The Complete 20-Day Hokkaido Itinerary: 7 Cities, Real Routes & Costs (From a Japan-Based Traveler)

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In April 2026 I spent 20 days traveling around Hokkaido.

Across seven cities — Sapporo, Otaru, Asahikawa, Furano, Biei, Wakkanai, Noboribetsu and Hakodate — I ate Genghis Khan lamb, soup curry, sushi, soaked in secret hot springs, chased scenery, saw the “million-dollar night view,” and stood at the northernmost point of Japan.

I’m based in Japan, so this isn’t a rewrite of other guides — it’s my real schedule, route, and spending, laid out in full for visitors planning a long trip to Hokkaido.

What you’ll get from this guide

  • The full 20-day route (day by day)
  • Recommended spots in each city
  • A complete cost breakdown (¥612,000 / approx. US$4,000 for two)
  • Honest hotel reviews
  • When to use a Japan Rail Pass vs. a rental car
  • What to watch out for in Hokkaido in April

Trip basics

ItemDetails
DatesApril 5–24, 2026 (19 nights, 20 days)
Travelers2
Total cost~¥612,000 (approx. US$4,000) for two
TransportFlights + 7-day rail pass + rental car + local buses
CitiesSapporo, Otaru, Asahikawa, Furano/Biei, Wakkanai, Noboribetsu, Hakodate

Note on rail passes for overseas visitors: We used the domestic “Hokkaido Free Pass.” Foreign visitors also have the JR Hokkaido Rail Pass (3/4/5/7-day flexible options), sold specifically for tourists — often the better-value choice. Buy it online before arrival or at major JR stations with your passport.


Route overview

Day 1      : Tokyo (Narita) ✈ New Chitose → [Sapporo]
Day 2      : Sapporo → [Asahikawa] (Asahiyama Zoo, Mt. Asahidake)
Day 3-4    : [Biei & Furano] (Blue Pond, secret onsen, cheese workshop) → stay in Asahikawa
Day 5      : Asahikawa → [Wakkanai] (northernmost Japan) → Sapporo
Day 6-7    : Sapporo → [Otaru] (street food, glass, canal)
Day 8      : Sapporo → [Noboribetsu] (Hell Valley) → [Hakodate]
Day 9-11   : [Hakodate] (morning market, night view, Goryokaku)
Day 12-19  : [Sapporo] (sightseeing & food)
Day 20     : New Chitose ✈ Narita

Day 1: Narita → New Chitose → Sapporo (4/5)

My first trip to Hokkaido in ten years, by plane (a bumpy one).

New Chitose Airport (fun the moment you land)

New Chitose feels less like an airport and more like a theme park — you can start enjoying Hokkaido before you even leave the terminal.

  • Royce’ Chocolate World: a free area on the history of cacao and how chocolate is made. The “chocolate melon bread” was so good I came back for it on the last day (¥659).
  • Kamaei: a crab-mayo fish-cake ball to eat on the go — the mayo really works (¥390).
  • Sapporo Agricultural College: a “fresh-baked” Hokkaido apple pie… that wasn’t actually fresh-baked that day (¥498).

Arriving in Sapporo

New Chitose to Sapporo (Odori) is about 40 minutes by JR (¥2,880 for two).

Dinner was Sapporo Genghis Khan Darumaotoshi, Susukino main branch — spicy grilled lamb, with a smooth garlic paste that paired perfectly (¥7,205 for two).

Hotel: plat hostel keikyu sapporo ichiba (¥3,996 + lodging tax ¥600)


Day 2: Asahikawa — Asahiyama Zoo & Mt. Asahidake (4/6)

Our 7-day rail pass started here. About 90 minutes from Sapporo to Asahikawa on the Lilac limited express.

Asahiyama Zoo (admission ¥2,000)

The hippos swam nonstop — genuinely powerful to watch. The exhibits let you see animals from angles no other zoo does. I bought a Pallas’s cat keychain as a souvenir. Lunch was a chicken-karaage-mayo bento at the in-park cafeteria (¥1,300).

Mt. Asahidake Ropeway (¥5,600)

Still deep snow in April. The top of the ropeway was a full snow world — genuinely disorienting. We got down by kneeling and sledding on our own legs.

