Sentos have cut operating hours and welcomed fewer customers, with some deciding to fold amid the energy crisis
2-MIN READ2-MIN ListenSCMP’s Asia deskPublished: 2:49pm, 27 Apr 2026Updated: 2:49pm, 27 Apr 2026Customers of Ikesu Onsen, a traditional Japanese bathhouse in Tsushima in Aichi prefecture, have had to delay their daily dips due to the Iran war.The sento, or public bathhouse, has been forced to push back its opening time by an hour since late March because of an unstable supply of fuel oil, according to Kyodo.Monthly delivery has been halved from about a tonne, leading the number of customers of the family-run 97-year-old sento to fall to around 10 per day.
“It’s a major blow,” its 57-year-old operator, Atsuko Matsui, told the news agency. “If we are told [by the supplier] ‘this amount at this price,’ we have no choice but to accept it.”
Like Iketsu, sentos across Japan have had to shorten opening hours or close temporarily as the global energy crisis bites.