Looking for a little more edge to your hot spring travel? Japan has begun offering explicitly tied to the fandom. For about $100 for a full session, you can rent cosplay costumes (maybe a robe stylized like Denji’s hero attire or Power’s horns) and access photo areas designed to look like Tokyo’s alleyways.
Located just a short train ride from Tokyo, Hakone is where city dwellers go to escape the concrete jungle. Because Tokyo is the central hub for the Public Safety office, Hakone is exactly where the characters would go for a quick weekend trip. The dense, foggy forests surrounding Owakudani (Great Boiling Valley) give off a mysterious energy that feels like a Devil could emerge at any moment. 3. Kusatsu Onsen (Gunma Prefecture) The Vibe: High-energy, intense, and revitalizing.
For the highly stylized, vibrant interactions seen in official promotional art and collaboration events, indoor hot spring theme parks offer the exact energy of Denji and Power's chaotic dynamic. While the famous Odaiba location closed, variants like in Osaka or Spa World provide massive, multi-floor bath complexes where visitors can wear traditional yukata (casual summer kimonos) and recreate the playful atmosphere of the Public Safety crew. Planning Your Chainsaw Man Hot Spring Itinerary
Start in Kabukicho, Shinjuku. This is the "Berman" district where devils hide in host clubs. Stay up too late, eat a famichiki, and sleep on a hard capsule hotel bed. You must feel exhausted.
Have you visited a Chainsaw Man location? Share your photos using the hashtag #CSM_SteamSanctuary. Chainsaw Man Hot Spring Travel
For when a relaxing bath inevitably turns into a battleground.
An onsen trip is about more than just the water. Enjoy the yukata , eat the kaiseki multi-course dinner, and sleep on a futon . It’s the life Denji dreamed of.
experiences the simple luxuries of civilization—hot baths and gourmet food—furthering his quest to understand standard human desires.
If you love Chainsaw Man and want to experience a high-end hot spring vacation in Japan without the property damage, consider these real-world spots: Looking for a little more edge to your hot spring travel
Denji’s goals at a hot spring would be incredibly simple. He would be amazed by the unlimited buffet, the soft tatami mats, and the novelty of a heated bath. Post-bath, you would find him chugging bottles of cold fruit milk from the bathhouse vending machine, fulfilling another childhood dream of ultimate comfort. Power’s Bathhouse Rebellion
Denji, naturally, is the first to notice when he steps out of the bath and his foot comes away bleeding from a hundred tiny cuts.
For the romantics, Chainsaw Man hot spring travel isn't about a team retreat—it's about the tragic, beautiful "Bomb Girl" arc. Denji and Reze’s date at the pool is surface level, but their implied escape to a country onsen is the dream that never happened.
The name itself— Jigoku , or hell—resonates deeply with the series. Chapter 63 of the manga is titled “Trip to Hell” , and the Hell Devil plays a major role in the storyline. Walking through Beppu’s hells, with their billowing steam clouds and supernatural colours, feels like stepping into an environment where devils could emerge at any moment. Located just a short train ride from Tokyo,
The team rides the cable car over the active volcanic valley. Power tries to throw Denji out of the window. Denji is too busy eating "Kuro-tamago" (black eggs boiled in the natural hot springs). Legend says eating one adds seven years to your life, which Denji desperately needs.
For a full itinerary, consider spending two to three days in Tokyo covering the major pilgrimage spots, then take a day trip or overnight stay at one of the onsen towns mentioned earlier. The contrast is powerful—running through Tokyo’s chaotic streets in the footsteps of Denji and Power, then sinking into a steaming onsen in total silence.
To chase Reze’s ghost, head to . Why? The isolation. The deep snow. The hibachi grill restaurants where a girl with a devil heart might order a yakisoba-pan.