Japanese Guest Houses
  Japanese Guest Houses
Japanese Guest Houses
Reservation Form

Prefectures
Hot Springs

About Ryokans
Ryokan Styles
Travel Tips
Cultural Liaisons

Payment/Cancel
Terms/Conditions
Japanese Clients
Home

Japanese Guest Houses
Japan Roads ToursJapanese Guest Houses
Also Try Japan Roads
for Tours to Experience Japan's Cultural Diversity

Japanese Guest Houses

Resources
Japanese Guest Houses on FaceboookBecome a Fan of Japanese Guest Houses on Facebook
->Planning Your Stay at a Japanese Ryokan
->Ryokan Styles
->Ryokan Customs
->Staying at a Ryokan, (including Food)
->Japanese "Kaiseki" (traditional, multi-course dinner)
->"A Ryokan Experience," by Andrew Daniel
->Interviews with Three Kyoto Ryokan Owners
->How to Put on a Japanese "Yukata" (Robe)
->Japanese Bathing Etiquette
->Japanese-Style Toilet
->Tatami Mat Conversion Table
->"Japanese Buddhist Temple Overnight," by David Paget
->"A Night on Mount Koya,"
->Guest's Comments
Yokoso Japan
Make a Reservation at a Ryokan (Traditional Japanese Inn) Anywhere in Japan
 Home > About Ryokans > Ryokan Customs

Dining Area at Seryo, Rural Kyoto

Ryokan Customs

**Announcement: Japanese Guest Houses has a new "sister site" - Japan Roads - for people who are interested in doing a tour of Japan. For more information, click here.

If you are staying at a nice ryokan and it is your first time at a ryokan, this description of ryokan customs will give you a better idea of what to expect.

  • When you arrive at the ryokan, take off your shoes at the entrance and put on the slippers provided. The slippers are used for walking around inside the ryokan. Your shoes will be placed in the entrance when you want to go outside. If you want to take a short walk near the ryokan, you may also wear the ryokan's sandals or Geta (wooden clogs) provided. 
  • After you check in, follow your hostess to your room. When you get to your room, take off your slippers before you walk on the Tatami (straw mats). Walk on the tatami with your socks or your bare feet, not your slippers. 
  • Your room will have a Tokoma (an alcove built into the wall used for placing flower vases and hanging scrolls), a glass enclosed sitting area separated by a Shoji (sliding paper door), and several Zabuton (cushions) for sitting. Your hostess will show you where to place your luggage. If it rains at night, please be sure to close the outside glass window. Usually a maid will bring tea for you, and you can sit on the zabuton and relax and enjoy your tea.
  • During your stay, a Yukata (robe) is provided for you. You can wear the yukata in your room, around the ryokan, and if you like you can wear it when you take a short walk near the ryokan. If it is cold, a Tanzen (outer robe) will be provided. Wear the tanzen over the yukata. 
  • Before dinner is a good time to take a bath. You may use the bath in your room or you may use the large public bath in the ryokan. When you arrive at the public bath, put all of your clothes into the baskets in the changing room. Take the small towel provided for you, and go into the bathing room. The large public bath you will see is only for soaking your body. Cleaning your body is done in the bathing area outside the public bath. There will be small plastic stools, soap, shampoo, and a mirror provided for the guests. When you have finished cleaning yourself and there is no soap left on your body, step into the public bath. If the public bath is unbearably hot, you can adjust the temperature a little by running a cold water into it. 
  • In the evening, the maid will either serve your dinner in your room or you will eat in the dining room. When you have finished eating, the maid will clean your room and prepare the Futon (quilt bedding) for you to sleep on. 
  • The front desk at a ryokan closes early. Be sure to confirm both the check-in and check-out times.

Other Useful Ryokan Information

If you have never stayed at a ryokan, then Planning Your Stay at a Japanese Ryokan will help you better plan your stay.

Our Ryokan Styles page will tell you about the various types of ryokans available

If it is your first time staying at a ryokan, you may want to read our page on Ryokan Customs

Here is some more detailed information about Staying at a Ryokan including ryokan cuisine

For more information about dining on Japanese "kaiseki," please see Japanese "Kaiseki" (traditional, multi-course dinner)

In A Ryokan Experience, a guest describes his stay at a ryokan on Miyajima Island

Read Interviews with Three Kyoto Ryokan Owners and their experiences hosting foreign guests

A step-by-step explanation of how to put on a Japanese "yukata" (robe)

Here is a description about the dos and don'ts of Japanese Bathing Etiquette, and here is how to use a Japanese-style toilet

How big is a tatami mat room? Go to this Tatami Mat Conversion Table and find out.

Read David Paget's article "Japanese Buddhist Temple Overnight" and a guest's article "A Night on Mount Koya" about their experiences staying overnight at Buddhist Temples on Mount Koya in Wakayama Prefecture.

Read guest's Comments about their ryokan stays

Top
Links
Top

Rediscover Japan Co., Ltd. (dba Japanese Guest Houses)
Hyogo-ken Chijitoroku Ryokogyo 3-609 (Hyogo Prefecture Travel Agent License Number 3-609)
10-5-401-1-(2) Sakae-machi, Kawanishi-shi, Hyogo-ken 666-0033 Japan
Staff at Japanese Guest Houses | Links
Copyright © 2000-2009 Rediscover Japan Co., Ltd. All Rights Reserved. Privacy Policy