What Japan Actually Is For a Small Gift Brand
The decision criteria before committing.
Do these. In this order.
- File JPO trademark first. Japan is first-to-file, distributor squatting is real
- Register as Qualified Invoice Issuer (JCT) before any wholesale shipment
- List on Orosy immediately. Passive discovery, no Japan entity required
- Set up Amazon Japan FBA. First revenue in 6–10 weeks
- Build bilingual JPY-priced line sheet before any outreach
- Exhibit at Interior Lifestyle Tokyo. Highest buyer quality of any Japan show
- Contact Loft directly. English proposal page, open to foreign brands.
- Email zakka boutiques with named buyer, bilingual attachment, JPY pricing
Stop doing these now.
- Cold email in English to Japanese boutiques. Around 3% response rate,, usually ignored
- Pitching department stores without a distributor on their vendor list. Waste of time.
- Assuming Faire covers Japan: it doesn't exist here as of 2026
- Pricing in USD on your Japan line sheet. Buyers will not convert it.
- Signing a distributor before trademark is filed. You lock yourself into a fight.
- Granting exclusivity with no annual minimums. You are locked for 3–5 years with no leverage
- Launching Rakuten before Amazon proves demand: expensive and premature
- Treating Japan as a quarterly export market: buyers will not partner with you
Why you price at 1.5–2× and still sell
- You can price 1.5–2× home-country retail and Japanese consumers will pay it
- Boutiques reorder at 60–80% annually for product that works
- Packaging matters more than the product. Get this right and the rest follows
- Foreign origin is a premium signal here, not a barrier
- Gohobi (self-gift) and temiyage (visiting gift) don't require established vendor status
- Near-zero import duty under EPA. Your landed cost is leaner than most markets
Why it's still hard
- ¥150 USD/JPY compresses your import margin 20–30% vs. 2019
- 12–18 months before distributor first order. Year 1 is cost.
- Faire doesn't exist here. You build the pipeline yourself.
- Consensus-based buying. Everything moves slower than you expect
- Defect tolerance below 1%: Japan is unforgiving on quality
- DDP required by every major channel: logistics setup is non-optional
Candles/fragrance: No mandatory JP cert for non-electric. Strong market. Start here. · Premium stationery: Most accessible entry. Loft, Hands, zakka boutiques actively buy. · Home textiles/pillows: Real import demand. Mandatory Japanese fiber labels (JIS L 0001:2024) since Aug 19, 2025. · Ceramics/tabletop: Food-contact items need FSA test cert at customs. Decorative items: no cert. · Design objects/accessories: Lowest compliance bar. Start outreach this week. · Children's products: Child PSC Mark mandatory Dec 25, 2025. Add 2–4 months and cost, or exclude. · Electric warmers/diffusers: PSE Mark required. 4–6 weeks. Don't ship without it.
Entry Sequence
Exact actions. Exact order. No theory.
- File JPO trademarkDay 1. ¥80K–¥300K. Non-negotiable.
- Appoint ACP/IORSK Advisory, ACP Japan, or COVUE. 4–6 weeks.
- Register JCT/QII¥150K–¥500K/year. Required before any B2B shipment.
- List on OrosyTakes days. Passive JP discovery starts now.
- Set up Amazon JP FBAEnglish backend. JP-language listings. First sales in 6–10 weeks.
- Build bilingual line sheetJPY pricing, cm dimensions, DDP Tokyo. ¥30K–¥60K translation.
- Submit to LoftEnglish supplier page at loft.co.jp/en. 5–8 hero SKUs. JPY pricing.
- Email Tier 1 boutiquesKakimori, Angers, CLASKA Do, Today's Special. Named buyer. Bilingual attachment.
- Register for ILTInterior Lifestyle Tokyo June 10–12. Apply for MOVEMENT zone early.
- Research 3–5 distributorsDon't approach yet. You need proof points first.
- Instagram DM to indie boutiques Outbound, Roundabout. Owners run IG actively.
- Exhibit at ILT (June)Target: 30–150 contacts, 5–15 sample requests.
- Convert show contactsSamples within 5 days. Follow-up within 24h. POs in 4–8 weeks.
- TIGS Autumn (Sep)Second show if budget allows. Broader buyer profile.
