What You’ll Learn in This Article
- Hakodate city tram (streetcar) day pass: fares, IC card compatibility, and where to buy
- How to reach the Morning Market, Kanemori Red Brick Warehouse, Motomachi, Goryokaku, and Mount Hakodate Ropeway by tram
- 2-day car-free itinerary: Day 1 Bay Area & night view / Day 2 Goryokaku & Yunokawa Onsen
- Where to stay: Hakodate Station area vs. Yunokawa Onsen — pros and cons
- Getting to Hakodate from Tokyo and Osaka (flights & Shinkansen) plus airport-to-city transfers
Hakodate Is Easy to Explore Without a Car
Hakodate’s top attractions line up neatly along its streetcar network, making a 1-night, 2-day trip entirely doable without a car. The Morning Market, Kanemori Red Brick Warehouse, Motomachi historic district, and the Mount Hakodate Ropeway are all within walking distance of a tram stop. Goryokaku is just one straight ride away.
Hokkaido has a reputation for being impossible to navigate without a car — and for most of the island, that’s true. Hakodate is the exception. The city’s streetcar system covers virtually every tourist route, and even Yunokawa Onsen, the local hot spring district, sits at the tram’s eastern terminus. With a day pass, your entire transit budget becomes a flat fee.
Getting to Hakodate: Routes from Major Cities
From Tokyo, you have two options: fly or take the Hokkaido Shinkansen. Flying wins on speed; low-cost carriers (LCCs) can also undercut the train on price. From Osaka or Nagoya, flying is the only practical choice.
| Departure | Mode | Travel Time | Approx. One-Way Fare | Arrival |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tokyo (Haneda) | Flight (ANA/JAL) | Approx. 1 hr 20–25 min | ¥7,000–30,000 (approx. USD 47–200, varies by season) | Hakodate Airport |
| Tokyo (Haneda) | LCC (Peach, etc.) | Approx. 1 hr 20–25 min | From ¥4,000 (approx. USD 27) | Hakodate Airport |
| Tokyo (Tokyo Station) | Hokkaido Shinkansen + Hakodate Liner | Approx. 4.5–5 hrs | ¥23,000–26,000 (approx. USD 153–173, standard season) | Hakodate Station |
| Osaka (Itami/Kansai) | Flight | Approx. 1 hr 40 min | ¥10,000–25,000 (approx. USD 67–167) | Hakodate Airport |
Info
The Hokkaido Shinkansen terminates at Shin-Hakodate-Hokuto Station, not Hakodate itself. From there, transfer to the Hakodate Liner (a rapid local train) for about 15–22 minutes to Hakodate Station. Total door-to-door time from Tokyo including the transfer is roughly 4.5–5 hours. Fly if speed is the priority; take the train if you have a JR Pass or can cover the fare with points.
From Hakodate Airport to the City
An airport shuttle bus runs to Hakodate Station in about 25–30 minutes. Yunokawa Onsen is only 10 minutes away, making it a very convenient base if you’re arriving by air.
| Destination | Transport | Travel Time | Fare |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hakodate Station | Airport shuttle bus | Approx. 25–30 min | Approx. ¥310 / USD 2 (to be verified) |
| Yunokawa Onsen | Bus | Approx. 10 min | Approx. ¥200 / USD 1.30 (to be verified) |
| Goryokaku Park (en route) | Airport shuttle bus (via stop) | Approx. 15–20 min | To be verified |
Hakodate City Tram: How It Works and the Day Pass
The Hakodate City Tram (streetcar) connects Hakodate Station to Yunokawa Onsen in the east, and Jujigai to Hakodate Dock/Yachigashira in the west. Every major tourist spot falls along these routes. If you ride three or more times in a day, the day pass pays for itself.
Standard Fares and Day Pass Options
A single ride costs ¥250–300 (approx. USD 1.70–2). The day pass becomes cost-effective after three or four rides.
| Ticket Type | Adult Fare | Child Fare | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Single ride | ¥250–300 / USD 1.70–2 (by zone) | ¥130–150 | IC card or cash accepted |
| Tram day pass (winter) | ¥1,200 / approx. USD 8 | ¥600 | Early November – early April |
| Tram day pass (summer) | ¥1,600 / approx. USD 11 | ¥800 | Mid-April – early November |
| Tram + Bus combo 1-day pass | ¥1,600 / approx. USD 11 | ¥800 | Smartphone purchase only (DohNa!! app) |
| Tram + Bus combo 2-day pass | ¥2,600 / approx. USD 17 | ¥1,300 | Smartphone purchase only (DohNa!! app) |
Point
In winter (November–early April), the tram day pass is just ¥1,200 (approx. USD 8) for adults — a great deal if you’re visiting off-peak. You can also buy a digital pass through the DohNa!! smartphone app. Note that IC cards (like Suica) work for single rides but cannot be used as an unlimited day pass.
