Richseen Private Journeys · Japan

Kyushu: Japan's Most Exclusive Rail Journey

Ultra-Exclusive Train — Fukuoka · Kyushu · Beppu
6 Days · 5 Nights
From USD 20,000+ per person
"Seven Stars in Kyushu — the most exclusive train in Japan, through the island that the rest of Japan has not yet found."
The Journey

Japan's
Hidden Island

Kyushu is the Japan that international travellers have not yet discovered in the numbers that have saturated Kyoto and Tokyo. The southernmost of Japan's four main islands — a landscape of active volcanoes, historic castle towns, ancient ceramic traditions, and thermal springs of such abundance that entire cities are built around the concept of bathing — it moves at a pace and with a confidence that does not require external validation. To travel through Kyushu slowly is to understand Japan at a depth that the faster itineraries do not reach.

The Seven Stars in Kyushu is the most exclusive train in Japan — which is to say, the most exclusive luxury train in the world. Operated by JR Kyushu, it carries a maximum of thirty guests in fourteen suites and two deluxe rooms, each individually designed by the industrial designer Eiji Mitooka with the same philosophy that produced the train's striking exterior: Japanese craft traditions — lacquer, textiles, ceramics — applied to the requirements of a moving hotel. Access is by lottery for Japanese residents and by private reservation through selected agents for international guests. Availability is among the most restricted of any travel experience currently bookable.

The Seven Stars operates on two itineraries: a two-day loop and a four-day loop through the full circuit of Kyushu. This journey uses the four-day loop — departing Hakata Station in Fukuoka on Tuesday morning and returning on Friday morning — combined with a night at The Ritz-Carlton Fukuoka before embarkation and a night in Beppu after disembarkation. Beppu: the city with more hot spring sources than anywhere else on Earth except Yellowstone, where the concept of onsen as daily practice rather than luxury experience is most fully realised. The journey ends where the island's thermal character is most concentrated.

Signature Moments

Six Encounters
with Hidden Japan

Thirty guests maximum. Access by private reservation only. The Japan that the rest of Japan has not yet found.

01
Thirty Guests — the Most Exclusive Train in the World
Seven Stars carries a maximum of thirty guests in fourteen suites — access by lottery for Japanese residents, by private reservation through selected agents for international guests. Availability among the most restricted of any travel experience currently bookable.
02
Japanese Craft Applied to a Moving Hotel
Each suite individually designed by Eiji Mitooka — lacquer, textiles, and ceramics from Kyushu's regional craft traditions, applied to the requirements of a hotel that moves through the island at speed.
03
The Four-Day Loop — the Full Circuit of Kyushu
Departing Hakata Station in Fukuoka on Tuesday morning — four days through the volcanic landscape, castle towns, and ceramic villages of Japan's most undervisited main island.
04
Beppu — 2,909 Hot Springs, One City
The onsen capital of the Earth: more hot spring sources than anywhere outside Yellowstone, the Jigoku steam vents of extraordinary colour, and the traditional bathhouse culture that has been practiced here for fifteen centuries as daily life rather than luxury.
05
Fukuoka Before Embarkation — One Night at the Ritz-Carlton
The Ritz-Carlton Fukuoka as the considered prelude — the city's Hakata ramen, the Nakasu canal district at night, and the calm of a hotel that understands what is about to begin.
06
Kyushu's Ceramics, Castles, and Volcanic Landscapes
The island moving past the observation car window — Arita's porcelain tradition, Kumamoto's castle, and the caldera of Aso that has been producing volcanic drama since the island was formed.
Curated Highlights