- Approach Loft againPost-ILT follow-up with show results adds credibility.
- Target 5–15 boutique accountsAcross Tokyo + Osaka + Kyoto.
- Approach distributorsOnly with proof: Amazon sales data + 5–10 boutique accounts + bilingual catalog.
- Loft national rolloutIf flagship trial performing (50+ units/90 days).
- Add Rakuten IchibaAfter Amazon reviews established. JP consultant required.
- First depato pop-upVia distributor. Isetan The Stage. Budget ¥5M–¥15M all-in.
- Super Delivery listedVia distributor. 330K+ JP retailers.
- 5–15 boutique accounts
- Loft flagship trial confirmed
- Amazon JP live with reviews
- Revenue: ¥3M–¥20M / 2–5% of global
- Distributor conversations started
- Exclusive distributor signed with annual minimums
- Loft national rollout
- Rakuten Ichiba live
- First depato pop-up
- Revenue: ¥20M–¥60M / 5–10% of global
- Depato permanent counter if Y2 sell-through proven
- Casa Brutus editorial
- Hands national account
- Revenue: ¥50M–¥150M / 8–15% of global
How Japanese Retail Actually Works
What the channel structure means for your cash flow and first accounts.
Fastest entry. Small orders. Real money.
Japanese zakka boutiques buy outright. 6–24 units, ¥30K–¥150K opening orders. Pro-forma first, Net 30 after. No consignment. Decisions in 2–8 weeks if samples are in hand. What kills it: buyers need bilingual JPY-priced materials and either a trade show meeting or a named referral. Cold email in English fails consistently. Come prepared or don't come.
70% consignment. You stock the floor. You pay the staff.
Japanese department stores run on 特定仕入: consignment. You hold inventory, they take 25–40% commission, you often staff the counter. Settlement Net 30–60 after the sales month. Outright buying is ~15%, reserved for proven brands.
The trap: ¥3M–¥10M on a depato floor, minimal sell-through reporting, nothing collected until it moves. Negotiate monthly stock reports, 3-month sell-through thresholds, and return rights before you agree to anything. Most foreign brands don't ask. Ask.
| Channel | Buying model | Opening order | Timeline | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zakka / indie boutiques Kakimori, CLASKA Do, D&Department, Angers, Today's Special, Outbound, Roundabout, Spiral Market |
Outright. Pro-forma first, Net 30 after. | 6–24 units / ¥30K–¥150K | 2–8 weeks | Start here |
| Loft 177 stores, centralized buying, Chiyoda HQ |
Outright (直仕入). English supplier proposal page. Unique in Japan.. | 50–200 unit flagship trial / Net 60 | 3–9 months | Priority chain: contact Month 2 |
| Hands (Cainz-owned) ~80 stores, centralized since 2022 |
Outright. Centralized buyer. | 100–300 units trial / Net 60 | 3–9 months | Year 1 target |
| Orosy Japan's closest Faire equivalent |
B2B platform. Foreign brands list directly. Shopify-integrated. | Variable: buyer discovers, places order | List in Month 1 | List immediately. Passive discovery, |
| Amazon Japan | FBA marketplace. English backend. IOR required. | No MOQ. ¥4,900/mo + 15% + FBA. | 6–10 weeks to first sales | Month 1–3: always run in parallel |
| Select shops Beams fennica, Actus, United Arrows, Today's Special Adastria |
Outright or consignment. Decentralized by label. | $2K–$8K / 6–12 month decision | 6–12 months | Warm intro or trade show only |
| Department stores Isetan, Takashimaya, Mitsukoshi, Hankyu |
Consignment 70%. Pop-up (25–35% commission + ¥500K–¥3M venue/week) accessible earlier. | Pop-up: ¥5M–¥15M budget. Counter: ¥3M–¥10M inventory. | Pop-up: Year 1 via distributor. Counter: Year 2+ | Pop-up Year 1 possible. Counter: Year 2+ |
| Rakuten Ichiba | Marketplace. 66M+ users. Japanese-only backend. | ¥60K setup + ¥50K/mo + 2–7%. BEP ~¥1.3M/mo. | Year 2: after Amazon reviews exist | Year 2 only |
| Super Delivery | B2B platform. 330K+ JP retailers. Japan entity required for vendors. | Via distributor only. | Via distributor | Access via distributor |
| Faire | Not operational in Japan as of 2026. | N/A | N/A | Does not exist here |
Target Accounts: Named, Prioritized, Actionable
Start with Tier 1. These have public contacts. Move to Tier 2 after trade show.
