Hakuba Iwatake Mountain Resort is a 1,289-metre summit in Nagano’s Hakuba Valley, reached by an 8-minute “Noah” gondola from a 750-metre base — and from May to November, the summit’s Hakuba Mountain Harbor deck delivers what most Japanese photographers consider the cleanest, closest, dead-centre view of the Hakuba Sanzan (Shirouma-dake, Shakushi-dake, Yari-ga-take). Green-season highlights: The City Bakery croissant sandwich (¥1,300) eaten on the deck with the snow peaks across the valley, the cantilevered Yahho Deck where visitors literally shout “yahho!” into the basin, and a 1.5-hour walk through the Nezuko Forest — a stand of Thuja standishii, a cypress endemic to Japan.
Last updated: 2026-05-29 · Visited mid May 2025 · Author: Nobutoshi · Operator: 株式会社岩岳リゾート (Iwatake Resort Co., Ltd.)
Quick facts
- Summit altitude
- 1,289 m
- Base altitude
- 750 m
- Gondola
- “Noah” — 2,183 m, ~8 min
- Adult round trip
- ¥2,900
- Green season 2026
- Apr 23 – Nov 15
- Gondola hours
- 8:30 – 16:20 (last down 16:50)
- City Bakery hours
- 9:00 – 16:00 (LO)
- Hakuba Sanzan view
- Mountain Harbor / Yahho Deck
- Nezuko Forest loop
- ~1.5 h
- Resort area
- 125 ha (15 ski runs in winter)
- Address
- 長野県北安曇郡白馬村北城12056
- Phone
- 0261-72-2474
Why I came back to Iwatake in May
Mid-to-late May is the best green-season window at Iwatake: the gondola is open (reopens Apr 23), the deck is fully operating, the foothills have turned bright spring green, and the snow is still on the upper peaks of the Hakuba Sanzan — so you get the contrast of green forest below and white-streaked rock above in the same frame.
I’d skied Hakuba a few times in winter and been to Hakuba Village’s bridges and lookouts in summer — see the Hakuba Village year-round guide for the wider context — but I’d never been to Iwatake in green season specifically. The mid-May trip fixed that. I took the morning gondola from the base, spent about 90 minutes at Mountain Harbor with coffee, walked the Yahho Deck, ate the croissant sandwich slowly with the mountains in view, and then dropped into the Nezuko Forest loop for the second half of the day. It’s one of the most efficient “I want to see the Northern Alps but I can’t actually hike them” days in central Japan.
The Noah gondola — 8 minutes from valley to 1,289 m
The Iwatake summit is reached by a single 2,183-metre gondola called Noah — about 8 minutes each way, running 8:30 to 16:20 with the last down at 16:50. Adult round-trip ticket: ¥2,900. There is no other way up — no road, no chairlift in green season.
Sit facing the rear of the gondola on the way up — that’s the direction the view opens. The first half of the ride is mostly over green-season ski-slope grass, but at around the halfway tower the valley starts to unfold and you can suddenly see all of Hakuba village below you, the rice fields, the small fish ponds at the base, and on a clear day the Northern Alps stretching east toward Tateyama.
Hakuba Mountain Harbor — the panoramic deck
Mountain Harbor is the main observation deck at the top of the gondola, built specifically to frame the Hakuba Sanzan. It opens 8:45–16:30 in green season, no admission beyond the gondola ticket, and is the single most-photographed spot at Iwatake.
You step out of the top gondola station, walk about 60 seconds, and the deck opens up. To the west: Hakuba Sanzan — three of the most famous peaks in the Northern Alps. 白馬岳 (Shirouma-dake, 2,932 m), 杓子岳 (Shakushi-dake, 2,812 m), and 白馬鑓ヶ岳 (Hakuba-Yari-ga-take, 2,903 m). To the east and south: Hakuba Village, the rice fields below, the entire Hakuba basin laid out under you.
The deck has folding wooden chairs scattered across it. The philosophy seems deliberate — you don’t queue, you don’t shuffle past a viewpoint, you sit and watch for a while. I spent close to 90 minutes there on my visit and never felt rushed.
