Shioyu Okageburokan Asahiyu (汐湯 おかげ風呂舘 旭湯)
This bathhouse stands on the Seta River. Here you can soak in waters containing an abundance of minerals and warm your body to the very core. The bathhouse' baths are filled with seawater from Futamiura, the same water used by visitors to the Ise Jingu shrine since time immemorial to purify body and soul. Out of a desire to make it possible for people to purify themselves according to Shinto tradition in the bathhouse before visiting the shrine, the bathhouse replaces the waters in its baths twice a day in the morning and in the evening. The bathhouse is replete with a Futamiura sweater outdoor bath, roiling bath, micro bubble bath, and a far-infrared sauna. Note that the bathhouse does not provide shampoo or other amenities; you must bring your own or purchase them at the front desk. The bathhouse is a 10-minute walk from Iseshi Station.
Mie Ise-shi Jinkyu 1-1-16 (Ise / Shima / TobaArea)
12:00-24:00
*Please inquire for New Year's Eve Sunday
Details
- Hours
- 12:00-24:00
*Please inquire for New Year's Eve Sunday - Closed
- Irregular holidays (4 times on Monday)
- Fees
- [Fee]
[Adult]400yen
[Elementary School Students]150yen
[Breast Child]70yen
*Breast Child is 0 years old-until preschool - Parking Lot
- Available
- Credit Card
- Not available
- Smoking
- Not available (non-smoking throughout)
- Wi-Fi
- Not available
- Average budget
- [Day] 1-1,000yen
[Night] 1-1,000yen - Estimated stay time
- 30-60 minutes
- Wheelchair accessible
- Yes (Elevator is available up to the front of the 2F shoe box)
- Infant friendly
- Available
Information Sources: NAVITIME JAPAN
Access
Mie Areas

Spread across the eastern side of the Kii Peninsula, Mie prefecture boasts hundreds of kilometers of pretty coastline comprising the oyster-rich Toba city and Shima National Park all the way down to Kumano, a city that marks the beginning of part of the Kumano Kodo pilgrimage, which runs into neighboring Wakayama prefecture. However, Mie is best known for the Ise Jingu Shinto shrine inland, one of the oldest and largest shrines in the country.