| Account | City | Contact | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kakimori (kakimori.com) | Kuramae, Tokyo | wholesale@kakimori.com. Explicit wholesale portal | Premium stationery, paper goods, writing accessories |
| Angers (angers.jp) | Kyoto (flagship) + Tokyo/Osaka/Yokohama | mail@angers.jp. Buyer Isao Nishizawa sources globally | Gift, lifestyle accessories, tabletop, candles |
| CLASKA Gallery & Shop "Do" (do.claska.com) | 14+ stores nationally | claska.com inquiry form | Home decor, lifestyle objects, Japanese-adjacent foreign design |
| Today's Special (todaysspecial.jp) | Jiyugaoka, Shibuya Hikarie, Hibiya, Kyoto, Kobe | Via Adastria wholesale inquiry | Candles, home goods, lifestyle accessories |
| D&DEPARTMENT PROJECT (d-department.com) | Tokyo HQ + 14 stores nationally + Seoul | d-department@lingble.com | Long life design objects. Must fit their philosophy |
| Loft HQ (loft.co.jp/en) | 177 stores, centralized Chiyoda, Tokyo | English supplier proposal page. Unique in Japan. | Stationery, candles, accessories, home decor, puzzles |
| Traveler's Factory (travelers-company.com) | Tokyo (Nakameguro) | Via site inquiry | Premium stationery, travel accessories, notebooks |
| Papier Labo (papierlabo.com) | Tokyo | Via site inquiry | Paper goods, stationery, letterpress |
Cibone, Outbound, Spiral Market
Cibone (Omotesando GYRE): HAY-adjacent international design objects. Welcome Group. Outbound (Kichijoji): owner Kazuto Kobayashi responds on Instagram @kazutokobayashi. IG DM works here. Spiral Market (Aoyama): rotating exhibition model, gallery show is the entry route. Stationery Café Tokyo, Frames, Check & Stripe, Mille Mille. All Priority 2 Tokyo accounts.
21_21 Design Sight, Mori Art, Tokyo National Museum
Museum stores are an underused first-account category for foreign design/lifestyle brands. One centralized buyer covers multiple locations. 21_21 Design Sight Shop (Roppongi), Mori Art Museum Shop, Tokyo National Museum Shop, Nezu Museum Shop, Watari-um ON Sundays, Design Museum Shop (Shibuya Hikarie d47). Reach via direct email to museum shop buyer.
Regional expansion after Tokyo foothold
Osaka: D&Department Osaka, Today's Special Osaka, Arts & Crafts Osaka, Stationery Box Osaka. Kyoto: Sfera Building (sfera-web.com), D&Department Kyoto, Papier Lab Kyoto. Fukuoka: Today's Special Fukuoka, Daimyo Design Row. Daikanyama: Tsutaya Books Daikanyama, Log Road, ARTLESS. Don't spread nationally until Tokyo is working.
177 stores. Centralized buying. English procurement page. Most Japanese retailers require a distributor introduction. Loft does not. Submit at loft.co.jp/en. Send 5–8 hero SKUs, JPY wholesale, DDP Tokyo, bilingual catalog. A prepared foreign brand can reach a flagship trial in 4–9 months without any Japan entity. Do this before you approach Isetan.
Japan Distributors: Named Contacts
Don't approach until you have boutique proof and Amazon data. When you're ready, these are the contacts.
