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Ryujin Onsen Marui Ryokan

★★Tanabe
8.6/ 10Very good

Based on public data

Review

This hotel has little guest-verified firsthand data yet. 0 reports; thin data, conclusions stay cautious. High-value questions (upgrades, lounge, breakfast) stay marked insufficient — we label thin data, we never fabricate.

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06External scores · reference only, not verified
8.55/10FlyerKey composite

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Rooms & Views

Deluxe Family Room
6x Futon Mat 26 Up to 6

The family room features air conditioning, tatami, as well as a shared bathroom boasting a bidet and a hairdryer. This f…

Japanese-Style Room
4x Futon Mat 26 Up to 4

The family room provides air conditioning, tatami, as well as a private bathroom featuring a shower and a bidet. The uni…

Japanese-Style Superior Room
4x Futon Mat 20 Up to 4

The quadruple room provides air conditioning, tatami, as well as a private bathroom featuring a shower and a hairdryer.…

Japanese-Style Standard Room with Shared Bathroom
4x Futon Mat 13 Up to 4

The triple room features air conditioning, tatami, as well as a shared bathroom boasting a bidet and a hairdryer. The un…

Japanese-Style Economy Room with Shared Bathroom
2x Futon Mat 10 Up to 2

The double room offers air conditioning, tatami, as well as a shared bathroom boasting a bidet and a hairdryer. This dou…

T2 · Official booking system. Actual features may vary.