What Defines This Journey

01🚂
Seven Stars in Kyushu — The Most Exclusive Train in Japan
Thirty guests maximum. Fourteen individually designed suites. Access by reservation only through selected international agents. The Seven Stars carries the full weight of Japanese craft tradition — lacquer, ceramics, textiles — into a moving hotel that operates on a four-day loop through every significant landscape on the island. There is nothing comparable anywhere in the world.
02🎍
Kyushu — Japan's Undiscovered Island
Active volcanoes, historic castle towns, ancient ceramic traditions, and thermal springs of extraordinary abundance — in an island that the international tourism wave has not yet reached in the volumes that have changed Kyoto. Kyushu moves at its own pace and on its own terms, and the Seven Stars is the correct way to encounter it.
03🏺
Japanese Craft — Lacquer, Ceramics, Textiles
The interior of each Seven Stars suite represents a different Japanese craft tradition: Arita porcelain, Hakata textiles, Kagoshima lacquerware, Oita bamboo work. The train is simultaneously a gallery of regional craft and a working hotel — the only vehicle in Japan in which the journey itself is a cultural education in the most literal sense.
04🍱
Regional Kaiseki — Kyushu Ingredients
Meals aboard the Seven Stars are kaiseki-structured and built around Kyushu's regional ingredients: Kagoshima wagyu, Nagasaki seafood, Kumamoto vegetables, Oita mushrooms, and the sake and shochu of an island whose brewing traditions are among the oldest in Japan. The dining car is the finest restaurant on rails anywhere in Asia.
05♨️
Beppu — The Onsen Capital of Earth
Beppu has more hot spring sources than anywhere on Earth outside Yellowstone — 2,909 registered springs producing 130,000 litres per minute of geothermal water. The city's eight onsen districts, the Jigoku steam vents, and the particular culture of a place that has built its entire identity around the practice of bathing: the journey's most concentrated conclusion.
06⚖️
Extremely Limited Access — The Rarest Booking
The Seven Stars in Kyushu is available to international guests only through selected reservation agents. Departure dates are fixed; suite availability is limited to thirty guests per departure; demand consistently exceeds supply. This is among the most restricted travel experiences currently bookable anywhere in the world, which is the correct measure of its significance.
Sample Itinerary

Key Moments & Movements

The Seven Stars operates year-round on fixed departure dates — Tuesday morning departures from Hakata, Friday morning returns. Spring brings cherry blossoms along the Kyushu mountain routes; autumn brings the most extraordinary foliage colour in the subtropical south. The four-day itinerary covers the full circuit of the island in every season.

Every Richseen journey is individually crafted. Your private consultant will tailor each day to your preferences, pace, and passions.

Day 1
Fukuoka Arrival — Ritz-Carlton
Private transfer from Fukuoka Airport to The Ritz-Carlton Fukuoka — opened in 2023, positioned above the Tenjin district with views across the city and direct access to the neighbourhood's yatai street stalls and the izakayas that represent Fukuoka's most authentic dining culture. Evening: the Nakasu district for the stalls that operate from dusk until the last customer, serving Hakata ramen and yakitori to the city's night workers and the visitors who know where to find them.
The Ritz-Carlton, Fukuoka
Day 2
Embark Seven Stars — Hakata Station
Morning at leisure in Fukuoka — the Dazaifu Tenman-gū shrine in the hills south of the city, or the Ohori Park garden for the measured silence of a Japanese landscape in the urban context. Midday: private transfer to Hakata Station and embarkation aboard the Seven Stars in Kyushu. Departure ceremony at the platform — the train departs with the particular deliberateness of something that knows it is worth watching. Lunch in the dining car as Fukuoka gives way to the Kyushu countryside; the first regional kaiseki dinner as the train moves south toward Kagoshima.
Seven Stars in Kyushu
Days 3–4
Kyushu Exploration — Volcano, Castle, and Coast
Two days of shore excursions as the Seven Stars navigates the full circuit of Kyushu: Kagoshima and the view of Sakurajima — the active volcano that has been erupting continuously since 1955 and produces the dramatic backdrop to a city that has built its culture around living in close proximity to geological forces it cannot control. Kumamoto Castle — one of Japan's three premier castles, currently being restored after the 2016 earthquake. The Takachiho Gorge in Miyazaki Prefecture, where the Gokase River has cut through volcanic basalt to produce a gorge of extraordinary narrowness and depth. The ceramic town of Arita in Saga Prefecture — the birthplace of Japanese porcelain, where the first porcelain was produced in Japan in 1616 and the tradition has continued without interruption. The train provides the overnight accommodation throughout; the excursions are arranged by the onboard team and conducted by expert local guides.
Seven Stars in Kyushu
Day 5
Beppu — The Thermal City
Disembarkation at Beppu Station — the onsen capital of the Earth, where 2,909 registered hot spring sources produce 130,000 litres per minute of geothermal water in eight distinct districts across the city. Transfer to the ANA InterContinental Beppu, positioned above the city with panoramic views of the bay. Afternoon: the Jigoku — the "Hell Springs" — where the extreme temperature and mineral content of the water produces coloured pools of extraordinary visual character; the cobalt blue of Umi Jigoku, the blood red of Chi no Ike Jigoku. Evening: private onsen experience in one of the city's traditional bathhouses, where the practice of bathing has been conducted daily for fifteen centuries.
ANA InterContinental Beppu
Day 6
Departure — Kyushu Recedes
Morning onsen before private transfer to Oita Airport for onward flight to Tokyo, Osaka, or international departure. The Kyushu mountains are visible from the aircraft window until the island gives way to the waters of the Bungo Channel — the same landscape the Seven Stars has been moving through for four days, and now visible all at once from above.
Luxury Stays