The City Bakery — Hakuba Pork croissant sandwich
The City Bakery at Mountain Harbor is the Japan branch of the New York bakery, and the standout order is the Hakuba Pork (白馬豚) croissant sandwich at ¥1,300 — croissant + ham + greens — eaten on the deck looking at Hakuba Sanzan. Open 9:00–16:00 (LO) in green season.
The City Bakery in New York is known for its pretzel croissant and morning buns; the Hakuba branch reads as a careful translation of that template into Hakuba-pantry ingredients. The croissant itself is the standard recipe, but the filling is Hakuba Pork (locally raised in Nagano) ham with seasonal greens, served on a wooden tray with hot drip coffee. Order at the counter, take your tray outside, find a chair on the deck. There is no table service. The pricing reflects the location — premium for what you’d pay at street level, but reasonable for a 1,289-metre summit cafe with a Northern Alps panorama.
I’d suggest going around 11:30, before the lunch queues form. The bakery also sells whole loaves, biscuits, and a Hakuba-only sandwich line if you want a takeaway for the Nezuko Forest walk afterward.
Yahho Deck — the cantilevered viewpoint
Yahho Deck is the separate cantilevered platform that juts out toward Hakuba Sanzan. You walk to the end of the deck and shout “Yahho!” — the valley acoustics carry your voice across the basin and the echo comes back. It is unironic, it is genuinely fun, and it is the single most popular photo spot at Iwatake.
Iwatake also runs a separate Yahho Swing (ヤッホー!スイング) on the same plateau — a swing positioned so that at the apex you appear to launch yourself directly out toward the Hakuba Sanzan. That’s a paid attraction (¥500 per ride). The Deck itself is included with your gondola ticket.
The unwritten Yahho rule
The “yahho” call is genuine — multi-generational Japanese family tradition for greeting mountains from a high point. You’ll see grandparents, schoolchildren, and city couples all doing it without irony. Don’t overthink it. Step to the rail, shout, listen for the echo.
Nezuko Forest — the 1.5-hour loop
The Nezuko Forest loop is a roughly 1.5-hour walking trail above the gondola top station, taking you through a stand of Thuja standishii — locally called nezuko or kuro-be, a cypress endemic to Japan, native to the subalpine zones of central Honshu and Shikoku.
Nezuko (ネズコ) means “mouse-coloured” — referring to the dull grey-brown heartwood of the tree, which was historically prized for tubs, bento boxes, and shrine architecture. The tree is part of the Cupressaceae (cypress) family, related to hinoki but with a distinct flat-scale leaf structure that gives the forest a different colour and texture from typical Japanese cedar forests further south.
The Iwatake trail is gently undulating, mostly soft earth and occasional wooden steps, with the gondola top station as both the start and end. Wear shoes you can walk a damp forest in — not sandals. The forest is at its best in late May to early June when the fresh leaves are at peak, and again in mid-October when the surrounding hardwoods turn. I’d recommend taking a coffee-and-pastry from The City Bakery with you and stopping halfway for ten quiet minutes.
The other activities — pricing summary
2,183 m gondola, ~8 min each way. Includes Mountain Harbor + Yahho Deck access. Required for everything at the top.
The swing positioned so you appear to launch toward Hakuba Sanzan at the apex. Quick queue, popular for couples and families.
Larger swing for two — same view angle as Yahho Swing but a longer arc and a more dramatic photo.
Downhill cart on the green ski slope. Family-friendly, no licence required.
Downhill + cross-country MTB courses. Rentals available. Helmets required.
1.5-hour walking trail through endemic Japanese cypress forest. Soft earth path, mild elevation change.
A clean half-day plan
10:00 to 15:00 — what I’d actually do
- 10:00 — Arrive base + buy gondola ticket¥2,900 adult round trip. Park free on site. Skip the ski-area bottom and head straight to the gondola entrance.
- 10:15 – 10:25 — Gondola upAbout 8 minutes in the Noah gondola. Sit facing the back to watch Hakuba Sanzan unfold as you rise.
- 10:25 – 11:30 — Mountain Harbor + Yahho DeckWalk the deck slowly, take photos, sit in a chair for 15-20 min. Walk to the Yahho Deck and shout. Optional: pay ¥500 for the Yahho Swing photo.
- 11:30 – 12:30 — The City BakeryHakuba Pork croissant sandwich (¥1,300) + drip coffee. Take it outside, sit on the deck facing the peaks. Don’t rush.
