Furano is the obvious base for a Hokkaido ski trip if you want to avoid the Niseko circus. But sticking to just one resort for your entire trip means missing out on some of the best skiing in Japan – and it’s all within a couple hours’ drive.
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The Hokkaido Powder Belt is a roughly 200-kilometer corridor through central Hokkaido where the snow is consistently lighter and drier than anywhere else on the island. Furano is the anchor, but there are four other mountains nearby that are worth your time. Some are cheap, some are luxurious, one is basically backcountry with a single gondola. Here’s what’s actually worth the drive from your Furano base.
Why the Powder Belt Snow Is Different
Quick geography lesson. Niseko, Rusutsu, and the other western Hokkaido resorts sit close to the Sea of Japan. Moisture-heavy storms roll in off the water and dump wet, heavy snow. It’s still great skiing, but that snow packs down fast and gets tracked out quickly.
The Powder Belt resorts – Furano, Kamui, Tomamu, and the mountains around Asahikawa – are far enough inland that the same storms have already dropped their moisture by the time the snow reaches here. What’s left is the lightest, driest powder in Japan. Some days it’s so light it barely registers on your skis. That’s not marketing fluff – it’s basic meteorology, and it’s the reason serious powder hounds base themselves in central Hokkaido instead of Niseko.
Kamui Ski Links: The Local’s Secret
About an hour north of Furano, near Asahikawa, Kamui Ski Links is the most underrated ski area in Hokkaido. Possibly in all of Japan.
The stats: 751 meters of vertical, 25 courses, longest run stretching 4 kilometers. Respectable for any resort. But the real draw is the combination of excellent snow, zero crowds, and absurdly low prices.
A day pass at Kamui runs about 3,500-4,000 yen. That’s roughly half what Furano charges and a third of Niseko. For that price, you get access to some genuinely good tree skiing and fall-line runs that hold powder for days because nobody’s there to track it out. I’ve skied fresh lines at Kamui at 2pm on a Saturday. Try doing that at Niseko.
Asahikawa is one of Japan’s snowiest cities, and Kamui benefits directly from that. The mountain gets buried. Storm days here are special – consistent snowfall, light wind (the terrain is protected), and you’ll share the mountain with maybe a few hundred local skiers from Asahikawa.
The downsides are real though. Facilities are basic – think old-school Japanese ski area, not polished resort. The lifts are slow. English signage is minimal. There’s no fancy lodge, no craft beer bar at the base, no Instagram-worthy restaurant. You come here to ski, and that’s about it.
If that sounds perfect to you, it is. Kamui is where I’d send any experienced skier who tells me they want cheap, uncrowded powder in Japan.
Getting there from Furano: About 1 hour by car. You can also train to Asahikawa and grab a shuttle, but having a car makes the day trip much smoother.
One more thing about Kamui: they’ve got a solid curry rice at the base lodge for about 800 yen. Nothing fancy, but it’s hot and filling after a morning in the cold. The vending machines have hot canned coffee for 130 yen, which is all the apres-ski you’re getting here. And honestly, that’s fine.
Hoshino Resorts Tomamu: The Luxury Option
Tomamu is the opposite end of the spectrum from Kamui. About 1.5 hours south of Furano, this is Hoshino Resorts’ flagship winter destination – and they’ve poured money into making it an experience that goes way beyond skiing.
Two connected mountains offer solid terrain variety. There’s legitimate steep skiing, good tree runs in designated areas, and enough groomed cruisers to keep intermediates happy all day. The snow quality benefits from the same Powder Belt geography, though Tomamu’s more exposed position means it catches more wind than Furano or Kamui.
Day passes run 6,000-7,000 yen – comparable to Furano’s pricing.
What makes Tomamu unique is the Ice Village. Every winter, they build an entire village out of ice – bars where you drink from ice glasses, a chapel made entirely of ice, shops, and illuminated sculptures. It sounds gimmicky, and sure, it’s a tourist attraction. But walking through it at night with snow falling is genuinely striking. Even the most cynical skier tends to enjoy it.
Accommodation is high-end: the Hoshino Resorts Tower and Risonare Tomamu are proper luxury hotels with prices to match. Club Med has a property here too. This is not the budget option.
Tomamu makes the most sense for: families where not everyone skis, couples who want luxury, and anyone who treats the skiing as part of a broader winter holiday rather than the entire point. If you’re a ski-obsessed powder hound on a budget, skip Tomamu and go to Kamui instead.
Getting there from Furano: About 1.5 hours by car via the expressway. Day-tripping is possible but not ideal since the drive eats into your ski time. Better as an overnight if you can swing it.
If you do stay overnight, Tomamu’s Mina Mina Beach is worth checking out – it’s an indoor wave pool with a tropical temperature, which feels absurd when there’s a blizzard outside. The whole Hoshino setup is designed so that non-skiers have plenty to do: Ice Village alone takes a full evening to explore, and the outdoor hot springs have forest views that are hard to beat.
Sahoro Resort: The Quiet Middle Ground
Sahoro sits near Tomamu but operates at a completely different pace. Twenty-one courses, decent vertical, and a relaxed atmosphere that feels more like a local ski hill than a resort destination.
The unusual draw here is Bear Mountain – a bear sanctuary literally on the resort property. You can ski in the morning and visit Hokkaido brown bears in the afternoon. It’s a weird combination that somehow works, especially if you’re traveling with kids who might not want to ski all day every day.
