Tax-free shopping in Japan: how it works for otaku buys (passport, minimums, rules)
How foreign visitors save Japan's 10% consumption tax on figures, electronics and anime goods — who qualifies, the spend minimums, what the rules are, and the changes to watch.
What tax-free means
Japan charges a 10% consumption tax. Short-term foreign visitors can buy tax-free at licensed stores, which is a meaningful saving on big otaku hauls — figures, electronics, hobby goods. Look for the 'Japan Tax-free Shop' logo; in Akihabara, big shops like Mandarake, Yodobashi Akiba and animate offer it.
Who qualifies
Non-resident foreign visitors on a short stay (temporary-visitor status), buying for personal use and taking the goods out of Japan. You must show your passport at purchase (a physical passport with the entry record; digital arrangements vary).
The basics
- There is a minimum spend (commonly ¥5,000 or more, tax excluded, per store per day).
- Goods fall into general goods (electronics, figures, clothing) and consumables (food, cosmetics); consumables are usually sealed in a special bag you shouldn't open until you leave Japan.
- Keep the goods and your documents together and be ready to show them at customs on departure.
Heads-up: the system is changing
Japan has announced a move toward a refund-style tax-free system (paying tax at purchase and getting it refunded at the airport on departure), planned to roll out around late 2026. Because the exact procedure and dates can shift, always confirm the current method at the store's tax-free counter and follow their instructions.
Practical tips for Akihabara
- Do your tax-free purchases at one big store in a single visit to clear the minimum.
- Carry your passport — without it, no tax-free.
- Some small shops and gachapon are cash-only and may not offer tax-free; plan bigger buys at the major retailers.
자주 묻는 질문
- Do I need my passport to shop tax-free?
- Yes. You must present your passport (with the entry record) at the time of purchase. Without it, the store cannot process a tax-free sale.
- What's the minimum to buy tax-free?
- Commonly ¥5,000 or more (tax excluded) per store per day. General goods and consumables are counted under their own rules, and consumables are sealed until you leave Japan. Confirm the current threshold in-store.
- Is the tax-free system changing?
- Yes — Japan has announced a shift toward a refund-at-departure model planned around late 2026. Procedures and dates may change, so always confirm the current method at the store's tax-free counter.
근처·관련
Mandarake Complex Akihabara
Eight floors of secondhand otaku treasure: vintage figures, doujinshi, retro toys, cosplay and collectibles, each floor with its own theme.
- 면세
- 영어OK
- 해외 배송
Yodobashi Camera Multimedia Akiba
Giant electronics megastore directly at Akihabara Station, with a large toy/hobby floor of figures, models, trading cards and games.
- 면세
- 영어OK
animate Akihabara
Flagship Akihabara branch of Japan's largest anime/manga goods chain — a multi-floor main building plus a second building and an ANNEX.
- 면세