Candles and floating lanterns lit along the Otaru Canal at night during the Snow Light Path festival
Photo: 欅 / CC BY-SA 3.0 / Wikimedia Commons

Otaru Snow Light Path: Canal vs Temiya Line, and How to Pair It With Sapporo

Published July 4, 2026 · 11 min read

🔄 Updated Jul 2026 · content verified against official sources

The Otaru Snow Light Path is one of Hokkaido's most overlooked free events — no admission fee at all, yet it delivers the one scene most of Hokkaido's winter itineraries miss: a candlelit canal with the reflections to match. It usually runs close to the much bigger Sapporo Snow Festival, and plenty of travelers pack their whole trip around Sapporo without realizing Otaru's evening walk is sitting 30 minutes away. This guide covers which of the two main venues to prioritize, when to go for the best light, and how to pair it cleanly with Sapporo — and where the 2027 dates genuinely stand right now, without borrowing last year's dates as a stand-in for this year's answer.

Key takeaways
  • 2027 dates are not yet official: recent pattern — Feb 8-15, 2025 and Feb 7-14, 2026, both early-February 8-day runs; confirm on the official site before you travel
  • It's entirely free: both main venues have no admission fee; the only spend is food stalls
  • Canal vs Temiya Line: the Canal venue (candlelit reflections, the postcard shot) paired with Temiya Line (lanterns and food stalls, thinner crowds) — 10-15 minutes apart on foot
  • Best timing: lights run roughly 17:00-21:00 by past-year pattern; 17:00-18:00 has the fewest people
  • Pairs naturally with Sapporo: about 30 minutes by JR, with dates often overlapping the Snow Festival's window — set up a KKday Japan eSIM to check official updates on the go
Table of Contents (click to expand)
  1. 2027 dates: what's confirmed and what's pending
  2. Canal venue vs Temiya Line venue: which to see
  3. Best time to go, and dodging crowds
  4. Pairing it with the Sapporo Snow Festival
  5. Getting around, cold-weather gear, and event notes
  6. Other venues and daytime Otaru
  7. FAQ

2027 dates: what's confirmed and what's pending

The most important thing to get right here: as of this fact check in July 2026, neither the Otaru Tourism Association nor the official Snow Light Path website has published exact dates for the 2027 (29th) edition. Some third-party travel sites list guessed date ranges for 2027 online — those are not official announcements, and this guide does not treat them as confirmed. Don't use them to book lodging or flights.

What is confirmed is the recent pattern: the 27th edition ran February 8 (Sat) through February 15 (Sat), 2025, and the 28th edition ran February 7 (Sat) through February 14 (Sat), 2026 — both eight-day runs starting on the first or second Saturday of February. Extrapolating from that, 2027 (the 29th edition) will most likely land in a similar early-February window — but "most likely" is not "confirmed." Check yukiakarinomichi.org or the Otaru Tourism Association's official site before you travel; this guide will update once the 2027 dates are officially announced.

Year / EditionOfficial datesLengthStatus
2025 (27th)Feb 8 (Sat) – Feb 15 (Sat)8 daysConcluded
2026 (28th)Feb 7 (Sat) – Feb 14 (Sat)8 daysOfficially confirmed
2027 (29th)Not yet publishedLikely ~8 days, based on past patternPending official announcement

The event's roots trace back to 1999, when local residents involved in a movement to preserve Otaru Canal set out a few hundred snow lanterns along the waterfront. It has since grown to include the Temiya Line and Mt. Tenguyama venues, becoming one of Otaru's signature winter community events. That background matters practically: this isn't a large corporate-run festival with a fixed annual template — much of the lantern-making and placement is done by volunteers, and weather or turnout that season can shift the exact venue footprint or hours slightly. That's exactly why checking the official site before you travel matters more here than for a standard tourist attraction.

Worth noting: Japan's other signature winter light-up — the Shirakawa-go gassho village illumination — runs on the opposite system. Its four 2027 dates are already confirmed (Jan 11, 17, 24, 31, 17:30–19:30) and entry is fully reservation-only with no walk-ups, while Otaru's Snow Light Path is free to wander into. If you want both in one winter, lock in Shirakawa-go first; Otaru can be slotted in last.

Canal venue vs Temiya Line venue: which to see

Otaru Canal in winter at night, historic stone warehouses along a snow-covered walkway with the canal water reflecting the lights
The Canal venue spans about 300 meters, with candles and floating snow lanterns in front of the historic warehouses — the single most recognizable shot from the whole event.

If you only have time for one, my honest take: go to the Canal venue first. It's the strongest visual and the shot that shows up in nearly every piece of official promotion — roughly 300 meters of canal lined with candles and lanterns floating on the water, framed by the historic warehouses. This isn't a "both are equally great" non-answer; the Canal venue simply wins on visual impact if you're comparing the two head to head.

If you have more time and want to escape the busiest stretch, the Temiya Line venue is worth the extra walk. It runs about half a kilometer along a decommissioned rail bed, with snow lanterns, lit statues and food stalls creating a more relaxed, neighborhood feel — and the crowds are generally thinner than at the canal. The two venues are a 10-15 minute walk apart, so with time to spare, the natural order is Canal first, then Temiya Line, which also happens to match a north-bound walk from JR Otaru Station.