Restaurants nearby

  • SÉN★ Michelin Picture yourself standing in a lush mountain valley, listening to the murmur of a nearby stream. This is SÉN’s ‘watershed cuisine’, a prix fixe experience in which time slowly passes and everyday cares are forgotten. The focus of this fare is on the foods of the Kumano River valley. The bounty of this mountain stream, which flows from the village of Tenkawa to the sea, includes vegetables, fish and game supplied by local farmers and hunters. In tribute to a region that prospered through forestry, the dishes are cooked over firewood.51.9km
  • à plus★ Michelin The restaurant shares a site occupied by a sake brewery since the days of the shoguns. A black counter reflects the Japanese interior of this refurbished traditional house. Locally grown and raised ingredients are the star of the cuisine, with Nara-style pickled vegetables, Yamato beef and vegetables all expressing the terroir of Nara. Akitsuho rice, used in sake brewing, makes an appearance in prix fixe offerings, transformed into rice dishes such as paella and risotto. Sake pairings from the unique expertise of a sake brewer are another reason to visit.67.5km
  • Da terra★ Michelin A peaceful, traditional rural house surrounded by farmland is home to this restaurant. The shop is an advertisement for the good earth of Asuka, ‘the place where Japan began’, and its bounty. Main ingredients consist of produce cultivated by the chef’s family. One item, a brightly colourful salad, is named “Daichi Kara”, “From the Land”. Wheat is turned into pasta, rice into risotto. Set menus are a journey through the seasons, calculated to inspire gratitude to nature as one proceeds through the meal.71.4km
  • Sushi Kawashima★ Michelin Sushi Kawashima pursues its own way in the sushi world, a route that crosses paths with the food culture of Nara. Sashimi is dressed with hishio, a koji-mould and salt-water mixture said to be the origin of soy sauce. Snacks are served with preserved so, a condensed-milk product enjoyed in ancient Japan. Yamato tachibana pepper is a seasoning made from an ancient citrus fruit. Sushi of gizzard shad with persimmon leaf testifies to the chef’s lively imagination. Nigirizushi is formed without wasabi, to bring out the flavours of the topping and sushi rice. Persimmon-leaf tea is a relaxing treat 71.8km
  • Lega'★ Michelin The chef prizes his relations with food producers; the better to express the appeal of each region’s topography. Lega’ means ‘bind’ or ‘connect’: the restaurant binds together the food cultures of Italy and Nara and puts diners in touch with the thoughts of food producers. Sushi of uncured ham and persimmon leaf, venison senbei—a dish resembling Nara’s famous deer crackers—and other unique items overlay one tradition onto another. The chef honed his skills in Italy’s Piemonte region, which is why he devotes himself to making hand-rolled pastas such as tajarin and agnolotti in autumn and winter71.8km
  • Kaiseki Morimoto★ Michelin The interior of the old traditional house is refurbished, yet the Showa-era ambience is unmistakable. The chef cooks alone, dedicated to his credo of serving everything straight from the kitchen to the table. What impresses most are the vegetables. Each plate features leaf and root vegetables grown under the personal care of the chef’s father, a landscape architect. The chef uses restrained seasoning to bring out the flavours of the ingredients. Takikomi-gohan made with vegetables picked that morning is served with house-made pickles. Simple, honest cooking, done as only Morimoto can.74.3km
  • Taian★★★ Michelin ‘Taian’ means ‘big hut’, and indeed this little place has a huge spirit. Recalling the apparent paradox of the tea ceremony, in which a small, spare space is made to feel boundless, the cosy and clean décor is exceptional in its modesty. The cuisine crystallises the skill and passion of Hitoshi Takahata, while the contrast between outward appearance and inner content is a reflection of his philosophy. Cuisine with depths of flavour satisfies the soul.87.1km
  • HAJIME★★★ Michelin An artwork resembling a planet dominates the dining room. Look closely and the ‘planet’ contains overlapping images of cuisine, which gather together to form a picture of the Earth. ‘Dialogue with the Earth’ is, indeed, the theme of this restaurant. The experience of growing up amid the beauty of nature shaped the bold world view of Hajime Yoneda. The digitised recipes and detailed cuisine attest to his experience as a system engineer. Cuisine that draws inspiration from all Creation is imbued with love and respect for nature.88.8km
  • Ajinokaze Nishimura★ Michelin Hearty deliciousness is the order of the day here. Simple arrangements convey the sincerity of the chef’s commitment to his craft. Hinohikari rice from Nara Prefecture is cooked in clay pots and seasoned with chirimen sansho (small fish cooked with peppers). The meal concludes with handmade confections served with matcha, to send you on your way feeling relaxed and calm. This Japanese cuisine is woven together with ingredients and crockery from Sakurai. The ‘aji no kaze’ or ‘winds of flavour’ blow gently amid the beauty of nature.77.1km
  • Sushi Harasho★★ Michelin The stately tea-house interior and Japanese-style painting of the spray from a waterfall enfold guests in an atmosphere of tranquillity. Proclaiming a no-nonsense approach to sushi, the two chefs restrict seasoning and other preparations to the bare minimum. They add no sugar to the sushi rice, the better to draw out the natural sweetness of fish and rice. Tuna is marinated in soy sauce only briefly; conger eel dressed in sauce that is only slightly sweet. As they form sushi by hand, both chefs focus on the basics of rice, wasabi, vinegar and fish.85.9km

Includes Michelin / Black Pearl / guide picks (reference quality, no prices); data from Overture, Michelin Guide and others.

Attractions nearby

  • Hōryū-ji Temple Buddhist temple in Nara Prefecture, Japan83.6km
  • Akashi Kaikyō Bridge suspension bridge in Kobe, Japan91.6km
  • Osaka Castle Japanese castle in Chūō-ku, Osaka, Japan88.7km
  • Yanmar Stadium Nagai building in Higashisumiyoshi-ku, Osaka Prefecture, Japan80.5km
  • Adventure World theme park and zoo in Shirahama, Wakayama Prefecture, Japan27.0km
  • Shitennō-ji Temple Built in 593 A.D., this famous Buddhist temple features a five-story pagoda, statues and turtle ponds85.0km
  • Tōdai-ji Temple Japanese Buddhist temple in Nara94.5km
  • Universal Studios Japan theme park in Osaka, Japan86.3km

Attraction data from Wikidata (CC0) — reference only.

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