JPO trademark first. File before emailing any distributor. ¥80K–¥300K per class. 6–12 months to registration. Your priority date protects from Day 1. · Annual minimums in the contract. ¥30M–¥100M/year floor or don't sign. · TM stays in your name. Verify in writing. · 6-month notice clause. Japanese Civil Code protects long-running distributors at exit. Build exit terms into the contract now, not when you need them.
| Company | URL | Known for | Fit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sazaby League | sazaby-league.co.jp | Afternoon Tea, Akomeya, agete. ~¥95B FY2023. 530+ stores. Operates Flying Tiger Copenhagen JV. | Premium gift, candles, lifestyle accessories, home goods |
| Look Holdings | look.co.jp | Marimekko Japan, A.P.C. Japan, Il Bisonte, Vera Bradley. TSE-listed, ~¥50B revenue. | Textile-led lifestyle, fashion-adjacent gift brands |
| Welcome Inc. | welcome.co.jp | Cibone, HAY Tokyo distribution. Operates Today's Special (Jiyugaoka, Hikarie). | Design objects, Scandinavian/European home, premium lifestyle |
| Eastland | N/A | Astier de Villatte Japan, Rick Owens. Boutique distributor, premium design. | Premium candles, home fragrance, art objects |
| Nordic Gift Japan | nordicgift.jp | Specializes in Nordic/Scandinavian gift and lifestyle brands. Known importer in this niche. | Scandinavian-adjacent candles, stationery, lifestyle objects |
| Dutch Design Japan | dutchdesign.jp | European design product importer. Strong in Amsterdam/Netherlands brand pipeline. | Design objects, home accessories, European lifestyle |
| Fine Gear | finegear.jp/en | Lifestyle and home goods importer. English-language company page. | Home goods, accessories, mid-premium lifestyle |
| Cast Japan | cast-japan.com | Foreign brand importer. Gift and lifestyle categories. | Gift, lifestyle, home accessories |
| Company | URL | Category specialization |
|---|---|---|
| Candle Living | candleliving.jp | Candles and home fragrance specialist importer |
| MIDORI | midori-japan.co.jp/english/distributors | Premium stationery distributor: active international brand pipeline |
| LIAM Japan | liam-japan.com/wholesale | Gift and lifestyle wholesale: explicit wholesale page |
| Aihara Trading | aiharaboeki.co.jp | Lifestyle goods trading company |
| Stitch | stitch.jp/wholesale | Lifestyle wholesale: explicit wholesale page |
| Interprogetto Japan | interprogetto.com | European design objects importer |
| YS International | ys-international.co.jp | Gift and lifestyle international import |
| George & Oliver | go-g.jp | Lifestyle and home goods importer |
| Shikama International | shikama-intl.co.jp/burando | Foreign brand distributor, home and lifestyle |
| Lune D'eau | lune-deau.co.jp/partner | Lifestyle brand partnership: explicit partner page |
| Model | Brand share of MSRP | Pros | Cons | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Direct to zakka boutiques | 40–50% | Highest margin. Fastest. Direct relationships. | Small orders. Full logistics burden on brand. | Start here: Month 1 |
| Japan exclusive distributor | 18–30% | Handles IOR, JCT, warehouse, sales. Opens depato and Super Delivery. | Lowest margin. 2–5 year lock-in. Annual minimums required. | Year 1–2: after proof points |
| Agent/rep (10–15% commission) | 50–70% less commission | Low cost. Fast. Brand retains control. | Uncommon. Retailers prefer local invoicing. | Only when you know the person |
| Online-first (Amazon / Shopify .jp) | 50–75% less platform fee | Fastest revenue. Demand validation. | JP-language listings required. Reviews take time. | Always run in parallel |
| Depato pop-up / consignment | 60–72% gross (you hold inventory) | Prestige signal. Drives boutique demand downstream. | ¥5M–¥30M budget. Counter staff costs. Capital-intensive. | Scale only: not Year 1 |
Trade Shows
Two shows that matter. One to add in Year 2. One to skip entirely.
Budget $10K–$25K all-in (booth, design, sample shipping, bilingual catalog, interpreter, travel). Expect: 30–150 contacts, 20–30% qualified, 5–15% convert to sample orders in 90 days. Plan 2–3 shows before real traction. ILT June is your first show. TIGS September is your second.
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Cost Stack
Two waterfalls. Same product. See what the distributor layer adds to your consumer price.
If your direct boutique retail is ¥3,630, your distributor channel consumer price will be ~¥4,752. Both are viable: Japanese consumers accept this. But you must engineer your FOB so the distributor waterfall lands at a clean JPY price point: ¥4,800, not ¥4,752. Do this calculation before your first export quote to Japan. Retroactively renegotiating FOB after a distributor signs is painful.
