Items | Otaru: Local Izakaya Bar Hopping in the Historic Canal Town
Otaru: Local Izakaya Bar Hopping in the Historic Canal Town
Otaru
Important Information
•
Infants and small children can ride in a pram or stroller
•
Public transportation options are available nearby
•
Infants are required to sit on an adult’s lap
•
Specialized infant seats are available
•
Suitable for all physical fitness levels
Cancellation policy
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.
•
For a full refund, you must cancel at least 24 hours before the experience’s start time.
•
Cut-off times are based on the experience’s local time.
•
If you cancel less than 24 hours before the experience’s start time, the amount you paid will not be refunded.
•
This experience requires a minimum number of travelers. If it’s canceled because the minimum isn’t met, you’ll be offered a different date/experience or a full refund.
•
Any changes made less than 24 hours before the experience’s start time will not be accepted.
Become our Lokal Curator
Are you ready to turn your hobbies into a business?
Discover Otaru’s authentic izakaya culture on a 2-hour guided bar hopping experience through this historic canal town. Led by a local English-speaking guide, explore atmospheric backstreets and lantern-lit lanes while visiting two izakayas selected to match your preferences that evening. At each stop, enjoy a ¥1,500 food and drink credit (¥3,000 total), giving you the freedom to order what interests you most. Along the way, your guide shares cultural insights, simple etiquette tips, and local context that turn casual drinks into a meaningful introduction to Hokkaido’s social traditions. Whether you enjoy alcohol or prefer soft drinks, this relaxed and flexible tour offers a genuine glimpse i...
Highlights
2 hours
Offered in English
Free Cancellation
Mobile Ticket
2 hours
Offered in English
Free Cancellation
Mobile Ticket
What's Included
Visits to two izakayas selected based on your preferences
English-speaking local guide throughout the tour
¥1,500 food and drink credit at each venue (¥3,000 total)
Additional food and drinks beyond the ¥3,000 credit
Personal expenses
Hotel pickup and drop-off
Meeting Points
Departure
7-Eleven
The meeting point is in front of the 7-Eleven Hokkaido ST Otaru store. Your guide will be waiting with a yellow sign. Please refer to the map for details.
Return
Otaru: Local Izakaya Bar Hopping in the Historic Canal Town
Otaru
About
Discover Otaru’s authentic izakaya culture on a 2-hour guided bar hopping experience through this historic canal town. Led by a local English-speaking guide, explore atmospheric backstreets and lantern-lit lanes while visiting two izakayas selected to match your preferences that evening. At each stop, enjoy a ¥1,500 food and drink credit (¥3,000 total), giving you the freedom to order what interests you most. Along the way, your guide shares cultural insights, simple etiquette tips, and local context that turn casual drinks into a meaningful introduction to Hokkaido’s social traditions. Whether you enjoy alcohol or prefer soft drinks, this relaxed and flexible tour offers a genuine glimpse i...
Highlights
2 hours
Offered in English
Free Cancellation
Mobile Ticket
2 hours
Offered in English
Free Cancellation
Mobile Ticket
What's Included
Visits to two izakayas selected based on your preferences
English-speaking local guide throughout the tour
¥1,500 food and drink credit at each venue (¥3,000 total)
Additional food and drinks beyond the ¥3,000 credit
Personal expenses
Hotel pickup and drop-off
Meeting Points
Departure
7-Eleven
The meeting point is in front of the 7-Eleven Hokkaido ST Otaru store. Your guide will be waiting with a yellow sign. Please refer to the map for details.
Return
Itinerary
1
Otaru
Otaru’s food-and-drink culture thrives in its intimate izakayas: small, owner-run rooms tucked between canal-side warehouses and backstreets near the station. Shaped by a port-town past and Hokkaido’s cold seas, menus highlight freshness and comfort—glistening sashimi, grilled seafood, hearty stews, and shareable bites. At the counter, time slows: the clink of glasses, a warm kanpai, handwritten specials, and casual conversation with proprietors who recall faces more than names. Etiquette is simple—order a drink first, share plates, try the day’s pick—so even newcomers relax quickly. A few short stops reveal how Otaru’s scale makes hospitality personal: you taste seasonality, feel neighborhood rhythms rather than nightlife hype, and leave sensing you joined the evening. With guidance—how to read a menu, call “sumimasen,” or pair dishes with beer, highballs, or sake—a casual hop becomes cultural insight, leaving warmth as the flavor remembered most.