The area of Hino was part of ancient
Hōki Province.
Yayoi period and
Kofun period remains have been found in the area. In the
Sengoku period (1467 – 1573) the
Hino clan built
Kagamiyama Castle on
Mount Kagami () in the Kurosaka area of Hino. In 1632 the
Ikeda clan destroyed the castle, and used the site as an encampment. In the
Edo period (1603 – 1868) the village of Neu became a
shukuba post town. The commercial and administrative activities of the present-day Hino shifted to the Neu, where they remain today. During the
Edo Period, it was part of the holdings of the
Ikeda clan of
Tottori Domain. The extraction of iron sand from the mountains and the production of tatara iron were important industries in this area until the rise of modern iron production in the modern era. Following the
Meiji restoration the area was divided into villages within
Hino District, Tottori on October 1, 1889, with the establishment of the modern municipalities system. The town of Hino was formed on May 1, 1959, by the merger of the towns of Kurosaka and Neu. ==Government==