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For Australians choosing among Japan, Europe and North America, Japan’s rise as a ski destination is no accident.
Yes, the Alps still carry old-world prestige, and North America remains a major global ski market. But for Australian travellers, Japan now offers a rare combination: serious snow, practical access, strong value, family-friendly culture and plenty to enjoy beyond the slopes.
That helps explain why Australian travel to Japan topped 1,058,300 visitors in 2025, passing one million for the first time. Visa also reported that visits to Japan’s ski destinations rose about 40% year on year during the 2024/25 peak ski season.
From Brisbane, a direct flight to Tokyo takes roughly 9 to 10 hours, depending on airline and season. Once in Japan, ski-country access is surprisingly efficient.
From Tokyo, the Hokuriku Shinkansen can reach Nagano in around 1 hour 19 minutes, while the Joetsu Shinkansen can reach Echigo-Yuzawa in around 1 hour 6 minutes. For Nozawa Onsen, the express bus from Iiyama Station takes about 25 minutes. Hakuba can also be reached from Tokyo in roughly 2 hours 50 minutes using shinkansen plus express bus.
For a Brisbane family, the journey can feel much simpler than expected: direct flight, bullet train, resort bus, done.
Compare that with Europe, where getting from Australia to classic ski gateways such as Paris, Zurich or Milan usually means a much longer multi-leg journey before the mountain transfer even begins. North America may be closer than Europe by flight time, but many ski resorts still require onward domestic flights, long drives or complex transfers.
Japan hits the sweet spot: far enough to feel like a proper overseas winter holiday, but close enough to work for a one- or two-week family trip.
Japan’s appeal is not only about convenience. It is also about purchasing power.
With the Australian dollar recently sitting around the ¥110 per A$1 range, many Australians feel their money stretches further in Japan than in Europe, North America or premium Australian snow destinations.
That does not mean every Japanese ski holiday is cheap. Popular resorts such as Niseko, Hakuba and Nozawa Onsen can still be expensive in peak season. But meals, transport, regional accommodation, everyday spending and local experiences often feel better value than comparable international ski trips.
For families, that matters. Ski holidays are cost-heavy: flights, transfers, accommodation, lift passes, rentals, lessons, food and activities all stack up quickly. Japan’s combination of rail access, regional accommodation options and favourable currency conditions makes the overall package highly competitive.
This is where Japan separates itself from many other ski destinations.
A Japanese ski holiday is rarely just a ski holiday. In towns like Nozawa Onsen, the village itself is part of the experience: hot springs, narrow laneways, local shops, traditional inns, casual dining and winter festivals.
That matters because not every family member wants to ski all day. One parent may ski more than the other. Kids may want snow play instead of full-day lessons. Grandparents may come along. Some travellers simply want atmosphere, food, onsen and a few memorable snow days.
Japan handles those mixed travel styles beautifully. The non-ski hours still feel rewarding: onsen bathing, izakaya dinners, cafés, local trains, ryokan stays, snow-town walks and regional culture.
And the appeal does not disappear when the snow melts. Places like Hakuba now actively promote green-season activities such as mountain biking, trekking, river sports and mountain sightseeing. That gives many Japanese ski towns a four-season story, not just a winter one.
Put simply, Japan has the right mix for this moment.
It is closer than Europe. It can be easier than North America once total resort access is considered. It offers strong value for Australians. And it delivers more than sport alone: food, culture, hot springs, family-friendly travel and authentic regional towns.
The Alps may still own the old prestige. But for many Australians, Japan increasingly owns the better all-round snow holiday.
Call to Action: Before booking another default snow trip, ask a better question: are you just looking for a ski resort — or a Japanese winter town your family may want to return to year after year?