Sapporo is laid out on a grid with an excellent subway, which means one honest truth most guides bury: you do not have to sleep in the most expensive block to be everywhere in minutes. We run three apartments here, so below is the comparison we give our own friends, including when a hotel in another area is genuinely the better choice.
Odori & Susukino: the center of everything
Odori Park is the city's heart and Susukino, one stop south, is its nightlife district: thousands of restaurants and bars, neon, and the ice sculptures in festival season. Stay here if your trip is mostly eating, drinking, and being out late; you will pay the city's highest rates for the privilege, especially in February and during summer festivals. Rooms skew small business-hotel style.
Sapporo Station: for the constantly-in-transit
The JR station block is department stores, the airport rapid train, and rows of business hotels. It is the right base for one-night stops and day-trip-heavy itineraries (Otaru, Asahiyama Zoo, ski buses). It is also the least atmospheric part of the city: efficient, not memorable.
Nakajima Park: calm and green, south side
A pleasant pond-side park district south of Susukino with a few good hotels. Quiet evenings, pretty walks, still walkable to nightlife. A solid couples' choice when rates are reasonable.
The north side (Kita ward): where Sapporo actually lives
North of the station, past Hokkaido University, the city turns into calm residential streets with convenience stores, local restaurants, and subway stations every few blocks. This is where our three apartments are: a 4 minute walk from Kita-18-jo Station, a few minutes on the Namboku line from Odori and Susukino.
Why choose it: space and value. For the price of one small central double you get a whole apartment with a kitchen, washer and dryer, room for 4 to 5 guests (up to 9 across two units), and quiet nights. It suits families, groups, ski trips that need gear-drying, and anyone staying longer than a couple of nights. Choose the center instead if your plan is bar-hopping until 3am every night; that is a fair trade we will tell you honestly.
Quick chooser
- Nightlife every night: Susukino.
- One night, train early tomorrow: Sapporo Station.
- Couple, calm evenings: Nakajima Park.
- Family, group, ski base, or a week-plus stay: a north-side apartment (that is us).
- Snow Festival on a budget: north side, a few subway stops from the sculptures.