Pricing: Five Rules That Apply Only in Japan
Hit these price points or you won't sell. Follow these rules or buyers will correct you.
| Channel | Markup over wholesale | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Department store | 2.5–3.0× | Consignment commission 25–40% on top. Price to absorb both. |
| Loft / Hands / select chains | 2.2–2.6× | Standard chain markup. Clean price point engineering essential. |
| Independent boutiques | 2.0–2.5× | Lowest markup. Fastest decisions. Best for margin visibility. |
| Online DTC (.jp Shopify / Amazon) | 2.5–3.5× effective | After platform fees (15–25%), effective brand margin is similar to boutique. |
| Rule | What it means | What breaks if you ignore it |
|---|---|---|
| 1: Total price display mandatory 総額表示 since April 2021 |
All consumer prices must show JCT-inclusive. Show ¥3,300 or ¥3,300 (税込). Not ¥3,000+tax. | Retailers will correct your materials. Signals you don't understand the market. |
| 2: Hit the clean price points Kireina kakaku |
Engineer wholesale so retail-inclusive lands at: ¥1,000 / ¥1,500 / ¥1,980 / ¥2,980 / ¥3,300 / ¥4,800 / ¥6,600 / ¥9,800. Retailers price to these naturally. | Product sits awkwardly on shelf at ¥3,850 when everything around it is ¥3,300 or ¥4,800. Kills sell-through. |
| 3: No RPM (resale price maintenance) | You cannot legally enforce retail prices in Japan. Provide 参考小売価格 (reference retail) + MAP policy. That's your limit. | JFTC considers retail price fixing illegal. A retailer who discounts has limited legal exposure. |
| 4: Open price (オープン価格) is the norm | Japan does not use fixed MSRP. Provide reference retail price (参考小売価格). Do not use "MSRP" language on your Japan line sheet. | Signals you prepared US/EU materials and renamed the field. Buyer credibility takes a hit. |
| 5: JPY on your line sheet. Always. | Every wholesale price in JPY. Update quarterly for exchange rate. ¥150 baseline, model at ¥140 worst case. | Buyer will not convert USD. Line sheet goes in the pile with every other unprepared brand. |
Compliance: What Stops Your First Shipment
Duties. JCT. IOR. Product safety. Labeling. Only what applies to gift and lifestyle.
| Category | HS Code | MFN | EPA Rate (US / EU / CPTPP) | Action |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Candles | 3406 | 0% | 0% | None required |
| Notebooks / diaries | 4820.10 | 0% | 0% | None required |
| Greeting cards / paper goods | 4909 | 0% | 0% | None required |
| Pencils | 9609 | 3.4% | 0% | Obtain EPA Certificate of Origin |
| Pillows / cushions | 9404.90 | 3.8% | 0% | Obtain EPA CoO |
| Textile furnishings | 6304 | 3.7–7.4% | 0% | Verify rules-of-origin: Chinese-made goods do NOT qualify |
| Ceramic tableware | 6911/6912 | 2.3–3.4% | 0% | Food-contact: FSA test cert required at customs |
| Glassware | 7013 | 3.6–5.4% | 0% | Obtain EPA CoO |
| Puzzles / adult games | 9503 | 0% | 0% | Child PSC Mark if for under-36 months (Dec 2025 rule) |
A US brand manufacturing in China does not qualify for US-Japan EPA zero duty. Those goods pay MFN rate. Verify origin per HS code before quoting any Japanese buyer a landed cost. This mistake is discovered at first customs clearance.
- Japan Consumption Tax = 10% on CIF + duty. Always. No exceptions. Factor into every cost waterfall. Non-recoverable unless you are IOR with JCT registration. ¥150 FX at $10 FOB → ~¥0.45 JCT per unit minimum. Compounds fast on large shipments.
- Qualified Invoice Issuer (QII) registration: required before first B2B wholesale shipment. Japanese retailers lose JCT input credit from non-registered suppliers. The credit phases down: 80% until Sep 2026 → 50% until Sep 2028 → 0% after. Buyers are already adding QII registration as a vendor qualification. Register through a Japan JCT Tax Representative. 4–6 weeks. ¥150K–¥500K/year. Provider: SK Advisory, ACP Japan, COVUE.
