Lo cierto de Kamakura es que la mayoría de la gente la visita como excursión de un día desde Tokio y regresa por la tarde. Lo cual está bien, pero te pierdes lo mejor — los templos con la luz suave de la mañana antes de que lleguen las multitudes, y Hasedera al atardecer con la bahía tiñéndose de rosa. Así que si tienes tiempo, quédate una noche. No te arrepentirás. Esta ciudad costera está a una hora al sur de Tokio por la línea JR Yokosuka — templos budistas con historia, un Daibutsu (Gran Buda) de bronce de 13 metros sentado al aire libre en Kotoku-in desde 1252, y Komachi-dori, la larga calle de tiendas que va directa desde la estación hasta el santuario Tsurugaoka Hachimangu. El Templo Hasedera se alza sobre la bahía con sus escalones bordeados de hortensias (preciosísimo en junio), y el viejo tranvía Enoden sigue traqueteando por la costa de Shichirigahama hacia la isla de Enoshima. Es básicamente el punto ideal entre playa y templos en la versión más auténtica de Japón. Ojo: los hoteles escasean aquí porque la mayoría de visitantes se van por la tarde. Los pocos que existen se llenan rápido los fines de semana y festivos, así que reserva con antelación. Nuestro equipo revisó 5 opciones para todos los estilos — desde Hotel Metropolitan Kamakura justo en la estación, hasta el resort-style Kamakura Prince en la costa de Shichirigahama, pasando por Kamakura COCON, una impresionante casa de mercader restaurada de 160 años a pasos del Gran Buda. WeBase tiene literas modernas y limpias para mochileros, y Kamakura Seizan es un pequeño ryokan de diseño con la tranquilidad de la montaña. Todos con puntuación de 8.0+ según huéspedes reales.
Dónde alojarse — barrios
Lo cierto de Kamakura es que la mayoría de la gente la visita como excursión de un día desde Tokio y regresa por la tarde. Lo cual está bien, pero te pierdes lo mejor — los templos con la luz suave de la mañana antes de que lleguen las multitudes, y Hasedera al atardecer con la bahía tiñéndose de rosa. Así que si tienes tiempo, quédate una noche. No te arrepentirás. Esta ciudad costera está a una hora al sur de Tokio por la línea JR Yokosuka — templos budistas con historia, un Daibutsu (Gran Buda) de bronce de 13 metros sentado al aire libre en Kotoku-in desde 1252, y Komachi-dori, la larga calle de tiendas que va directa desde la estación hasta el santuario Tsurugaoka Hachimangu. El Templo Hasedera se alza sobre la bahía con sus escalones bordeados de hortensias (preciosísimo en junio), y el viejo tranvía Enoden sigue traqueteando por la costa de Shichirigahama hacia la isla de Enoshima. Es básicamente el punto ideal entre playa y templos en la versión más auténtica de Japón. Ojo: los hoteles escasean aquí porque la mayoría de visitantes se van por la tarde. Los pocos que existen se llenan rápido los fines de semana y festivos, así que reserva con antelación. Nuestro equipo revisó 5 opciones para todos los estilos — desde Hotel Metropolitan Kamakura justo en la estación, hasta el resort-style Kamakura Prince en la costa de Shichirigahama, pasando por Kamakura COCON, una impresionante casa de mercader restaurada de 160 años a pasos del Gran Buda. WeBase tiene literas modernas y limpias para mochileros, y Kamakura Seizan es un pequeño ryokan de diseño con la tranquilidad de la montaña. Todos con puntuación de 8.0+ según huéspedes reales.Elegimos primero por ubicación y barrio, luego por puntuaciones reales de huéspedes en Agoda · Booking.com · Trip.com, características únicas y relación calidad-precio.
Reseñas · 5 mejores hoteles
Toca un estilo de viaje — la lista se reordena para mostrar la mejor opción primero.
No. 1 #1 location · steps from Kamakura Station ★8.8 Hotel Metropolitan Kamakura
📍 Right by Kamakura Station — a 2-minute walk, with Komachi Street starting at the door and Tsurugaoka Hachimangu Shrine a 10-to-15-minute walk on.