Otaru Canal walkway and historic warehouses in daylight
Scouting the canal walkway and warehouse layout in daylight first makes finding a good angle after dark much faster than working it out on the fly.
VenueWhat it's known forLengthCrowdsTime to budget
Canal venueCandlelit reflections, floating snow lanterns, warehouse backdrop — the strongest visual~300 mMain venue, more crowded30-45 minutes
Temiya Line venueLanterns and lit statues along a former rail line, plus food stalls; more relaxed feel~500 mThinner than the Canal venue30-45 minutes

Best time to go, and dodging crowds

Going by past years, both main venues run roughly 17:00 to 21:00, with the exact 2027 hours still pending official confirmation — check the official site before you travel rather than assuming the schedule above carries over.

Which window to pick depends on the shot you want: 17:00-18:00, right after the candles are lit, is the quietest window and still holds a trace of blue-hour daylight, which makes for richer canal reflections than full darkness. After 19:00 the crowds thicken, especially on weekends, but the deeper darkness makes the candlelight itself pop harder and more dramatically. Neither is objectively better — pick the quiet-and-soft option or the darker-and-more-dramatic one depending on what you're after.

Same as with the Sapporo Snow Festival, weekends during the event window tend to draw noticeably bigger crowds than weekdays. If your schedule allows it, building the Otaru evening around a weekday makes the whole walk considerably easier.

Pairing it with the Sapporo Snow Festival

A snow-covered Hokkaido winter village, illuminated buildings along a snowy street
Otaru's Snow Light Path and the Sapporo Snow Festival have run in overlapping or closely adjacent windows in recent years — a natural pairing for a Hokkaido winter trip.

The most common way travelers build this trip is pairing it with the Sapporo Snow Festival — Otaru is about a 30-minute JR ride from Sapporo, so the transit cost is minimal. In recent years the two events have landed in overlapping or closely adjacent early-February windows (the 2027 Sapporo Snow Festival, for instance, is officially confirmed for Feb 4-11, and Otaru's event will likely fall somewhere near that same week going by past-year patterns — though its own 2027 dates are still pending). Whether the two actually overlap in 2027 won't be clear until both events have published official dates, so cross-check before finalizing an itinerary.

A workable split: spend a day in Sapporo touring the city, then head to Odori Park and Susukino at dusk for the festival's snow and ice sculptures, and either the same night (if the timing works) or the next day, take the JR out to Otaru specifically for the Canal venue after dark. The reverse order works just as well — a night in Otaru for the lights first, then a full day into Sapporo for the festival and the city's core sights. Either way, the one thing I'd avoid is cramming both into the same evening: a proper Odori-plus-Susukino evening in Sapporo already fills a night on its own, and adding a round trip to Otaru on top of that usually means rushing both and losing photo quality on each. Splitting them across two separate evenings, each with its own full attention, is the better trade.

Getting around, cold-weather gear, and event notes

The Canal venue is about a 10-minute walk from JR Otaru Station, and the Temiya Line venue extends north from there along the old rail bed — the two are a 10-15 minute walk apart, so you can string them together on foot without booking anything or working around a scheduled tour slot. The whole event is a free, self-guided walk-through; there's no ticketing, timed entry, or headcount limit to plan around.

Dress warmer than you would for a daytime itinerary: early-February nights in Otaru commonly sit around −5°C, and standing or slow-walking through an outdoor lantern display feels colder than active sightseeing. A thermal base layer, fleece, and windproof-waterproof shell are the baseline, with gloves, a beanie and hand warmers rounding it out. Grip-soled snow boots matter here specifically — the stone paving along the canal and the old rail bed at Temiya Line both get slick once snow starts melting and refreezing, and ordinary sneakers are a real fall risk on these surfaces. See the Hokkaido section of our Japan climate and clothing pillar guide for the full packing list.

According to the official event background, most of the snow lanterns and candle holders across the venues are hand-made and placed by local volunteers, with part of the canal-side lighting floating directly on the water. The organizers occasionally run public lantern-lighting sessions during the event window; check the official site for the current schedule and any participation details. If you're extending beyond Otaru and Sapporo into Asahikawa or Hakodate, it's worth comparing whether a Hokkaido Rail Pass pays off for your route.

Other venues and daytime Otaru

Beyond the Canal and Temiya Line venues, recent editions have also included the Otaru Art Base venue (a plaza with a snow slide and stage events) and the Mt. Tenguyama venue (ropeway access up to a hilltop view over the city), plus roughly 20 smaller neighborhood venues run by local residents scattered around town. If your time is tight, the Canal and Temiya Line venues are the most concentrated and easiest to combine on a single route; with time to spare, Tenguyama's elevated view is a solid way to see the city lights from above and skip the densest crowds at the core venues.

Otaru's Sakaimachi shopping street in daylight, historic stone buildings lining the street
The Snow Light Path is an evening event, so daytime is a good fit for the Sakaimachi shopping street, Kitaichi Glass and the Music Box Museum before heading back to the canal after dark.