- 2024 JCT reform: foreign corporations with capital ≥¥10M are taxable from Day 1. No new-business exemption. Do not plan around an exemption that no longer applies.
- Importer of Record (IOR) / ACP: must be appointed before first commercial shipment. Without a Japan entity, appoint an Attorney for Customs Procedures (ACP). Only the IOR can reclaim import JCT. If your 3PL or distributor is listed as IOR, you lose that reclaim right. Cost: ¥30K–¥80K/shipment + ¥100K–¥300K setup + ¥30K–¥100K monthly retainer.
- Textile labeling: mandatory. Effective August 19, 2025. Japanese-language fiber composition + JIS L 0001:2024 care symbols required on all textiles. Apply labels in bonded warehouse post-arrival. Importer name + address in Japanese on every unit.
- Child PSC Mark: mandatory for toys marketed at under-36 months. Effective December 25, 2025. Self-declaration no longer accepted. METI-authorized conformity assessment required. ~¥200K–¥500K per SKU class, 2–4 months. Budget or exclude children's SKUs from Japan range.
- PSE Mark (DENAN): required for candle warmers, electric diffusers, LED decorations. Non-electric wax candles exempt. Register as Notifying Supplier with METI within 30 days of first import. Customs broker handles.
- Food Sanitation Act test certificate: required for food-contact ceramics and glass at customs. Decorative-only pieces exempt. Heavy-metal leaching test from MHLW-recognized lab before first container if selling food-contact tableware.
- Candles: no mandatory Japanese certification. IFRA compliance and REACH SVHC screening are best practice. Department stores may request a Safety Data Sheet in Japanese. Have a Japanese-language SDS ready before depato meetings.
Logistics
3PL options. Incoterms buyers require. Freight benchmarks.
| Provider | Best for | Key fact |
|---|---|---|
| OpenLogi | Under 500 orders/month, pay-as-you-go | No fixed monthly fee. Shopify-integrated. Saitama/Chiba/Osaka. Best entry-level for small foreign brands. |
| COVUE | No Japan entity: ACP + IOR + 3PL bundled | Most hands-off option. Handles everything a brand without Japanese legal infrastructure needs. |
| Yamato Transport (Narita Bonded) | 1,000+ packages/month, B2B + B2C mixed | 45,000 sqm Narita bonded warehouse (March 2025). Size 100: ¥1,650 B2B rate. Volume contract: 30–50% off. |
| Yusen Logistics / Kintetsu | FCL ocean + ACP services bundled | Full customs + warehousing solution for container-level volume. |
| Distributor warehouse | Default option when distributor is in place | Bundled into distributor margin. Eliminates logistics overhead until volume justifies dedicated 3PL. |
DDP required: no exceptions
Department stores will not act as IOR. DDP is the only acceptable incoterm. Non-negotiable. If you cannot deliver DDP, you cannot access depato channels. Period.
DDP or DAP: default to DDP
Loft and Hands strongly prefer DDP. Independent boutiques will often accept DAP if they have a customs broker. Default to DDP in your line sheet: it removes friction. Accommodate DAP only if the buyer specifically requests.
CIF Tokyo or FOB origin
Japanese distributors typically prefer CIF Narita/Tokyo or FOB origin: they want to control IOR for JCT purposes. Do not offer DDP to a distributor. Confirm incoterms before the first PO or you will renegotiate at cost.
| Lane | Air ($/kg) | Sea FCL ($/40') | Sea LCL ($/CBM) |
|---|---|---|---|
| US West Coast → Tokyo | $3.50–5.50 | $1,500–2,500 | $80–130 |
| US East Coast → Tokyo | $4.50–7.00 | $3,500–5,500 | $90–130 |
| EU North → Tokyo | $3.80–5.50 | $3,000–4,500 | $90–130 |
Air vs. sea threshold: ~250 kg / 2 CBM. Candles and ceramics are heavy: sea saves 60–80% on large shipments. Stationery and paper: air competitive on small test consignments. Defect tolerance: Japan retailers accept <1%, often <0.3% for premium. Hold 5–10% buffer stock at JP 3PL for instant replacements.
