Overview
Ikaho Shusuien is a nostalgic hot spring ryokan in Ikaho Onsen, Gunma. You stay in a relaxed mountain setting with wide views toward the Joshu mountains, including areas such as Mount Akagi, Mount Tanigawa, and the Mikuni Mountains. The ryokan has a warm, informal mood, with a focus on hot spring bathing, local Gunma food, sake, coffee, traditional entertainment, and time to simply rest.
This property works well when you want a friendly ryokan stay close to Ikaho’s classic hot spring town atmosphere. You can soak in Shirogane no Yu, enjoy handmade local dishes, spend time in the view lounge, and walk to Ikaho’s stone-step area for shops, shrines, and small-town exploring.
Accommodation
Ikaho Shusuien offers several Japanese-style room types, including standard rooms, rooms with wider mountain views, and renewed therapy-style rooms. Many rooms look toward the Joshu mountains, giving you a calm view to enjoy between meals and baths.
The standard Japanese-style rooms include 8-tatami, 10-tatami, 12-tatami, and larger layouts with an additional sitting space. These rooms give you a simple tatami stay where you can stretch out, drink tea, and rest on futons. The view rooms include layouts such as 10-tatami plus 6-tatami, 10-tatami plus 4.5-tatami, and 10-tatami rooms facing the mountain scenery.
The renewed rooms add a more restful design concept. Mori no Uta is a forest-therapy room with a spacious two-room layout, while Honori no Uta is a barrier-free therapy room with a soft, gentle color palette and a more private-feeling layout. These rooms are good choices when you want more comfort and a quieter room atmosphere.
Rooms include the basic items you need for a ryokan stay, with tatami space, futon bedding, and simple in-room comforts. The ryokan also pays attention to futon cleaning, especially for children and anyone with sensitive skin.
Dining
Dining at Ikaho Shusuien focuses on Joshu cuisine made with local Gunma ingredients. The cooking has a homemade, comforting style rather than a highly formal feel, so you can enjoy seasonal vegetables, local flavors, and warm dishes that suit the mountain setting.
Dinner highlights ingredients from the area, including fresh vegetables from local direct-sales markets and handmade regional dishes. The ryokan is also known for Joshu beef sukiyaki and local sake, so you can enjoy a meal that pairs well with Gunma drinks and the relaxed mood of the inn. Extra dishes may include Gunma konjac dengaku and Ikaho’s local Dandan tofu.
Breakfast is a Japanese set meal served individually, not buffet style. You can start the morning with a warm, balanced meal before heading out to the stone steps, nearby shrines, or the wider Ikaho area. Meals are served in a banquet hall or private dining room depending on the plan and arrangement.
Onsen and Wellness
Ikaho Shusuien uses Ikaho Onsen’s Shirogane no Yu. The water is clear, colorless, tasteless, and nearly odorless, with a metasilicic acid simple spring quality. It is gentle and suited to relaxed soaking, and it is associated with recovery from tiredness, post-illness recovery, and general health support.
The ryokan has two main bath areas that switch between men and women by time. Kamitsuke no Yu has a large indoor bath with a tile mural inspired by the Joshu mountains, along with a forest-surrounded open-air bath. Ehidasa no Yu has a colorful stained-glass-style indoor bath and a powder room with a Taisho-romantic feel.
The open-air bath is attached to Kamitsuke no Yu, and the bath switching system lets you enjoy both bath atmospheres during your stay. You can soak indoors, step into the open air, and enjoy the gentle Shirogane no Yu water at a slow pace.
Guests with Tattoos
Ikaho Shusuien has shared public hot spring baths, so tattoos are not permitted in these bathing areas.
Facilities
Ikaho Shusuien has shared hot spring baths, an open-air bath, powder room, lounge, café, shop, vending machines, sauna facilities, dining spaces, banquet spaces, and parking. The fifth-floor Lounge Ukigumo is home to TO BE KOFFEE, where you can enjoy carefully roasted coffee with wide views over Ikaho and the surrounding mountains. The lounge can also be used as a workation space, with Wi-Fi and power access available.
The ryokan also hosts seasonal and cultural events throughout the year, including rakugo, daikagura, shamisen performances, food events, sake events, and local entertainment. It has also worked on disaster-prevention initiatives and received certification connected to use as a welfare evacuation lodging facility.
Activities
You can explore Ikaho Onsen easily from the ryokan. The famous stone steps are about 10 minutes away on foot, giving you access to shops, sweets, local food, and the old hot spring town atmosphere. You can wear yukata and enjoy a slow walk through the area.
Nearby sightseeing includes Ikaho Shrine at the top of the stone steps, Mizusawa Kannon, Haruna Shrine, Lake Haruna, Ikaho Green Bokujo, and Takehisa Yumeji Ikaho Memorial Museum. These spots let you add shrine visits, mountain scenery, cultural history, farm activities, and quiet lake views to your stay.
Additional Features
Ikaho Shusuien gives you Shirogane no Yu hot spring bathing, two switching bath areas, an open-air bath, Japanese-style rooms, renewed therapy-style rooms, mountain-view rooms, Joshu cuisine, local sake, Japanese breakfast, TO BE KOFFEE in the view lounge, cultural events, Wi-Fi, and parking.
Check-in is from 15:00, and check-out is by 10:00. From Shibukawa Station, take the bus bound for Ikaho Onsen and get off at the final stop. From the bus stop, you can walk to the ryokan, or contact the ryokan from the stop for pickup.



















