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Onsen etiquette: Learn the 7 basic rules of Japan’s traditional hot spring baths

Before you strip down, wash up, and dip in, it's important to learn the often unspoken rules of traditional Japanese onsen

Most Americans only take one trip to Japan in their life, which is understandable given its location on the other side of the globe. So, if you do go, you absolutely must visit an onsen, a geothermally heated spring with water that contains multiple beneficial minerals. Trust us, you’ll never find another experience like this anywhere else in the world.

Japanese onsen have been in use since before records were kept. Thousands of them dot the country’s many islands. Onsen can be either free-standing or attached to a hotel or ryokan. The pools are, more often than not, separated by gender, either through partitions, separate bathing areas, or alternating bathing times.

Man relaxing by himself in a Japanese onsen.
John S. Lander/Getty Images

It’s important to understand that onsen, however, are not water parks or bathhouses. They are distinguished places of leisure, peaceful meditation, light socializing, and regulations. Yes, like almost everything in Japan, there are strict rules of onsen etiquette one must follow when visiting. So, before you strip down and dive into a pool full of volcanically heated spring water, take heed of the unspoken Japanese onsen etiquette and protocol. Because the last thing you want is to be kicked out just when you’ve reached peak relaxation.

Rule #1: Wash before entering the onsen

Most Japanese onsen will have a shower area — in or just outside the bathing area — where you are required to wash your body. Entering an onsen with soap, dirt, or sweat on your body is unacceptable and grounds for dismissal from the spring. Take this moment as an opportunity to thoroughly scrub down and think of it as a preparation for a full-body skin treatment. After all, the spring is full of natural compounds and minerals that are great for the skin.

Rule #2: You must be completely naked

Foreigners might have a hard time with this one, but there’s no way around it. In Japan, clothing, towels, and any other garments are considered sullied or “dirty” and should never, ever be brought into an onsen. Nudity is expressly required, but really, it’s no big deal. If you’ve ever had to shower in gym class (who hasn’t?), nudity in an onsen is much less embarrassing. That’s because (a) you’re no longer a squeaky-voiced teenager, (b) no one cares what you look like, and (c) you definitely won’t get towel-snapped. That being said, some Japanese onsen allow for bathing suits, but this is rare (and such an onsen will usually not provide the most authentic experience) and is typically found in more tourist-friendly hotels and resorts, if at all.

Two towel buckets draped with towels on the side of a Japanese onsen.
Iplan/Getty Images

Rule #3: Modesty is appreciated

While nudity is required, modesty is expected. Use your small towel to casually hide your nether regions as you move from changing room to shower to onsen and back again. You’ll notice most Japanese men and women doing the same.

Rule #4: Never dip your towel in the water

This harks back to Rule No. 2. and the notion that towels are dirty and should not come into contact with the water. Most bathers simply wear the small cloth they are given at check-in to the onsen on their heads. It may look funny, but it’s the easiest way to not lose your towel and not dirty the water at the same time. When everyone else is doing it, you won’t feel as ridiculous sitting naked in a 110-degree tub with nothing but a napkin-sized towel on your head.

Rule #5: Don’t go under (Or get your hair in the water)

It’s pretty much forbidden to dunk your head under the water in an onsen — and for good reason. No one wants mouth germs floating around in an environment where bacteria thrive. It’s also a good idea never to dip your hair into the water, mostly to prevent oils and residual grooming products from dirtying the water, but also to simply keep hair out of the bath drains (they do drain and clean them often).

An upscale Japanese onsen with an outdoor Zen area.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Rule #6: No exposed tattoos allowed

Sorry, but this is a big no-no in a country where most people still associate tattoos with Japan’s mafia, the Yakuza. If you’ve got small tattoos that can be covered with a waterproof bandage, you shouldn’t have any trouble getting in, but if you’re tatted from head to toe, your best bet for visiting an onsen is to book a private one through a ryokan (traditional Japanese inn). Some onsen around Tokyo are specifically geared toward foreigners and are more lenient when it comes to tattoos (and nudity, as mentioned above), but they are few and far between.

Rule #7: Stay and relax after your dip

Most Japanese onsen have areas to relax after your stay in the hot spring. From hot sand rooms to small bars to lounge areas with massaging chairs and glasses of Kirin Ichiban beer or sake (Japanese rice wine), these facilities are the cherry on top of the onsen cake, and you should take advantage of them while you can. Where else are you going to be able to nap under a pile of heated sand? Only in Japan!

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