The Snow Light Path is strictly an after-dark event, so daytime is a good fit for the canal-side Sakaimachi shopping street, Kitaichi Glass, the Otaru Music Box Museum, or a sushi lunch — then loop back to the Canal venue once it gets dark. Full daytime routing and shop picks are in our Otaru travel guide. To fold Otaru and Sapporo into one complete Hokkaido winter trip, see our Hokkaido winter 7-day itinerary, or start with our Sapporo travel guide for the city's core sights.

Otaru Snow Light Path FAQ

Q1:When is the Otaru Snow Light Path in 2027?
As of this fact check in July 2026, the official organizers have not yet published exact 2027 (29th edition) dates. The pattern from recent years: the 27th edition ran Feb 8-15, 2025, and the 28th edition ran Feb 7-14, 2026 — both eight-day runs in early February. 2027 will likely follow a similar window, but check the official sites at yukiakarinomichi.org or the Otaru Tourism Association before you book anything. Do not treat past-year dates in this guide as confirmed for 2027.
Q2:What is the difference between the Canal venue and the Temiya Line venue?
The Canal venue runs about 300 meters along Otaru Canal, with candles and snow lanterns floating on the water in front of the historic warehouses — the classic postcard shot most people picture. The Temiya Line venue stretches roughly half a kilometer along a former railway right-of-way, with snow lanterns, lit statues and food stalls, and generally fewer crowds than the canal. If you only have time for one, the Canal venue delivers the stronger visual; with more time, walk both — they are 10-15 minutes apart on foot.
Q3:Do I need to buy a ticket for the Snow Light Path?
No. Both main venues are entirely free and open to walk through — there is no admission fee at either site. The only spending you'll do is on food stalls (hot cocoa or roasted sweet potato runs roughly ¥300-500) and transit to and from Otaru.
Q4:What time does it run, and when is the best time to go for photos?
Going by recent years, both main venues light up roughly from 17:00 to 21:00, though the exact 2027 hours are pending official confirmation. The 17:00-18:00 window, right after the candles are lit, has the fewest people and still holds a trace of daylight for canal reflections. After 19:00 the crowds pick up, especially on weekends, but the darker sky makes the candlelight pop more. Neither window is objectively better — pick based on whether you want a quiet frame or deeper contrast.
Q5:Can I combine this with the Sapporo Snow Festival?
Yes, and that is how most visitors build the trip. Otaru is about 30 minutes from Sapporo by JR. In recent years both festivals have landed in early February with overlapping or closely adjacent windows — for example the 2027 Sapporo Snow Festival is officially confirmed for Feb 4-11, and Otaru's event will likely land somewhere near that same week, though its official dates are still pending. Whether the two actually overlap in 2027 won't be clear until both are officially announced, so cross-check before locking in an itinerary.
Q6:How do I get between the venues? Do I need reservations?
No reservations are needed for either venue — it's a free, self-guided walking event. The Canal venue is about a 10-minute walk from JR Otaru Station, and the Temiya Line venue extends north from there along the old rail bed. The two are a 10-15 minute walk apart, so you can string them together on foot without booking anything in advance.
Q7:How should I dress for the cold at the venues?
Early-February nights in Otaru commonly sit around −5°C, and standing or slow-walking through an outdoor lantern display feels colder than an active daytime itinerary. Plan on an extra layer beyond your daytime gear: thermal base layer, fleece, and a windproof-waterproof shell, plus gloves, a beanie and hand warmers. Grip-soled snow boots matter here — the canal-side stone paving and the old rail bed both get slick once snow starts melting and refreezing. See the Hokkaido section of our Japan climate and clothing pillar guide for the full packing list.
Q8:How are the candle lanterns actually made and placed?
According to the official event background, most of the snow lanterns and candle holders across the venues are hand-made and placed by local volunteers, with part of the canal-side lighting floating directly on the water. That is also why the scene varies slightly year to year — the exact density and layout of lanterns depends on volunteer turnout and weather that season. The organizers occasionally run public lantern-lighting sessions during the event; check the official site for the current schedule.
Q9:Are there venues besides the Canal and Temiya Line?
Yes. In recent years the event has also included the Otaru Art Base venue (a plaza with a snow slide and stage events) and the Mt. Tenguyama venue (ropeway access with a hilltop view over the city), plus around 20 smaller neighborhood venues run by local residents around town. If your time is limited, the Canal and Temiya Line venues are the most concentrated and easiest to combine on one route.
Q10:What can I do in Otaru during the day before the lights come on?
The Snow Light Path is an evening event, so daytime works well for the canal-side Sakaimachi shopping street, Kitaichi Glass, the Otaru Music Box Museum, or a sushi lunch, then loop back to the Canal venue once it gets dark — see our Otaru travel guide for the full daytime route. To fold Otaru into a complete Hokkaido winter trip alongside Sapporo, see our Hokkaido winter 7-day itinerary, or start with our Sapporo travel guide for the city's core sights.

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