Sahoro is more affordable than Tomamu and draws far fewer tourists. The skiing is intermediate-friendly with some decent steeps available. Think of it as a half-day add-on when you’re in the Tomamu area rather than a primary destination.
Getting there from Furano: About 1.5 hours by car, similar route as Tomamu.
Asahidake: For the Serious Ones
Asahidake (Mt. Asahi) is Hokkaido’s highest peak at 2,291 meters, and calling it a “ski resort” would be misleading. It’s a single ropeway (gondola) that takes you up an active volcanic mountain. No groomed runs. No marked trails. No ski patrol in the traditional sense. Just the mountain, the snow, and whatever line you choose to ski down.
This is backcountry skiing accessed by a lift. In winter, it’s expert-only territory. The terrain is open and alpine above treeline, transitioning to tight trees below. Navigation matters. Avalanche awareness matters. This is not a place for your first powder day.
What it offers to those who can handle it is unmatched. Asahidake gets the most snow in Hokkaido – more than anywhere else on the island. The snow is impossibly light at elevation. On a good day, you’re skiing thigh-deep powder with volcanic steam vents visible across the crater. There’s nothing else like it.
About 30 minutes from Asahikawa and roughly 2 hours from Furano, Asahidake is best treated as a special day out rather than a daily destination. Check conditions carefully before going – visibility and wind can shut things down fast at that elevation.
The ropeway costs around 3,200 yen for a return ticket, and most people do 3-5 laps in a day – the hike back to the ropeway station from your chosen descent route takes effort, and in deep powder it’s a workout. Bring your own gear; there are no rental shops up here. And carry water and snacks – there’s one basic lodge at the ropeway base, but nothing on the mountain itself.
Getting there from Furano: About 2 hours by car, routing through Asahikawa. No public transport option that makes sense for a day trip.
Resort Comparison
| Resort | Distance from Furano | Day Pass | Vertical | Best For | Crowds |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Furano | – | 6,500-7,500 yen | 964m | All-round powder skiing | Low-moderate |
| Kamui Ski Links | 1 hr north | 3,500-4,000 yen | 751m | Budget powder, tree skiing | Very low |
| Tomamu | 1.5 hrs south | 6,000-7,000 yen | Varies | Families, luxury, non-skiers | Moderate |
| Sahoro | 1.5 hrs south | ~4,500 yen | Moderate | Relaxed skiing, families | Very low |
| Asahidake | 2 hrs north | ~3,500 yen | ~1,000m+ | Expert backcountry | Minimal |
The Powder Belt Pass
If you’re planning to hit multiple resorts, the Hokkaido Powder Belt 5-day pass is the play. For around 30,000 yen, you get 5 days of skiing valid at Furano, Tomamu, and Kamui Ski Links. That works out to 6,000 yen per day across three resorts – cheaper than buying individual day passes at Furano alone.
A solid week-long itinerary from a Furano base: 3 days at Furano, 1 day at Kamui, 1 day at Tomamu using the Powder Belt pass. Save Asahidake for a powder day if you have the skills and a spare day. Take a rest day to explore Furano town somewhere in the middle – your legs will thank you.
What to Pack for Multi-Resort Days
If you’re hitting different resorts on different days, a few things make life easier. Keep a change of base layers in the car – you’ll sweat on warmer days at Tomamu and freeze at Asahidake, so having options matters. A thermos of hot tea or coffee saves you from relying on vending machines at the more basic resorts like Kamui. Portable phone charger is essential since you’ll be using GPS navigation between resorts and your phone drains fast in the cold.
For Asahidake specifically, pack an avalanche beacon, probe, and shovel if you have backcountry experience. Even if you’re staying in bounds (such as it is with one ropeway and no marked runs), the terrain is serious enough that basic safety gear is non-negotiable. If you don’t own this gear or know how to use it, stick to the other resorts.
Day Trip Logistics
All of these resorts are doable as day trips from Furano, but a rental car makes everything dramatically easier. Winter driving in Hokkaido is straightforward if you have snow experience – roads are well-maintained, and all rental cars come with proper winter tires.
Without a car, Kamui is reachable by train to Asahikawa plus a shuttle. Tomamu has a train station (Tomamu Station on the Sekisho Line), though service is infrequent. Sahoro and Asahidake are essentially car-only for day trips.
If you need help with transport options around Furano, a rental car from Asahikawa or Furano Station is the most flexible choice. Budget about 5,000-7,000 yen per day for a compact car with insurance.
My Recommendation
Base yourself in Furano. Ski Furano most days – it’s your home mountain and the snow is consistently excellent. Drive to Kamui on a storm day when you want empty slopes and don’t mind basic facilities. Hit Tomamu if you want a change of scenery or you’re traveling with someone who’d rather explore Ice Village than ski another run. And if you’re an experienced backcountry skier and Asahidake is getting hammered with snow, drop everything and go. Those are the days you’ll remember twenty years from now.
The Powder Belt doesn’t have Niseko’s name recognition or its nightlife. What it has is better snow, lower prices, and the feeling that you’ve found something most tourists haven’t figured out yet. That won’t last forever – Furano’s Ikon Pass inclusion is already bringing more international visitors. Go now, before the secret gets out completely.
And if you’re debating between spending a full week at Furano versus splitting time across the Powder Belt – do the split. Furano is your home base and main mountain, but those one or two day trips to Kamui or Asahidake will be the stories you tell when you get home.