Asahikawa at night

The ready-made food at the local AEON supermarket was surprisingly cheap. We grabbed a hamburg steak and relaxed at the hotel.

Hotel: Y’s Hotel Asahikawa (¥4,274 + lodging tax ¥600). Public bath, right by the station, clean — at this price it’s the best-value hotel of the whole trip. We stayed here twice.


Day 3-4: Biei & Furano (4/7-8)

We rented a car (Car Times) and drove. About ¥21,000 for two days.

Day 3: Biei → Furano

Biei scenic spots

  • Shin-ei no Oka Observatory: vast views (plus a mysterious straw-doll sculpture)
  • Mild Seven Hill: the lone tree I’d long wanted to see
  • Shikisai-no-oka: no flowers yet in April — a summer revisit is a must

Furano

  • Jet Coaster Road: genuine roller-coaster-style ups and downs — a big highlight
  • Farm Tomita: again, no flowers in April; the dried-flower room is lovely
  • Furano Delice: the crème brûlée pancake was outstanding (¥2,500)
  • Ningle Terrace: visited at dusk — the lights are magical
  • Kumagera: roast beef and “bandit hotpot” — a great local spot (¥6,550)

Day 4: Blue Pond & secret onsen

Morning: Furano Cheese Factory — the pepper-topped cheese pizza was superb (¥2,650), and the gelato had a natural milky sweetness (¥500).

Afternoon: Biei scenery

  • Blue Pond (Aoi-ike): genuinely, movingly blue (parking ¥500)
  • Shirahige Falls: the view from the bridge is superb (I nearly dropped my phone)

Evening: secret hot springs

  • Fukiage Onsen Hakuginso (¥2,600): a long detour due to road closures, but an open-air bath with a snow-mountain view is unbeatable. There’s a mixed bath too.
  • Fukiage Rotenburo (free): the definition of a “secret hot spring.” Perfect temperature — my personal favorite. Bring a swimsuit next time.

Dinner: back in Asahikawa, spicy-soy ramen at the locally loved Horyu — incredible (¥2,450).

Hotels

  • Day 3: Hostel TOMAR, Furano (¥7,183) — Furano has few hotels, so prices run high
  • Day 4: Y’s Hotel Asahikawa (¥6,620) — second stay, even nicer room

Day 5: Wakkanai & Japan’s northernmost point (4/9)

A ~3-hour-40-minute train ride from Asahikawa to Wakkanai on the Soya limited express.

Cape Soya (Japan’s northernmost point!)

The strongest wind of my life — literally strong enough to nearly lift you off your feet, so strong I could only laugh. You can buy a Northernmost Point Certificate (¥200) at Kashiwaya.

The “northernmost of…” tour

  • Northernmost McDonald’s (Route 40 Wakkanai): a rare bench with Ronald sitting on it. The cheeseburger tastes exactly like everywhere else (¥1,140).
  • Northernmost Lawson and northernmost Seicomart (Seicomart is Hokkaido’s own convenience-store chain)

Other sights

  • Wind Turbine Road: rows of huge turbines on a road you’re not quite sure you’re allowed on
  • Cape Noshappu: sunset and a dolphin statue — beautiful, but freezing
  • Wakkanai North Breakwater Dome: Parthenon-like columns; lots of deer (and their droppings)

Home on the 17:44 Soya — a 5-hour trip.

Hotel: plat hostel keikyu sapporo ichiba (¥6,620 + late check ¥1,000 + tax ¥600)


Day 6-7: Otaru (4/10-11)

About 40 minutes from Sapporo by JR (free with the pass). We visited 30+ spots over two days.

Otaru food highlights

  • Otaru Masazushi: so good we went two days running — sweet ikura, uni with zero bitterness. We splurged ~¥23,000 across two days.
  • Naruto: Otaru’s soul food; the half-chicken fry has crackling skin and juicy meat (¥2,440)
  • Rutao Pathos: the morning-only Dolce Mille-feuille, warm and crisp — be first in line (¥3,720)
  • Otaru Beer Brewery: local beer and sausages in a relaxed space (¥2,370)
  • Rokkatei: the Marusei Ice Sandwich is excellent (¥620)