Hotel Metropolitan Kamakura is the best-located 4-star in town — a 2-minute walk from Kamakura Station and sitting right where Komachi Street, the souvenir-and-snack lane, begins. It opened in 2021, so the rooms are new and noticeably larger than what most Japanese hotels at this price give you. Breakfast is a buffet downstairs at the Muji Cafe — both Japanese and Western spreads — and it's the part guests rave about most. The station sits on the JR Yokosuka Line, which runs straight in from Yokohama and Tokyo with no transfer, and from the platform the Enoden tram gets you to Hase for the Great Buddha in 8 to 10 minutes. Reviews land at 8.8/10, with repeated praise for friendly staff and spotless rooms. From about $143 a night, it works equally well for couples and business travelers.
- 2-minute walk to Kamakura Station
- New 2021 rooms, roomy
- Muji Cafe breakfast
- No onsen or spa
- Prices jump in peak season
Affiliate links — we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. Details
No. 2 #2 Sea views · Most romantic stay ★8.3 Kamakura Prince Hotel
📍 On the Shichirigahama coast facing Sagami Bay, a 5-minute walk from Shichirigahama Station and about 10 minutes by Enoden from central Kamakura.
Kamakura Prince Hotel sits right on the Shichirigahama coast, looking straight out over Sagami Bay — and on clear winter or early-spring mornings the white cone of Mt. Fuji shows up above the horizon. This is the most romantic of the Kamakura picks: a 4-star, 96-room property built away from the shrine-district crowds, with an outdoor pool that opens in summer and an in-house French restaurant that cooks with ingredients from around the bay. It scores 8.3/10 on guest reviews, with praise for the rooms and the setting. You trade convenience for the view — it's about 10 minutes by the little Enoden line from central Kamakura, then a 5-minute walk — but for couples, anniversaries, or anyone who wants to actually slow down, that trade is the whole point.
- Sagami Bay and Mt. Fuji views from some rooms — the best in Kamakura
- Romantic setting, ideal for anniversaries or a honeymoon
- Quality in-house French restaurant using local ingredients
- Far from central Kamakura Station — transfer to the Enoden line first
- Pool open in summer only (roughly July–September)
Affiliate links — we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. Details
No. 3 #3 boutique design · near station & beach ★8.5 WeBase Kamakura
📍 Near Kamakura Station — a 3-minute walk, with Yuigahama Beach about 10 minutes away.
WeBase Kamakura used to be a hostel and reopened as a boutique hotel with all private rooms — no shared dorms left. The look is contemporary and freshly renovated, with a clean Japanese-modern feel, and the location does a lot of the work: 3 minutes on foot to Kamakura Station and about 10 minutes to Yuigahama Beach. It scores 8.5/10 with guests and sits at #2 among Kamakura hotels on TripAdvisor, which is unusual at this price. Rooms start around $100 a night, the best value on our Kamakura list, and from the front door you can walk to Komachi Street in 5 minutes or hop the Enoden line toward Hasedera and the Great Buddha. Past guests keep using the same phrase — better than the price suggests.
- Best value on this list for the design and location
- Stylish contemporary look, very photogenic
- 3 min to the station, 10 min to Yuigahama Beach
- No restaurant on site — you eat out nearby
- Rooms are compact
Affiliate links — we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. Details
No. 4 #4 Luxury boutique · highest score, only 2 suites ★9.2 Kamakura COCON
📍 A quiet residential pocket of real Kamakura, a 15-minute walk from Kamakura Station and just 5 minutes from Tsurugaoka Hachimangu shrine.
Kamakura COCON is not really a hotel — it is an experience. The building is a 160-year-old wooden house from the Edo era, carefully restored and turned into a luxury boutique with only 2 suites of about 85 sqm each, taking just 2 groups of guests per night. Dinner is an Italian course the chef cooks fresh in front of you using local ingredients from Kamakura and the Miura Peninsula. The private Japanese garden you see from the rooms looks good in every season — cherry petals in spring, red leaves in autumn. It opened in 2018 and scores 9.2–9.3/10 from real guests. Tsurugaoka Hachimangu, Kamakura's most famous shrine, is a 5-minute walk away. This is a place for a once-in-a-lifetime trip, not a quick city stopover.