What Breaks
Real failure points. No softening.
| What breaks | Why | Result |
|---|---|---|
| No JPO trademark before distributor contact | Japan is first-to-file. Squatting is real. | Unrecoverable |
| No JCT/QII registration | B2B buyers can't claim input credit from you. | No wholesale |
| USD pricing on your line sheet | Buyers won't convert it. | Ignored every time |
| Cold email in English to boutiques | ~3% response rate. | Waste of time |
| No bilingual materials | You don't exist in this market. | Invisible |
| Distributor deal with no annual minimums | You're locked for 3–5 years with no leverage. | Trapped |
| Pitching depato cold | Samples go to a mailroom. Nothing happens. | Dead end |
| Rakuten before Amazon proves demand | ¥60K setup + ¥50K/mo with no reviews. | Burned cash |
| Ochugen/Oseibo as your main season | Both are food-dominant. Wrong category, wrong buyer. | No orders |
| Chinese-made goods treated as EPA origin | They don't qualify. Discovered at customs. | Surprise duties |
| No Japan-resident operating layer | You cannot scale past boutiques without ACP + JCT + 3PL. | Stuck small forever |
Entry Mistakes: What People Think Works But Doesn't
Common assumptions. All wrong.
| What people think | What actually happens |
|---|---|
| "We'll find a distributor first, then use them to test the market." | Wrong order. Distributors want proof the market works before committing. Come with Amazon data and 5–10 boutique accounts. Then approach distributors. Not before. |
| "We need to build a full Japanese website before outreach." | No impact in Year 1. Japanese boutique buyers want a bilingual PDF line sheet, not a .jp Shopify store. Build the line sheet. The website can wait 12 months. |
| "Rakuten is bigger than Amazon in Japan: we should start there." | Rakuten requires Japanese-only backend, ¥60K setup, ¥50K/month fixed, and breaks even at ¥1.3M/month. Without Japanese reviews, you won't get there. Start on Amazon (English backend, lower cost), add Rakuten in Year 2 after reviews exist. |
| "Department stores are the prestige move: let's target Isetan first." | Isetan will not meet with you cold. You cannot get on their vendor master without a distributor. Even pop-up placement requires someone already in the system. Depato is Year 2 minimum, and only via distributor. |
| "Ochugen and Oseibo are the big Japan gifting seasons: we'll time our entry around them." | Both seasons are food-dominated. Department stores lock assortments 4–6 months ahead. You need established vendor status to participate. Your actual Japan gifting opportunity is gohobi, birthdays, Valentine's, and temiyage: none of which require seasonal timing. |
| "We'll get a distributor to handle everything and check in quarterly." | Passive ownership kills Japan partnerships. Distributors invest in brands that show up: trade shows, seasonal briefs, sell-through reviews, PR support. Brands that disappear after signing get deprioritized in 6 months. Show up or lose the market. |
| "Our Instagram following will drive boutique inquiries." | Japanese buyers do not discover foreign brands through Instagram alone. Trade shows (ILT, TIGS), direct email with bilingual materials, and introductions from existing Japan contacts are how discovery happens. Instagram validates, it doesn't generate. Show up in person. |
| "We'll send a few samples cold to Isetan, Tsutaya, and Cibone and see who responds." | Samples sent cold to department stores and major concept stores go to a receiving desk or get discarded. Japanese buyers receive hundreds of unsolicited sample parcels. Without a meeting pre-arranged and a bilingual presentation attached, nothing moves. |
Who Should Enter Japan Right Now
Category-by-category verdict. No generic encouragement.