- 12:30 – 14:00 — Nezuko Forest loop1.5-hour walk from the gondola top station. Bring water. The trail is mild but you should be in walking shoes, not sandals.
- 14:00 – 14:30 — Second deck passLight is different in the afternoon — shadows are longer on the peaks, the snow contrast sharpens. Worth a second 20-minute sit.
- 14:30 – 14:45 — Gondola downLast down is 16:50 so you have buffer. If you have energy and time, optionally do the Mountain Cart on the way down.
When to visit Iwatake — seasonal table
| Month | What’s happening | Crowd level | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|
| Apr 23 – early May | Green season opens. Trees still bare, snow still heavy. | Light | Solitude but not yet pretty |
| Mid-late May | Fresh leaf below + snow above on Hakuba Sanzan | Light–moderate | Best — what this article is about |
| June | Tsuyu (rainy season) early-mid June. Forest at deep green. | Light | Check the forecast morning of |
| Jul–early Aug | Peak summer green. Snow mostly gone from peaks. | Moderate | Hot at the base, cool at the top |
| Aug–early Sep | Family holiday season. Yahho Festival in August. | Heavy | Book early or visit on weekdays |
| Mid-Oct | Koyo — beech, maple, larch all turn together | Heavy on weekends | Second-best window |
| Late Oct – Nov 15 | Late koyo at the foothills, snow returning to peaks | Moderate | Atmospheric — bring a jacket |
| Closed | Mid Nov – mid Dec (gondola transition) | — | Closed |
| Mid Dec – early Apr | Winter ski season (separate ticket) | Heavy in peak Jan–Feb | Different article — gondola accesses 15 ski runs |
How to get to Iwatake from Hakuba Station
Hakuba Iwatake Mountain Resort — the gondola base is at the south end of the marked area. Free on-site parking.
| From | Route | Time | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hakuba Station | Free Iwatake shuttle bus (green season) OR taxi | ~10 min | Free (shuttle) / ~¥1,500 taxi |
| Nagano Station | Alpico Express Bus to Hakuba → shuttle/taxi | ~1h 45 min total | ¥2,800 bus + shuttle |
| Tokyo | Hokuriku Shinkansen to Nagano → Alpico Bus to Hakuba | ~3h 30 min | ~¥10,200 |
| By car (Tokyo) | Joshin-etsu Expressway via Nagano → Hakuba | ~4 h | ~¥6,000 toll + fuel |
For the full access detail, see the Hakuba Station access guide — it covers Tokyo, Osaka, and Nagoya routes including the express buses. Hakuba’s other major free viewpoints are 5-10 minutes by car from the Iwatake base: the Hakuba Ohashi 100-meter bridge for the Hakuba Sanzan + Matsukawa river framing, and Hakuba Oide Park for the signature suspension-bridge + Sanzan composition. The three together make a clean full-day Hakuba Sanzan photo route — Oide Park early morning, Iwatake midday, Ohashi for sunset.
Tips for visitors from Singapore, Bangkok, KL & Jakarta
Practical notes for SEA travellers
Hakuba is one of the most SEA-friendly mountain destinations in Japan — the bus connections are direct, English signage is good (winter ski tourism makes the area used to non-Japanese visitors), and the May to October green season avoids the brutal cold most SEA travellers want to skip.
- From SIN/KUL/BKK/CGK: NRT or HND direct via Scoot, AirAsia X, Jetstar Asia, ANA, JAL, SQ. NRT → Hakuba: Hokuriku Shinkansen Tokyo → Nagano (90 min) → Alpico Bus to Hakuba (75 min). Plan ~6h total airport to Hakuba.
- Halal & vegetarian: The City Bakery croissants themselves are vegetarian (butter, no animal-derived shortening) but the Hakuba Pork sandwich is not halal. Plain croissants and biscuits are safe. Hakuba Village has several halal-aware ramen and curry shops near the station.
- Climate vs SEA: Mid May at 1,289 m summit averages 12-18 °C — much cooler than Singapore (28 °C). Pack a light fleece or windbreaker. The base at 750 m is about 18-22 °C — t-shirt weather. October highs at the summit can be near freezing.