Where You Rest Matters

Tenjin District, Fukuoka, Japan
Fukuoka — 1 Night
The Ritz-Carlton, Fukuoka
Tenjin District, Fukuoka, Japan
Opened in 2023 — the most considered luxury address in the Kyushu gateway city, positioned in the Tenjin district with views across Fukuoka and direct access to the street food culture that has made the city Japan's most underrated culinary destination. The correct prelude for the journey south.
Kyushu Island Circuit, Japan
In Transit — 3 Nights
Seven Stars in Kyushu
Hakata to Kyushu Circuit — JR Kyushu
Thirty guests maximum in fourteen individually designed suites — each a different expression of Japanese craft tradition. The dining car serves kaiseki cuisine built from regional Kyushu ingredients; the observation car provides the landscape continuously; the lounge car provides the social architecture for thirty people who understand they are aboard something that cannot be replicated. The most exclusive train in Japan.
Beppu Bay, Oita Prefecture, Japan
Beppu — 1 Night
ANA InterContinental Beppu
Beppu Bay, Oita Prefecture, Japan
Positioned above Beppu with panoramic views of the bay and the volcanic mountains behind — the most considered address in the onsen capital of the Earth, providing immediate access to the city's 2,909 hot spring sources and the Jigoku steam vents that have been producing geothermal water since the Nara period.
Exclusive Experiences

Moments Designed for You

🚂
The Journey
Seven Stars — Kaiseki in the Dining Car
Regional kaiseki served in the Seven Stars dining car — Kagoshima wagyu, Nagasaki seafood, Kumamoto vegetables, Oita mushrooms — as the Kyushu landscape moves past the window in the particular light of the Japanese afternoon. The finest restaurant on rails anywhere in Asia, operating at thirty guests and no compromise.
🌋
Geology
Sakurajima — The Active Volcano
Sakurajima has been erupting continuously since January 1955 — producing ash falls over Kagoshima city and the particular atmosphere of a place that has decided to coexist with something it cannot control. The view across Kinko Bay from Kagoshima city, with the volcano in the background performing its daily routine, is one of the most extraordinary urban landscapes in Japan.
♨️
Onsen
Beppu — Traditional Bathhouse Culture
Beppu's traditional bathhouses — the Takegawara onsen, operating since 1879; the Hyōtan Onsen, with its sand baths and waterfall pools — represent onsen culture as daily practice rather than luxury amenity. An evening in the traditional bathhouse district is an evening conducted at the pace and on the terms that the city has maintained for fifteen centuries.
🏺
Craft
Arita — The Birthplace of Japanese Porcelain
The town of Arita in Saga Prefecture has been producing porcelain since 1616 — when Korean potter Yi Sam-pyeong discovered the kaolin clay deposits in the hills above the town and began the tradition that produced Imari and Kakiemon ware, exported throughout Europe by the Dutch East India Company and collected by the courts of the Continent for three centuries.
Visual Journey

Through the Lens

Begin Your Story

Craft Your
Private Journey

Every detail — from your first evening in Fukuoka to your final morning in Beppu — is composed entirely around you. Speak with your dedicated Richseen journey consultant today.

From USD 20,000+ per person

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