Key Tram Stops and Nearby Attractions
Familiarize yourself with these stops before you board — knowing where to get off makes navigation straightforward.
| Tram Stop | Nearby Attraction | Walking Time |
|---|---|---|
| Hakodate-Ekimae | Hakodate Morning Market, JR Hakodate Station | Approx. 3–5 min to the market |
| Suehirocho | Kanemori Red Brick Warehouse, Hakodate Bay Area | Approx. 5 min |
| Jujigai | Motomachi historic district (Western-style buildings, churches), Hachimanзaka Slope | Approx. 5–10 min |
| Jujigai (→ Ropeway base station) | Mount Hakodate Ropeway | Approx. 10 min walk from Jujigai stop |
| Goryokaku-Koen-Mae | Goryokaku Park, Goryokaku Tower | Approx. 10–15 min |
| Yunokawa | Yunokawa Onsen district | Approx. 5–10 min (varies by inn) |
- Hakodate City Tram – Day Pass Info (City of Hakodate, Japanese)
- Tram Day Pass – Hakobura Tourism Site (Japanese)
2-Day Car-Free Itinerary
Day 1 focuses on the Bay Area, Motomachi, and the iconic night view from Mount Hakodate. Day 2 covers Goryokaku’s history and ends at Yunokawa Onsen. A tram day pass (or 2-day pass) keeps transit costs flat throughout.
Day 1: Morning Market, Bay Area, Motomachi & Mount Hakodate Night View
Day 1 is compact — everything is within walking distance of Hakodate Station or one tram stop away. Finish the day with the night view, which is best experienced after sunset.
| Time | Spot | Duration | Getting There & Tips |
|---|---|---|---|
| 6:00–7:30 | Hakodate Morning Market (Asaichi) | Approx. 1–1.5 hrs | 3-min walk from Hakodate Station. Seafood rice bowls and fresh squid sashimi are the staples. Open from 5:00 am May–December. |
| 9:30–11:30 | Kanemori Red Brick Warehouse & Bay Area | Approx. 2 hrs | Tram to Suehirocho stop, then 5-min walk. Four brick warehouse buildings housing about 50 shops. Great for a harbor stroll. |
| 12:00–13:00 | Lunch in the Bay Area | Approx. 1 hr | Seafood, Western-style bistros, and cafés are all clustered nearby. |
| 13:30–15:30 | Motomachi Historic District (Western buildings, churches, Hachimanзaka Slope) | Approx. 2 hrs | Tram to Jujigai stop. Walk up to the Old Hakodate Public Hall, Orthodox Haristos Church, and the famous Hachimanзaka slope. |
| 16:00–17:30 | Check in & rest | — | If staying near Hakodate Station or Yunokawa Onsen, a break before heading to the night view is easy to build in. |
| After sunset | Mount Hakodate Observatory (Ropeway) | Approx. 1.5–2 hrs | Tram to Jujigai, then 10-min walk to the ropeway base station. Round-trip ¥1,500 / approx. USD 10 (adult). |
Day 2: Goryokaku & Yunokawa Onsen
Day 2 balances history at Goryokaku with a relaxing soak at Yunokawa Onsen. Since Yunokawa is right next to the airport, this order works perfectly if you’re flying home.
| Time | Spot | Duration | Getting There & Tips |
|---|---|---|---|
| 9:00–11:30 | Goryokaku Park & Goryokaku Tower | Approx. 2–2.5 hrs | Tram to Goryokaku-Koen-Mae, then 10–15-min walk. Tower admission: ¥1,200 / approx. USD 8 (adult, revised April 2025). |
| 12:00–13:00 | Lunch near Goryokaku | Approx. 1 hr | Cafés and restaurants are concentrated around the Goryokaku-Koen-Mae tram stop. |
| 14:00–16:00 | Yunokawa Onsen (day-use bathing) | Approx. 1.5–2 hrs | Tram to Yunokawa stop, then 5–10-min walk. Several ryokan (traditional inns) accept day-use visitors. |
| 16:30 onward | Transfer to Hakodate Airport or Station | — | From Yunokawa to the airport: approx. 5 min by car or 10 min by bus. To Hakodate Station: approx. 25–30 min by tram. |
Admission Prices & Hours at a Glance
Opening hours vary by season — the ropeway in particular changes its closing time. Check official sites before your visit, especially during peak periods like Golden Week (late April–early May) and the summer school holidays.