- Cash: The gondola counter accepts cards. The City Bakery accepts cards. Yahho Swing and Mountain Cart counters are usually cash-only. Carry ¥5,000 in small notes.
- Prayer / wudu: Hakuba Village has no specific facilities; bring a portable mat. Larger Nagano Station has prayer rooms. The Mountain Harbor restrooms have basins suitable for ablution.
- What to pack: Walking shoes (not sandals — Nezuko Forest is earth, not pavement). Sunscreen (UV is strong at 1,289 m). Light jacket. Water bottle (refilled at the gondola top station, free).
FAQ
How much is the Iwatake gondola in 2026?
¥2,900 round-trip for an adult during green season. This includes access to Mountain Harbor, Yahho Deck, and the Nezuko Forest trail. Separate fees apply for the Yahho Swing (¥500), Giant Swing (¥1,000), Mountain Cart (¥2,000), and MTB Park day pass (¥4,800). Children’s pricing varies — check the current official rate on the day of visit.
When is Iwatake’s green season in 2026?
April 23 (Thu) – November 15 (Sun), 2026. Gondola operates 8:30 – 16:20 with the last down at 16:50. The City Bakery runs 9:00 – 16:00 (last order). Mountain Harbor hours are 8:45 – 16:30. There is a transition closure from mid-November until the ski season opens in mid-December.
What’s the best month to visit Iwatake Mountain Harbor?
Mid-to-late May for the green-below + snow-above contrast on Hakuba Sanzan. Mid-October for koyo when beech, maple, and larch turn together. Late June to mid-July is also good but watch the tsuyu rainy-season forecast. August is the busiest month due to Japanese summer holiday — visit on a weekday if possible.
Is the Yahho Deck different from the Yahho Swing?
Yes — they are two separate attractions on the same plateau. The Yahho Deck is the cantilevered wooden viewing platform where visitors shout “yahho!” toward Hakuba Sanzan; it is free with your gondola ticket. The Yahho Swing is a paid attraction (¥500 per ride) — a swing positioned so you appear to launch toward the peaks at the apex, popular for couples and family photographs.
What can I eat at Mountain Harbor?
The headline item is The City Bakery’s Hakuba Pork croissant sandwich (¥1,300) — croissant with locally raised Hakuba Pork ham and seasonal greens. The bakery also sells plain croissants, biscuits, a Hakuba-only sandwich line, and drip coffee. Order at the counter, take your tray outside to the deck chairs. No table service. The bakery runs 9:00 – 16:00 (last order).
How long is the Nezuko Forest trail?
About 1.5 hours for the full loop. The trail starts and ends at the gondola top station and passes through a stand of Thuja standishii — the Japan-endemic cypress called nezuko or kuro-be. Mild elevation change, soft earth path, suitable for adults and older children. Bring walking shoes (not sandals) and water.
Can I see the Hakuba Sanzan peaks from Mountain Harbor?
Yes — the deck is positioned specifically for this view. You see all three peaks: Shirouma-dake (白馬岳, 2,932 m), Shakushi-dake (杓子岳, 2,812 m), and Hakuba-Yari-ga-take (白馬鑓ヶ岳, 2,903 m). The view is dead-centre across the valley, unobstructed. Hakuba Mountain Harbor is widely cited as the cleanest, closest stationary viewpoint of the Sanzan in the Hakuba area.
Is there a free shuttle from Hakuba Station?
Yes during the green season — Iwatake runs a free shuttle bus from Hakuba Station to the gondola base, about 10 minutes. Schedule varies by date; confirm timing on the official site or at the Hakuba Station information desk on arrival. Taxis run the same route in ~10 minutes for about ¥1,500.
Sources used for this article
- Hakuba Iwatake Mountain Resort official — iwatake-mountain-resort.com
- Hakuba Village tourism official — vill.hakuba.nagano.jp
- Hakuba1.com (Hakuba Tourism Bureau) — hakuba1.com
- Rurubu Travel article (price + Hakuba Sanzan peak names) — plus.rurubu.jp
- Wikipedia (jp): 白馬岩岳スノーフィールド, ネズコ
- Personal observation, mid May 2025 visit (all photographs in this article)
Plan an Iwatake trip — three paths
Mountain Harbor + Yahho Deck pair well with an overnight in Hakuba Village. Three booking paths:
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