Share This Article

Naeba Prince Hotel is a sprawling, slightly surreal ski-in/ski-out classic: aging concrete, endless corridors and a surprisingly polished Club Floor experience that finally gives Naeba a more premium edge and a way to escape the hordes.
GETTING THERE >
Naeba sits in the mountains of Niigata, about 40 minutes by shuttle from Echigo-Yuzawa Station on the Joetsu Shinkansen, making it one of the easiest big ski resorts to access from Tokyo for a weekend or even a spontaneous day-and-a-half escape. Trains from Tokyo to Echigo-Yuzawa run frequently, and in peak winter the Prince transfer coaches are well organised if occasionally crowded, so timing your arrival outside the midday rush is wise (and make sure you book a seat on the coach at least 3 days prior to arrival).
Once at the resort, the hotel complex unfurls along the base of the slopes, effectively forming its own village; you step off the bus into a cavernous lobby and, from there, almost everything—lifts, rentals, lockers, restaurants, convenience stores—is reachable undercover, which matters on those howling Naeba storm days.
STAY >
The Club Floor, carved out of the upper levels of Building 2, is where Naeba finally feels contemporary: rooms are compact by international standards but warmed up with pale woods, updated textiles and considered lighting, with views that swing between river, forest and floodlit night-ski pistes. Club rooms layer in the details missing from the older wings—proper blackout curtains, decent bedding, modern bathrooms with electronic bidet toilets and shower–tub combos, (oddly some also feature hammock’s to swing and take in the view) plus the expected Japanese amenities line-up of shampoo, conditioner, body wash, face wash, toothbrush sets and yukata-style robes.
Access to the dedicated Club Lounge on the same stack of floors is the real upgrade: a quiet, slope-facing living room for pre- and post-ski decompression, with all-day soft drinks and snacks, and an evening cocktail service where you can sink into the sofas and watch the snow guns paint the mountain white. Service throughout the property skews old-school Prince—formal yet genuinely kind—though the sheer scale of the place and its long, 1970s corridors means you will walk, and occasionally get mildly lost, between room, lifts and restaurants.
EAT >
Naeba Prince functions as its own food court city, with a mix of big buffet halls, casual cafeterias and a handful of more focused restaurants, including well-regarded Italian and Japanese options that are the best bet for dinner when you want to sit, exhale and actually taste something. Menus lean towards hearty après-ski comfort—curries, pastas, hotpots—with a few higher-end flourishes in the sushi and kaiseki-style offerings, but this is still a ski hotel first; breakfasts are busy, functional affairs built around rice, miso, eggs and pastry rather than made-to-order anything.
On-mountain and in-hotel fast food is exactly what you expect at a Japanese mega-resort—serviceable burgers and fried things that fuel laps rather than inspire them—so planning a couple of proper sit-down dinners across the stay pays off, especially if you are travelling with non-skiers. Availability tightens during peak weekends and holidays, so booking preferred restaurants on check-in (or earlier, if your package allows) will spare you the last-minute buffet shuffle.
DRINK >
The Club Lounge doubles as Naeba’s most civilised bar, with its evening cocktail window running from late afternoon into the night, a concise roster of drinks and the kind of big-window mountain theatre that makes a simple highball feel like a proper reward. Beyond that, the main hotel complex offers several bars and lounges scattered along its internal “street”, from old-school lobby bars pouring whisky and beer to more casual izakaya-style corners where you can share snacks and a carafe of sake without stepping outside.
Convenience stores inside the hotel stock a surprisingly deep selection of canned chuhai, beer and basic wine, which makes it easy to retreat to your room’s window ledge with a drink when the public spaces feel too busy or too bright. Nightlife here is less about scene and more about soft clinking glasses, kids in oversized slippers and the low thrum of families plotting the next morning’s first lift.
WORKOUT >
Naeba is unapologetically ski-first: step out of the racks and you are essentially on the snow, with high-speed lifts and a busy network of runs of varying difficulty fanning out above the hotel. For mixed-ability groups and families, the set-up works well—excellent access to ski school, plenty of mellow groomers, and enough vertical and night-skiing to keep stronger skiers interested for a long weekend.
Off the hill, the hotel’s onsen and large public baths become the de facto recovery zone; soaking in hot water with a view of snowbanks does more for tired legs than any gym, and Naeba delivers on that elemental winter-in-Japan pleasure. Lockers, drying rooms and rental facilities are extensive if slightly dated, and the indoor walks between them become part of the daily rhythm: boots, steam, neon vending machines, then back into the white.
CONCLUSION >
Naeba Prince Hotel is not a boutique alpine hideaway; it is a nostalgic, slightly eccentric ski machine that trades on scale, access and atmosphere, with the Club Floor carving out a more refined layer for guests who want comfort and a sense of escape above the crowds. If you can embrace the retro architecture, plan your dining, and use the Club Lounge and onsen as your anchors, Naeba becomes exactly what you need it to be: an easy-to-reach base camp where the mountain is outside the door and the rest of Japan feels a long way away.
Click on images below to launch the lightbox
Image Credit | ALMANAK & Prince Hotels
address |
202 Mikuni, Yuzawa
Minamiuonuma
Niigata, Japan
Web | www.princehotels.com/en/ski/naeba/
































