🎉

Party Score: 7/10 — Group & Event Friendly

Secluded location, good facilities for groups, and room to be social. See all party-friendly campgrounds

Saitama Togetsuen Camp

さいたま桃月園キャンプ場

Saitama City, Saitama

4.4 (237)
Saitama Togetsuen Camp in Japan
Category fallback image Source: Fallback art Checked: 2026-03-02

Fallback stock-style category art. Replace with venue-specific imagery when available. Google Place photo can be used as a future live fallback if rights-cleared and properly attributed.

Overview

Saitama Togetsuen Campground is a small, thoughtfully designed campground in the Nishi Ward of Saitama City, created for campers who value simplicity and quiet over flashy amenities. With just thirteen plots ranging from thirty-five to sixty square meters, the campground maintains an intimate atmosphere that encourages relaxation rather than the party-style camping found at larger facilities.

The campground opened in May 2021 with a clear philosophy: eliminate the long drives that eat into camping weekends. Located in the flatlands west of Omiya, it sits just twenty minutes by car from central Saitama City and roughly forty-five minutes from Shinjuku. For those without a car, Sashiogi Station on the JR Saikyo Line is a seventeen-minute walk away, making this one of the few quality campgrounds in the Kanto region accessible entirely by train.

A signature offering is the unlimited firewood program at two thousand yen for one fire pit, with additional pits at fifteen hundred yen each. For campers who love tending a fire, this removes the usual anxiety about rationing wood and lets the campfire become the centerpiece of the evening. Free showers, clean gender-separated restrooms, and a small management office shop round out the facilities.

Plot pricing starts from three thousand to four thousand yen plus facility fees, keeping the overall cost reasonable for what amounts to a suburban camping experience. The campground's barrier-free design and variety of accommodation types, including tent sites, RV spots, auto camping areas, glamping units, cabins, bungalows, and cottages, make it accessible to a wide range of visitors.

The Nishi-Yuba area of Saitama City is flat agricultural land bordered by the Arakawa River, offering open skies unusual for the Tokyo metropolitan area. Saitama City itself provides urban amenities including the Railway Museum in Omiya, Hikawa Shrine, and numerous shopping and dining options along the Saikyo Line corridor.

For more campgrounds like this, see our Camping near Tokyo guide, Hot spring camping guide, Pet-friendly camping guide or Glamping in Japan guide.

Getting there from Tokyo

45 min from Shinjuku; 17 min walk from Sashiogi Station (JR Saikyo Line); 20 min by car from Omiya

Best season to visit

Year-round; spring and autumn most comfortable; summer for evening campfires

Nearby activities

  • Omiya Railway Museum
  • Hikawa Shrine
  • Arakawa River cycling path
  • Omiya Bonsai Village
  • Saitama Super Arena events
)}

Full details for Saitama Togetsuen Camp

JaCamp Pro unlocks:

  • Nightly pricing & booking friction rating
  • English support score
  • Full amenity & site type breakdown
  • Map, contact info & directions
Subscribe to JaCamp Pro — $10/month

Already a subscriber? · Or get one-off booking help from $100

Plan your trip to Saitama City

Saitama City Nishi Ward, Arakawa River floodplain, Omiya Railway Museum, Hikawa Shrine, Saikyo Line corridor

Browse our campgrounds in Saitama City 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 Saitama City

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 Saitama City 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.

Planning a group trip?

Share this listing with your travel group so everyone has the details.

Need help booking Saitama Togetsuen Camp?

Get Help