
Aomori Spring Ski Resort
resort town
A long-season resort overlooking the Sea of Japan, run by the Rockwood Hotel — a short hop from the Shinkansen and rarely crowded.
Akita's city-adjacent resort — compact but well-groomed, with one of Tohoku's better night-skiing setups.
Live conditions
Off-seasonThe mountain is resting.
Next season
Opens late November
Current temp 15°C, wind 5 km/h. We’ll resume the daily report once snowfall picks up.
Forecast data via Open-Meteo. Refreshes hourly. Always verify with the resort before driving up.
Why Taiheizan Opus
Akita's city-adjacent resort — compact but well-groomed, with one of Tohoku's better night-skiing setups.
Taiheizan Opus is a ski resort in Akita, Tohoku, with 12 marked runs and 191m of vertical. The terrain suits beginners and intermediates. Expect well-groomed pistes.
Terrain in detail
MellowCruisey terrain — fine for advanced skiers as a rest day, not a destination. Difficulty, powder character, and the stats that matter on the mountain itself.
Hardcore index
26
Cruisey terrain — fine for advanced skiers as a rest day, not a destination.
From terrain split, run profile, vertical drop, expert features.
Powder profile
Cold Tohoku storms — drier than the Sea of Japan coast.
Drier on cold storms, deeper when the Sea of Japan fires.
—
m
per season
Snowfall data not published — frequency is the regional baseline.
Expert runs
2 of 12
Estimated from advanced terrain split.
Vertical drop
191m
Compact mountain.
Steepest pitch
—
Pitch not published.
Backcountry gates
None
In-bounds skiing only.
Tree skiing
Limited
Mostly groomed terrain.
Moguls
Few
Mostly cord and powder.
Best for
Terrain
Getting there
From airport
Approximately 45 minutes from Akita Airport
Train / bus
Shuttle from JR Akita Station Approximately 45 minutes from Akita Airport
Shuttle from JR Akita Station Approximately 45 minutes from Akita Airport
Curated guides covering Taiheizan Opus and the rest of Tohoku.
More resorts in Tohoku

resort town
A long-season resort overlooking the Sea of Japan, run by the Rockwood Hotel — a short hop from the Shinkansen and rarely crowded.

powder-focused
A single ropeway into Tohoku's most legendary backcountry — snow-monster ridges, tree runs through beech forest, and some of Japan's deepest, driest snow. Experts and guides only on most days.

day trip
A city mountain on the edge of Aomori — short lift lines, floodlit night skiing, and a reliable first day of a Tohoku trip.

resort town
Overlooking Lake Tazawa — Japan's deepest — with long cruising runs and a clean shuttle connection from the Akita Shinkansen.