Walking spots

  • Old Temiya Railway line: Ghibli vibes; you walk along the disused track
  • Sakaimachi Street: the main street lined with glass, sweets, and craft shops
  • Otaru Canal: cruise cancelled by rain — a light-up-season revisit is on the list
  • Former Bank of Japan Otaru Branch: lift 100 million yen (10 kg)!
  • Miffy Port Town: the biggest selection I’ve seen
  • Otaru Music Box Museum: the largest I’ve ever visited

Full details in the dedicated post: Otaru 2-Day Walking Guide

Hotels

  • Day 6: Cozy Inn Otaru (¥7,358 + tax ¥600)
  • Day 7: Odyssis Sapporo (¥5,084 + tax ¥600) — clean, big desk, big tub. Recommended!

Day 8: Noboribetsu → Hakodate (4/12)

A travel day, Sapporo → Noboribetsu → Hakodate. The Hokuto limited express lets you stop off at Noboribetsu.

Noboribetsu Onsen (~3 hours)

  • Gokuraku-dori: a short street dotted with ogre statues
  • Jigokudani (Hell Valley): rugged red-brown rock and rising steam — the overcast sky made it feel all the more hellish
  • Oyunuma River natural foot bath: a detour due to a closed shortcut; sadly lukewarm

A surprise hit: the an-butter whipped-cream bun (¥280) at the bakery Piacere Noce in the onsen town.

Arriving in Hakodate

About 2.5 hours by limited express. Dinner was Soup Curry Begiramah — my first-ever soup curry, and possibly the best curry I’ve had, with deep flavor and 10 kinds of grilled vegetables (¥6,070 for two).

Hotel: HOTEL MYSTAYS Hakodate Ekimae (2 nights ¥16,673 + tax ¥1,200)


Day 9-11: Hakodate (4/13-15)

Day 9: Onuma Quasi-National Park → Kanemori Red Brick Warehouses

A drive out to Onuma. THE DANSHAKU LOUNGE has a hilariously high-quality “potato utility pole.” I had an Onuma-beef burger (¥2,350). Dinner was conveyor-belt sushi at Kantaro Ugaura, with a great seaside view; the seafood chirashi gunkan (¥250) was a steal.

Day 10: Hillside walk & the million-dollar night view

Morning at Hakodate Morning Market — the half-hokke set at Bukkake was superb and springy (¥3,385). I finally got the Machikado Crepe I’d missed the day before — possibly the best crepe I’ve ever had, with a crisp layered texture (¥1,960).

Motomachi walking course: Hachiman-zaka slope → Old Public Hall (¥500) → Old British Consulate (¥500) → Museum of Northern Peoples (¥600) → Local History Museum (¥200).

At night, the Mt. Hakodate Ropeway (¥3,600) to the million-dollar view — dazzling, and it earns the nickname. We finished with golden-broth shio ramen at Shinano (¥3,800 for two).

Day 11: Goryokaku & Lucky Pierrot

We climbed Goryokaku Tower (¥4,358)… but the cherry blossoms weren’t out yet! Mid-April was too early. Lunch was Hakodate’s famous Lucky Pierrot — the sweet-savory chicken-mayo burger is delicious (¥2,002). Then the afternoon limited express back to Sapporo (~4 hours, ¥19,540).

Redemption: I returned to Goryokaku on 4/23. In full bloom, the star-shaped fort turned pink — spectacular. If you come to Hakodate, aim for cherry-blossom season (late April to early May).

Full details: Hakodate 3-Day Guide


Day 12-19: Slow days in Sapporo (4/15-22)

The back half was based in Sapporo — sightseeing and food.

Sights

SpotPriceNote
Hokkaido UniversityFreeVast campus; the museum stamp rally is fun
Sapporo Beer MuseumFreeSurprised to learn Sapporo and Asahi were once one company
Sapporo Beer Garden¥2,910Exclusive “Five Star” beer and coiled lamb sausage
Sapporo Clock Tower¥700Retro and charming
Former Hokkaido Government Office¥600Beautiful red brick
Shiroi Koibito Park¥8,800The cookie-decorating experience is fun
Sapporo TV Tower¥2,200Rain-streaked windows made for good photos
Royce’ Town factory tour¥2,400Learn how chocolate is made
Maruyama Zoo¥1,600A different feel from Asahiyama
Lake ShikotsuFreeSparkling lake surface

Sapporo food highlights

Genghis Khan #1: Hyottoko — a deep, smoke-filled room; sear the lamb lightly and eat it rare for tender, clean flavor. The best of the trip (¥7,100 for two).

