s compact grid hides a scattering of karaoke boxes and casual pubs within a short walk of most accommodation.
TERRAIN >
Yuzawa Kogen’s skiing and riding is split between the Nunoba (foothill) area near town and the higher plateau reached by the ropeway, together offering eight main courses and a longest run of around 5 km. Official stats put the ability breakdown at roughly 40% beginner, 30% intermediate and 30% advanced, with most runs on compacted snow and only a small fraction left ungroomed.
The upper-mountain layout mixes gentle panoramic cruisers with steeper pitches up to a maximum gradient of about 28 degrees, giving confident intermediates enough bite while keeping things accessible for progressing skiers. For families and first-timers, the Nunoba base zone offers wide, mellow slopes right on the edge of town, while more adventurous skiers can use connecting lifts and passes to roam into linked neighbours like GALA Yuzawa and Ishiuchi Maruyama.
| Feature | Yuzawa Kogen Ski Resort Details |
|---|---|
| Elevation Top | 1,170 m |
| Elevation Bottom | 360–380 m |
| Vertical Drop | 790–810 m |
| Skiable Terrain | 49 hectares / ~12–15 km (Yuzawa Kogen plateau); 33.8 km total in wider Yuzawa Kogen / GALA Yuzawa / Ishiuchi Maruyama system |
| Longest Run | Panoramic Slope (~4 km) |
| Beginner (Easy) | 30–35% of terrain |
| Intermediate | 40–45% of terrain |
| Advanced (Difficult) | 20–25% of terrain (includes steep slopes up to 28° gradient) |
| Lifts | 9 lifts (Yuzawa Kogen plateau); 30 lifts in the broader interconnected system |
| Snowmaking | Yes, on main slopes |
| Night Skiing | Limited / seasonal (availability can vary by year) |
| Snowparks | Snowland sledding and tubing area; no halfpipe |
| Cross-country | Limited / minimal |
| Main Base Villages | Echigo-Yuzawa (base village, approximately 10 minutes’ walk from Joetsu Shinkansen station) |
| Notable Runs | Panoramic Course (beginner, scenic), Blue Poppy Course (beginner), Kisuge Course (intermediate), Cosmos Course (beginner), steep plateau runs for advanced skiers |
| Season | Late November / early December – late March |
| Average Snow Depth | Typically around 2–3 m during peak season (January–February) |
| Powder Quality | Dry “Japow” powder influenced by Siberian systems crossing the Sea of Japan; light, low‑moisture snow especially from January to early February |
| Annual Snowfall | Niigata region often records around 10–15 m of snowfall per winter; Yuzawa Kogen commonly exceeds 1,000 cm per season with frequent overnight top‑ups |
| Sunniest Month | Early winter (around December) tends to be sunnier; January–February prioritised for powder rather than bluebird days |
| Family Facilities | Kids’ Square indoor play area, Snowland sledding and tubing zone, gentle family-friendly slopes, ski school |

PLAY >
Yuzawa Kogen leans hard into play, particularly for younger families and mixed-ability groups, with one of the largest snow play areas in the Kanto region at the base. Yuzawa Onsen Yuki Asobi Park serves up sledding, snow racers, tubing and snowmobile rides, plus the indoor Kodomo Hiroba kids’ area for when the weather turns.
On fine days, non-skiers can ride the ropeway for its 7‑minute aerial journey and wander the plateau’s panoramic walks, viewpoints and photo spots. The mountain also retools into Yuzawa Kogen Panorama Park in the green season, but even midwinter days can be punctuated with onsen-hopping, station-area shopping and quick excursions to nearby resorts.
TICKETS / PASSES >
Lift and ropeway tickets are sold in a mix of whole-day and time-based formats, with options that bundle the ropeway and all lifts or limit you to specific areas like Nunoba. As an indicative benchmark, recent pricing from local partners shows a one-day “whole mountain” lift and ropeway ticket around ¥4,200 for adults, with cheaper child and senior rates and shorter morning, afternoon or 5‑hour products sitting below that.
There are also Nunoba-only passes at lower prices for beginners and snow-play-focused days, plus ropeway-only return tickets for sightseeing that have recently been in the ¥2,000 range for adults. For broader roaming, the YUZAWA SNOW LINK Lift Pass lets you move between Yuzawa Kogen, GALA Yuzawa and Ishiuchi Maruyama on one ticket, which can be compelling for stronger skiers wanting variety over several days.
CONCLUSION >
Yuzawa is not the most challenging resort but there it is incredibly convenient if you are staying in the Echigo Yuzawa town area and when the connecting ropeway is running it becomes a quick way to get over to GALA and from their on to Ichiushi and that makes it very interesting indeed.
Image Credit: ALMANAK Magazine & Yuzawa Kogen / ALPINA Resorts
Address |
490 Yuzawa, Yuzawa-machi,
Minamiuonuma-gun,
Niigata 949-6101, Japan,
phone | +81 25-784-3326
web | yuzawakogen.com
Instagram | @yuzawakogen





