| Category | Verdict | What you need to know |
|---|---|---|
| Candles / home fragrance | Enter now | Strong validated market. No mandatory JP cert for non-electric. Diptyque ~10 Tokyo locations proves the demand ceiling. Target zakka boutiques and Loft first. Price ¥2,980–¥9,800 tax-inclusive. Electric warmers/diffusers: PSE Mark first. |
| Premium stationery / paper | Enter now | Most accessible Japan entry. Loft, Hands, Kakimori, zakka boutiques actively buy. Zero certification for adult paper goods. Contact Kakimori wholesale page and Loft submission simultaneously this week. |
| Home textiles / pillows | Enter: labeling first | Real import demand. Japandi aesthetic helps. Mandatory: Japanese fiber composition labels + JIS L 0001:2024 care symbols (Aug 19, 2025). Apply in bonded warehouse. Price pillows ¥5,800–¥18,000. |
| Home decor / ceramic tabletop | Enter: food contact check first | Concept stores and depato gift floors buy foreign design objects. Food-contact ceramics need FSA heavy-metal test cert before first container. Purely decorative: no cert. Price ¥3,300–¥15,000. |
| Design objects / lifestyle accessories | Enter now | Lowest compliance bar. Most accessible boutique entry. If your product has a clear aesthetic identity and gift-ready packaging, start outreach to Angers and CLASKA Do this week. |
| Adult puzzles / tabletop games | Enter | Premium adult collector segment viable. Loft and Hands are the right chain targets. Price ¥3,500–¥12,000. Frame as gifting object, not game. Zero certification for adult product. |
| Children's products / toys | Enter if PSC is budgeted | Child PSC Mark mandatory Dec 25, 2025 for under-36-month products. ¥200K–¥500K per SKU class, 2–4 months. Run the numbers first. Do not exclude before calculating cost. |
| Low-AOV mass stationery (under ¥800 retail) | Skip or reconfigure | Cannot absorb Japan's cost stack at sub-¥800 retail. Kokuyo and Pilot own this at domestic pricing. Reconfigure as premium bundle or exclude from Japan range. |
| Electric / connected products | Enter with PSE plan | PSE Mark required. ~¥50K–¥150K cost, 4–6 weeks. Manageable. Do not ship before this is in place: customs will hold the shipment. |
Scorecard: Is Japan Right For Your Brand Right Now?
Scores from the perspective of a $500K–$10M foreign gift or lifestyle brand.
| Dimension | Score | What it means for you |
|---|---|---|
| Boutique and indie retail access | 8 / 10 | Kakimori, Angers, CLASKA Do, Today's Special, Loft: accessible with preparation. Opening orders ¥30K–¥150K, decisions 2–8 weeks. Higher access than most developed markets if you come prepared. |
| Consumer appetite for imported design | 8 / 10 | Foreign origin is a premium signal in the ¥2,000–¥15,000 band. You are differentiated by origin, not fighting against it. Holds as long as your packaging matches the expectation. |
| Pricing power | 8 / 10 | 1.5–2× home-country retail is normal and accepted. One of the highest-premium markets globally for foreign lifestyle. Yen constraint is real: price your FOB to work at ¥140 worst case. |
| Compliance burden | 7 / 10 | Lighter than Korea for most gift/lifestyle. Candles: no cert. Stationery: no cert. Home decor: no cert (unless food-contact ceramics). The real burden is JCT setup: administrative, not product safety. 4–6 weeks with the right broker. |
| Setup complexity | 5 / 10 | More infrastructure required than most markets before first dollar: JPO trademark, ACP, JCT, IOR, DDP logistics, bilingual materials. None technically complex. All non-negotiable. Do them in sequence. |
| Speed to first revenue | 6 / 10 | Amazon Japan: 6–10 weeks. Boutique orders: 3–6 months. Loft trial: 4–9 months. Depato pop-up: Year 1 with distributor. Permanent counter: Year 2+. Slow to start, high-value once moving. |
| Distributor dependency | 6 / 10 | You can open boutiques, Loft, and Amazon JP without a distributor. You cannot access depato at scale or Super Delivery without one. The direct path takes you to 3–5% of global revenue before you need distribution. More options than Korea. |
| Yen exposure | 4 / 10 | USD/JPY at ¥150 compresses import margins 20–30% vs. 2019. Model your distributor waterfall at ¥140 worst case. If it doesn't work at ¥140, renegotiate FOB before signing. This is the single biggest structural risk in Japan 2025–2026. |
| Department-store route | 5 / 10 | Real and achievable: Year 2–3. 25–40% consignment, brand-staffed counter, ¥3M–¥10M inventory. Isetan The Stage pop-up is the accessible first step. Do not let depato ambition shape your Year 1 timeline. |
| Long-term compounding potential | 9 / 10 | Highest-compounding gift/lifestyle market in Asia for brands that execute in Years 1–2. Japanese consumers are loyal at 60–80% annual reorder rates for proven product. The difficulty of entry protects the margins of brands that get through it. Year 3–5 is where Japan rewards you. |