Oita, Oita Prefecture
Seven Eleven - 5 min walk / 1 min drive
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401 rental properties available · ¥10,000 – ¥16,490,000 · 195 new this month
Oita is Japan's hot spring prefecture in absolute terms. Beppu — on the bay below the Tsurumi volcanic range — produces 100,000 tonnes of hot spring water per day, the highest flow rate of any spa town on earth, with more than 2,400 individual spring sources within the city. The "Eight Hells of Beppu" (Beppu Jigoku) — natural hot spring features including a blood-red ferrous spring, a cobalt-blue spring, a boiling grey mud pond, and a spring hot enough to cook eggs in the nearby sand — are marketed as tourist attractions with a cheerful theatricality that Beppu has long since made its own. But the real Beppu is the neighbourhood bathhouses (konyoku, or mixed-gender, in some of the older and more interesting ones) used by locals as a daily ritual, and the steaming street drains and pavement vents that remind you you're sitting on top of a seriously volcanic landscape.
The Sonic and Nichirin limited express trains connect Oita to Fukuoka in about 2 hours. Oita Airport has connections to Tokyo, Osaka, and Seoul. The Kyudai Line connects to Yufuin, Oita's second major hot spring destination. A car opens the rural highland areas of the Kuju plateau — one of Kyushu's finest upland landscapes — and the coastal towns of the Bungo Channel.
Yufuin, in the volcanic basin 30 minutes inland from Beppu, has developed a completely different hot spring character: quiet, design-conscious, with an emphasis on boutique inns (ryokan), galleries, small restaurants, and a pastoral village atmosphere entirely at odds with Beppu's resort theatrics. The morning mist over Lake Kinrin in Yufuin's centre, with ducks crossing and mountains rising behind, is one of the more postcard-perfect scenes in Kyushu. Usuki, in southern Oita, has an extraordinary group of stone-carved Buddhas from the Heian period — some of the finest religious sculptures in Japan, cut directly into the rock face of a hillside.
Nakatsu, in northern Oita, has a specific and tenaciously maintained claim: its karaage (Japanese-style fried chicken) is considered by its devotees to be Japan's finest. The town has more karaage restaurants per capita than anywhere else in the country, and the preparation — marinated overnight in soy, ginger, and garlic, then fried twice for a crust that is described as almost glass-like — has its advocates who compare it to a religion. The Oita-Miyazaki coast road south of Saiki passes through one of the most dramatic and uninhabited stretches of Pacific coastline in Japan.
For property buyers, Oita offers genuine lifestyle for reasonable prices. Oita city houses run ¥4M–¥12M. Beppu properties, given its tourism infrastructure, range from ¥5M–¥15M — with the rental market supported by consistent visitor demand. Yufuin has properties from ¥5M–¥20M in an onsen village setting. Rural Oita — the Kuju highlands, the southern coast — has akiya from ¥500,000–¥4M. The hot spring access, alone, is a quality-of-life advantage that is genuinely difficult to price.
Seven Eleven - 5 min walk / 1 min drive
Seven Eleven - 6 min walk / 1 min drive
Seven Eleven - 5 min walk / 1 min drive
Family Mart - 29 min walk / 6 min drive
Seven Eleven - 4 min walk / 1 min drive
Cocostore - 11 min walk / 2 min drive
Family Mart - 5 min walk / 1 min drive
Lawson - 5 min walk / 1 min drive
Cocostore - 11 min walk / 2 min drive
Lawson - 9 min walk / 2 min drive
Lawson - 7 min walk / 1 min drive
Seven Eleven - 6 min walk / 1 min drive
Lawson - 10 min walk / 2 min drive
Seven Eleven - 11 min walk / 2 min drive
Every One - 5 min walk / 1 min drive
Every One - 5 min walk / 1 min drive
Lawson - 6 min walk / 1 min drive
Family Mart - 6 min walk / 1 min drive
Seven Eleven - 6 min walk / 1 min drive