| Attraction | Hours | Admission (Adult) | Nearest Tram Stop |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hakodate Morning Market | 5:00–14:00 approx. (May–Dec) / 6:00–14:00 approx. (Jan–Apr) | Free entry (individual stalls charge separately) | Hakodate-Ekimae (3-min walk) |
| Kanemori Red Brick Warehouse | 9:30–19:00 approx. (check official site) | Free entry (shopping/dining extra) | Suehirocho (5-min walk) |
| Mount Hakodate Ropeway | 10:00–22:00 (Apr 25–Oct 15) / 10:00–21:00 (Oct 16–Apr 24) | ¥1,500 / approx. USD 10 round-trip | 10-min walk from Jujigai stop |
| Goryokaku Tower | 8:00–19:00 (Apr 21–Oct 20) / 9:00–18:00 (Oct 21–Apr 20) | ¥1,200 / approx. USD 8 (revised April 2025) | Goryokaku-Koen-Mae (15-min walk) |
| Goryokaku Park | Open year-round (free access) | Free (tower charged separately) | Goryokaku-Koen-Mae (15-min walk) |
- Mount Hakodate Ropeway – Hours & Fares (Official, Japanese)
- Goryokaku Tower – Hours & Admission (Official, English)
- Hakodate Morning Market (Official, Japanese)
Where to Stay: Hakodate Station Area vs. Yunokawa Onsen
Hakodate has two main accommodation zones. The station area is better for sightseeing efficiency; Yunokawa Onsen is better if a hot spring experience is part of the reason you came. Both are connected by tram, so the choice affects your daily routing more than your overall access.
| Area | Highlights | Best For | Watch Out For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hakodate Station Area | Walking distance to the Morning Market, Bay Area, and Motomachi. Wide range of business hotels and tourist hotels. | Travelers prioritizing sightseeing efficiency; those who want to hit the morning market at opening time | Few traditional hot spring inns. About 25–30 min from the airport by bus. |
| Yunokawa Onsen | 10 min from Hakodate Airport by bus. Multiple ryokan (hot spring inns) with onsen; several offer day-use bathing. | Travelers making onsen a key part of the trip; those with early or late flights | About 20–25 min to the Morning Market and Bay Area by tram. |
Info
Yunokawa Onsen has several ryokan with source-fed (kakenagashi) baths and rooftop open-air baths. Properties such as Yumoto Takubokutei and Hewitt Resort Hakodate also accept day-use visitors, so you can stop by for a soak on Day 2 afternoon even if you’re not staying there.
Tips for Avoiding Crowds at the Mount Hakodate Night View
The night view from Mount Hakodate is recognized as one of the top three night views in the world, and the ropeway gets busiest in the 30 minutes right after sunset. Shifting your timing by an hour can cut wait times dramatically.
The ropeway base station is about a 10-minute walk from the Jujigai tram stop. During Golden Week, summer school holidays, autumn foliage season, and year-end, queues for the descent can stretch past an hour. Heading up about an hour after sunset tends to find shorter lines while the view is still spectacular.
Point
A mountain bus service also runs to the Mount Hakodate Observatory during certain seasons — check the schedule before your visit, as it can be faster than the ropeway when the queue is long.
Summary
Hakodate is one of the rare Hokkaido cities where a car is genuinely optional. With a tram day pass in hand, the Bay Area, Motomachi, Mount Hakodate, Goryokaku, and Yunokawa Onsen flow naturally into a two-day loop.
- Tram day pass: ¥1,200 (approx. USD 8) in winter / ¥1,600 (approx. USD 11) in summer — breaks even after 3–4 rides
- The Morning Market opens at 5:00 am from May to December — an early start unlocks the freshest seafood and thinnest crowds
- Head to the Mount Hakodate night view about an hour after sunset to avoid peak ropeway queues
- Hakodate Station area for sightseeing efficiency; Yunokawa Onsen for a hot spring focus — both work well for a 2-day stay
- From Tokyo, flights are faster and often cheaper than the Shinkansen (LCC fares from approx. ¥4,000 / USD 27 one way)


