Hato No Su Garden Campground

鳩ノ巣ガーデンキヤンプ場

Okutama, Tokyo

3.2 (29)
Hato No Su Garden Campground in Japan
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Overview

Camping in Tokyo offers more variety than most visitors expect, and Hatonosu Garden Campground in Okutama is a good example of why. The campground occupies terrain that gives it a distinct personality — not a cookie-cutter layout replicated across the region.

The campground provides well-kept sites that balance outdoor authenticity with practical comfort.

Lake Okutama reflects forested ridges, and Nippara Limestone Cave hides underground chambers. Beyond the site boundaries, Lake Okutama, Nippara Limestone Cave, Tama River gorges, Mt. Kumotori (Tokyo's highest) round out a day's itinerary.

Western Tokyo campgrounds are reached via the JR Chuo or Ome Lines, or the Chuo Expressway. The Ogasawara Islands require a 24-hour ferry from Takeshiba Pier, departing roughly every 6 days. Reservations may require a phone call in Japanese — a translation app or bilingual friend can help with booking. The campground carries a 3.2-star Google rating from 29 reviews, reflecting consistent visitor satisfaction. Mountain areas are best from April to November.

Hatonosu Garden Campground will resonate most with couples on a weekend reset, small friend groups, and solo travelers seeking quiet. For travelers based in Tokyo who want genuine outdoor time without a major expedition, this Okutama campground hits the mark.

For more campgrounds like this, see our Camping near Tokyo guide.

Getting there from Tokyo

Western Tokyo campgrounds are reached via the JR Chuo or Ome Lines, or the Chuo Expressway. The Ogasawara Islands require a 24-hour ferry from Takeshiba Pier, departing roughly every 6 days.

Best season to visit

Mountain areas are best from April to November. The Ogasawara Islands enjoy a subtropical climate suitable for year-round visits, with whale-watching season from February to April.

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Full details for Hato No Su Garden Campground

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Plan your trip to Okutama

Okutama is Tokyo's final frontier, a mountain town where the Tama River carves through limestone gorges beneath peaks reaching 2,000 meters. Lake Okutama reflects forested ridges, and Nippara Limestone Cave hides underground chambers. It's wilderness camping with a Tokyo address.

Browse our campgrounds in Okutama page for local comparisons. Use the official site and map links below to confirm access, check-in details, and any Japanese-only booking steps.

More campgrounds in Okutama

If this listing is close but not quite right, compare it with other nearby options in the same municipality. That is usually the fastest way to find a better fit for your budget, site style, or booking comfort level.

Want the wider picture? Browse our full Okutama area page for a broader list of local campgrounds.

Related guides and next steps

Use JaCamp’s planning content to figure out what this campground actually means in practice: whether you need a car, whether the booking flow is likely to stay Japanese-only, and what kind of setup makes the most sense for a short trip from Tokyo.

Our directory pages tell you what the campground offers. The guides below help you translate that into a real trip plan, especially if you are new to camping in Japan or trying to avoid getting stuck in a Japanese-only booking flow.

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