- Highest score on the list at 9.2/10
- Maximum privacy — only 2 groups a night
- Fresh Italian course dinner at the counter
- Most expensive on the list, from about $343/night
- Hard to book — reserve months ahead in peak season
Affiliate links — we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. Details
No. 5 #5 Ryokan · private onsen + kaiseki ★8.7 Kamakura Seizan
📍 Hokokuji temple district — a 15-minute bus ride from Kamakura Station, with Hokokuji (the bamboo-grove temple) a 5-minute walk away.
Kamakura Seizan is the ryokan we'd book in Kamakura when the point of the trip is a private onsen and a proper kaiseki dinner, not a station-side base. It sits near Hokokuji — the temple famous for its big bamboo grove — in a quiet, almost rural pocket where few tourists pass through. Each room is Japanese-style with its own onsen you can soak in whenever you like, so there's no waiting for a shared bath and no fixed hours. Reviewers consistently call out the hot water, the food and the attention to small details, and the score lands at 8.7/10. Dinner is a seasonal kaiseki built from Kamakura and Miura Peninsula produce, and a Japanese breakfast follows in the morning. Rates start around $200 a night including both meals. The trade-off is distance: the temple district is a 15-minute bus ride from the main station rather than a short walk.
- Private in-room onsen you can use any time, no waiting
- Seasonal kaiseki from Kamakura and Miura produce
- Quiet ryokan feel — yukata, Japanese-style rooms
- 15-minute bus from the main station
- Pricey once both meals are bundled in
Affiliate links — we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. Details
📊Comparativa · 5 hoteles
| # | Hotel | Estrellas | Puntuación | Desde / noche | Zona | Destacado |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Hotel Metropolitan Kamakura | 4 | 8.8 | ~$143 | Kamakura Station, a 2-minute walk, on the JR Yokosuka Line — straight to Yokohama in 27 minutes and Shinjuku in 65. | #1 location · steps from Kamakura Station |
| 2 | Kamakura Prince Hotel | 4 | 8.3 | ~$129 | Shichirigahama Station (Enoden) is a 5-minute walk; central Kamakura is about 10 minutes away by train. | #2 Sea views · Most romantic stay |
| 3 | WeBase Kamakura | 3 | 8.5 | ~$100 | Kamakura Station, 3-minute walk — Yuigahama Beach about 10 minutes on foot. | #3 boutique design · near station & beach |
| 4 | Kamakura COCON | 5 | 9.2 | ~$343 | 15-minute walk from Kamakura Station; Tsurugaoka Hachimangu is a 5-minute walk away. No shuttle. | #4 Luxury boutique · highest score, only 2 suites |
| 5 | Kamakura Seizan | 4 | 8.7 | ~$200 | Kamakura Station is about a 15-minute bus ride away on the Kenchoji / Hokokuji line, or roughly 10 minutes by taxi. | #5 Ryokan · private onsen + kaiseki |
Cuál elegir — por estilo de viaje
#1 Hotel Metropolitan is the best-placed hotel in Kamakura — next to the station, with rooms wider than you'd expect at this tier.
#2 Kamakura Prince is the most romantic sea-view hotel in Kamakura — an outdoor pool and a French restaurant on a quiet stretch of coast.
#3 WeBase is a well-designed boutique stay that costs less than the 4-star hotels yet sits steps from the station and beach — the best middle option in Kamakura.
#4 Kamakura COCON is a stay you cannot get anywhere else — a 160-year-old house, 2 suites, and a fresh Italian course dinner cooked at the counter.
#5 Kamakura Seizan is the ryokan we'd pick in Kamakura for one reason: a private in-room onsen you can soak in any hour, paired with kaiseki and a bamboo-grove setting.
Selección final
5 hoteles para todos los estilos y presupuestos — elige por barrio, características únicas y estilo de viaje.
Haz clic en cualquiera para leer la reseña completa y comparar precios en Agoda · Booking.com · Trip.com.