Soup curry ranking: 1) Begiramah (Hakodate) 2) Treasure (Sapporo) 3) Garaku (Sapporo)

Ramen: Menya Saimi — a huge queue; the ginger-forward miso ramen warms you to the core (¥1,600).

Lamb shabu: Kudo Yonikuten — paper-thin lamb shabu-shabu, superb. Even my lamb-skeptic partner loved it (¥11,920 for two).

Full details: The Complete Sapporo Food Guide


Day 20: Last day (4/24)

Souvenir shopping and one last meal at New Chitose Airport.

  • Royce’ Chocolate World: a repeat buy of that chocolate melon bread
  • Butadon Meijin: the Tokachi-style pork bowl we’d meant to eat in Tokachi — great with sansho pepper (¥3,470)
  • Chidoriya: Hanabatake Bokujo fresh caramel — melts as you eat it

Goodbye, Hokkaido. See you again!


Cost summary

Total: ~¥612,000 (approx. US,000) for two

CategoryAmount (approx.)
Flights (Narita ⇔ New Chitose)¥39,540
7-day rail pass¥56,000
Limited expresses outside the pass¥58,620
Rental car (Car Times)¥38,280
Buses / trams~¥5,000
Lodging (19 nights)~¥145,000
Food~¥150,000
Sightseeing / admissions~¥50,000
Souvenirs / shopping~¥50,000
Other (laundry, delivery)~¥20,000

Was the rail pass worth it?

For a trip that leans on long-distance limited expresses — especially the Wakkanai round trip — yes, clearly. Our domestic 7-day pass saved about ¥21,000 for two versus regular fares. If you’re only doing Sapporo–Otaru–Noboribetsu, it’s harder to break even.

For overseas visitors: compare the tourist-only JR Hokkaido Rail Pass — it’s often better value than regular tickets if you’re covering long distances.

Full breakdown: What a 20-Day Hokkaido Trip Really Costs


Hotel reviews (cheapest first)

HotelPer nightRatingNote
plat hostel keikyu sapporo ichiba¥3,996+★★★☆☆Cheap but shared bathrooms
Y’s Hotel Asahikawa¥4,274+★★★★★Public bath, by the station, clean — best value
Odyssis Sapporo¥5,084★★★★☆Clean, big desk, big tub
Hostel TOMAR (Furano)¥7,183★★★☆☆Furano runs pricey; thin walls
Cozy Inn Otaru¥7,358★★★★☆Spacious, clean
Sapporo Excel Hotel Tokyu¥8,348★★★★☆Roomy, stylish interior
HOTEL MYSTAYS Hakodate Ekimae¥8,337/night★★★★☆Smooth self check-in
KOKO HOTEL Sapporo Ekimae¥9,570★★★★☆Great location
Tokyu Stay Sapporo¥19,515★★★★★In-room washer & microwave — best facilities

Top 3: 1) Y’s Hotel Asahikawa (best value) 2) Tokyu Stay Sapporo (great for longer stays) 3) Odyssis Sapporo (well balanced)

Book any of these (overseas-friendly):
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[AGODA_AFFILIATE_LINK → hotel name / city search]


What to watch out for in Hokkaido in April

Flowers aren’t out yet (early season)

Furano’s lavender and the Shikisai-no-oka flower fields are bare in April. For flowers, July is best. But cherry blossoms open in late April — Goryokaku was in full bloom on 4/23 and stunning.

Many road closures

Mountain roads close often due to snow. Check road conditions in advance.

It’s cold — especially Wakkanai

Even in April, Wakkanai has wind strong enough to nearly lift you. Warm layers are essential. Central Sapporo feels roughly like Tokyo in March.

Pace yourself

On a 20-day trip I got run down partway through. Long trips lead to overeating and short sleep — build in an easy schedule.


Conclusion

The lesson from 20 days in Hokkaido: you can never quite see enough of it. Even after seven cities, there’s summer Furano, the lit-up Otaru canal, and Shikisai-no-oka in bloom still waiting. I hope this helps you plan your own long trip north.

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