Japan Tax-Free Shopping 2026: The New ‘Pay First, Refund Later’ System β€” Complete Tourist Guide

πŸ“ AI-Assisted Content Notice
This article was created with AI writing assistance (ChatGPT, Claude, etc.). Product selection, specifications, and reviews are verified by the Japan Life Lab editorial team.

Japan’s Tax-Free System Is Getting a Major Overhaul

If you’re planning to shop in Japan in 2026, there’s something important you need to know: Japan’s tax-free shopping system is changing dramatically on November 1, 2026. The old system β€” where stores deducted consumption tax (10%) immediately at the register β€” is being replaced with a completely new “Pay First, Refund Later” model.

Under the new system, you pay the full price including tax at the store, receive a QR code receipt, and claim your refund at the airport before departing Japan. This guide explains everything you need to know about both the old system (valid until October 31, 2026) and the new one coming November 1st.

Key Date: November 1, 2026 β€” Japan’s new tax-free refund system goes live. The old system ends completely on October 31, 2026.

How Japan’s Current Tax-Free System Works (Until October 31, 2026)

Until the end of October 2026, Japan uses an in-store tax exemption system:

  • Show your passport at checkout at participating stores
  • The store confirms your tourist status and applies a 10% consumption tax deduction immediately
  • You pay the tax-reduced price right there at the register
  • For consumables (food, cosmetics, medicine): minimum Β₯5,000, maximum Β₯500,000/day, must be sealed in packaging
  • For non-consumables (electronics, clothing): minimum Β₯5,000
  • The two categories must be purchased separately

This system has led to significant tax fraud β€” tourists buying tax-free items and reselling them commercially. The new system is designed to close this loophole.

Japan’s New Tax-Free System: “Pay First, Refund Later” (From November 1, 2026)

Step 1: Shopping at the Store

Under the new system, you shop normally. At checkout:

  • Show your original passport to the cashier
  • The cashier uploads your passport info and purchase details to the National Tax Agency’s Tax-Free Sales Management System
  • You pay the full price including 10% consumption tax
  • You receive a receipt with a QR code containing your purchase records

No immediate discount β€” you pay full price at the store. The refund comes later at the airport.

Step 2: At the Airport (Self-Service Kiosk)

When you’re ready to depart Japan:

  • Find the Tax Refund Kiosk at your departure airport (after security, in the international departure zone)
  • Scan your passport
  • The system automatically retrieves all your purchase records from participating stores
  • Confirm your purchases on screen
  • The system determines if a baggage inspection is required

Step 3: Receiving Your Refund

The refund is processed via e-payment methods (credit card refund, digital wallet) β€” no more waiting in cash lines. This is generally faster and eliminates the need to carry cash for refunds.

Old System vs. New System: Key Differences

FeatureOld System (Until Oct 31)New System (From Nov 1)
When you pay taxDeducted at store immediatelyPay full price; refund at airport
Minimum purchaseΒ₯5,000 per storeΒ₯5,000 per store (unchanged)
Daily purchase limitΒ₯500,000/dayAbolished
Sealed packagingRequired for consumablesNo longer required
Category separationConsumable / non-consumable separateNo longer required
Refund methodInstant in-store discountAirport kiosk + e-payment
Departure proofChecked at departure90-day departure required

What Got Easier Under the New System

While the new system requires extra steps at the airport, it removes several frustrating old restrictions:

  • No Β₯500,000 daily limit β€” shop as much as you want in a single day
  • No sealed packaging requirement β€” you can open and use your purchases before departure
  • No category separation β€” buy food, cosmetics, and electronics in one transaction
  • All purchases aggregated β€” the airport kiosk automatically retrieves all records from participating stores

Shopping Tips for Tax-Free Refunds

Before November 1, 2026 (Old System Still Active)

  • Always carry your original passport β€” photocopies are not accepted
  • Ask at the store: “ε…η¨Žγ‚·γƒ§γƒƒγƒ”γƒ³γ‚°γ―γ§γγΎγ™γ‹οΌŸ” (Do you offer tax-free shopping?)
  • Remember the Β₯5,000 minimum per store
  • Keep consumables sealed in their packaging until you leave Japan

From November 1, 2026 (New System)

  • Carry your original passport at all times while shopping
  • Keep all QR code receipts from participating stores
  • Allow extra time at the airport for the kiosk refund process
  • Make sure your credit card or digital wallet is linked for the refund
  • You must depart Japan within 90 days of purchase to claim the refund

Which Airports Have Tax Refund Kiosks?

The new kiosks are being deployed at Japan’s major international departure airports:

  • Narita International Airport (NRT)
  • Haneda Airport (HND) β€” International Terminal
  • Kansai International Airport (KIX)
  • Chubu Centrair International Airport (NGO)
  • Fukuoka Airport (FUK)

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I still get a tax-free discount at the store after November 1?

No. From November 1, 2026, all stores must switch to the new “Pay First, Refund Later” model. There is no transitional overlap β€” the old system ends completely on October 31.

What if I’m in Japan before November 1 but leave after?

Purchases made before November 1 are processed under old rules at the store. Purchases made after November 1 use the new system with airport kiosk refunds.

What is the minimum purchase for a refund?

The Β₯5,000 minimum per store remains unchanged under the new system.

Is the refund exactly 10%?

Japan’s standard consumption tax is 10%, which is what you get refunded on most goods. Groceries and non-alcoholic beverages are taxed at a reduced 8% rate.

Want the Complete Japan Guide?

Get everything you need for life in Japan β€” banking, health insurance, housing, Suica, taxes and more β€” in one downloadable PDF guide.

Get the Japan Expat Starter Kit

More Japan Shopping Guides

πŸ“š More Japan Guides: Suica Card Β· PayPay Guide Β· Convenience Stores Β· Best VPN for Japan Β· Japan eSIM

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *