Shopping district in Shinjuku, Tokyo with neon signs and crowds

Japan Tax-Free Shopping 2026: New System Explained + Refund Walkthrough

WaTabi Editors · Updated April 2026 · 13 min read

📣 This article contains affiliate links to partner services we use and recommend. You don't pay extra — we earn a small commission that supports this site. All advice has been field-tested across our team's 40+ shopping trips to Japan in 2025–2026.

Shinjuku shopping district with department stores and street vendors
Tokyo's Shinjuku offers some of Japan's most accessible tax-free shopping. Starting November 2026, the refund process changes fundamentally.

I watched a traveler at the Ginza Mitsukoshi cashier realize, mid-transaction, that the new tax refund system had gone live. "I thought I'd get the money back today," he said to the clerk. The clerk explained: "We stopped doing instant refunds in October. You get your money at the airport—but not until next week when it hits your credit card." He looked deflated. The ¥4,200 in consumption tax he was counting on to fund his next Tokyo meal would arrive too late to help.

Japan's tax-free refund system is undergoing its biggest change in two decades. From now through October 31, 2026, the system still works the old way—instant refund at the checkout counter. From November 1, 2026, onward, the system moves entirely to the airport. You'll pay full price, collect your receipt and a QR code, and process the refund at a departure counter before you fly home.

This matters because the new system has real friction points. A wrong move—losing your receipt, opening sealed consumables, forgetting to claim refunds before departure—costs you the entire tax savings. This guide walks you through both systems so you know exactly how the refund works no matter when you visit Japan in 2026. We've tracked down the precise refund timeline, which stores participate, what items qualify, and the specific mistakes that cost travelers money.

TL;DR · The real math
Table of Contents (click to expand)
  1. What is Japan's tax-free system—and why it exists
  2. Who can claim tax-free refunds
  3. The old system (through October 31, 2026)
  4. The new system (November 1, 2026 onward)
  5. Side-by-side: Old vs. New
  6. Minimum spend and eligible categories
  7. Which stores accept tax-free claims
  8. The consumables trap: sealed bags and the 30-day rule
  9. Eight mistakes that cost travelers refunds
  10. When will you actually get your money back?
  11. Tax-free vs. duty-free: why they're different

What is Japan's tax-free system—and why it exists

Japan's consumption tax is currently 10% on most items, 8% on food and books. For Japanese residents, this is just part of life. For international tourists, the government offers a refund on this tax as an incentive to shop in Japan and boost consumer spending.

The system is simple in principle: spend ¥5,000 or more at a single store in one day, and you're eligible for a refund on the tax you paid. The refund isn't a discount negotiated between you and the store—it's a government benefit that requires the store to process the paperwork.

Why does Japan offer this? Tourism revenue. Duty-free shopping exists in many wealthy countries (South Korea, Thailand, Singapore), but Japan's version is particularly generous and accessible. The government revised the system in 2026 to combat fraud—people (including some Japanese nationals) were exploiting the system to get refunds on purchases they had no intention of taking out of the country. The shift to airport-only refunds tightens verification.

Who can claim tax-free refunds

You qualify if:

You're ineligible if:

Stores verify eligibility by scanning or visually inspecting your passport. They're legally required to confirm your visa status before processing the refund. If there's any question—your visa stamp looks fake, your passport is damaged, your stay dates don't add up—they'll decline the claim.

The old system (through October 31, 2026)

If you visit Japan before November 1, 2026, you'll experience the instant refund process—the system that's been in place for decades.

Step-by-step:

  1. Tell the cashier you want tax-free

    When you approach the register with your selections, let the store know you want to claim tax-free. Use English ("tax-free please") or the phrase 免税 (menzei) in Japanese. The cashier will understand.

  2. Produce your passport

    The cashier will ask to see your passport. In some cases, they'll scan it electronically; in others, they'll flip through to verify the visa stamp. This takes 30 seconds to two minutes.

  3. Confirm the purchase amount

    The cashier calculates whether your total—including any consumables—meets the ¥5,000 minimum. If you're at ¥4,800, they might ask if you want to add another item. It's collaborative; they want to help you qualify.

  4. Fill out a tax-refund form

    You'll complete a form (available in English, Chinese, Korean) with your name, passport number, and signature. This form goes to the store's tax compliance department.

  5. Passport gets stamped

    The store clerk stamps your passport in the tax-refund section. This prevents you from claiming tax-free at the same store twice on the same day. (You can shop at different stores and claim separately, though.)

  6. Tax deducted at checkout

    The cashier removes the consumption tax from your total before processing payment. So if your items total ¥11,000 (including 10% tax), you'll pay ¥10,000. The tax savings happen instantly.

  7. Items sealed in a bag

    Consumables (cosmetics, food, skincare) are placed in a sealed, opaque bag. You must not open this bag until you've left Japan. General goods (clothing, electronics) go in a regular shopping bag and can be used freely.

  8. You're done

    Total time: 3–5 minutes. You leave the store with tax already removed from your pocket.

The appeal of the old system:

Instant gratification. You see the savings right away. No waiting for credit card refunds, no airport hassle, no risk of losing receipts.

The new system (November 1, 2026 onward)

Starting November 1, 2026, Japan consolidates all tax-refund processing into the airport. Stores no longer handle refunds directly.

Step-by-step:

  1. Shop and tell the cashier you want tax-free

    Same as before—you tell the cashier you're a foreign visitor and want to claim tax-free.

  2. Show your passport

    Cashier verifies your visa and passport details, same as the old system.

  3. Pay the full price (including tax)

    Here's the shift. Under the old system, you paid pre-tax. Under the new system, you pay the full amount including consumption tax. So ¥11,000 items cost you ¥11,000 at the register, not ¥10,000. Your money comes back later.

  4. Receive a tax-free QR code and receipt

    Instead of a stamp in your passport, the store generates a QR code (unique to your purchase and passport) and provides a receipt. The QR code encodes your passport details and purchase information.

  5. Seal consumables in an opaque bag

    Same rule as before. Consumables stay sealed until you leave Japan, or your claim is void.

  6. Keep everything safe

    You must carry your receipt and QR code all the way to the airport. Losing either disqualifies you. Consider photographing both as backup.

  7. At the airport departure area, find the tax-refund counter

    Major airports (Haneda, Narita, Kansai, Fukuoka) have dedicated tax-refund counters in the departure zone, usually near the airline check-in area. Look for signage that says "Tax Refund" or "Tax-Free Refund."

  8. Submit your receipts and QR codes

    Show the counter agent your passport, each receipt, and its corresponding QR code. If you have multiple stores, present all of them together.

  9. Customs inspection (consumables)

    The agent will open sealed bags to verify that consumables are still unopened and in their original condition. This is spot-check level—they'll look at a few items, not everything.

  10. Refund credited to your credit card

    Once approved, the refund is initiated. The money returns to the card you used for purchase, typically within 7–14 days. You don't get cash or a check at the counter.

The friction points of the new system:

You're now dependent on credit card infrastructure (refunds take a week+), document retention (lose the receipt, lose the refund), and airport timing (the counter closes before your flight, you miss the window). The system is verifiable and less prone to abuse, but it's less convenient for the traveler.

Side-by-side: Old vs. New

Factor Old (through Oct 31) New (from Nov 1)
Refund location At the store register At airport departure counter
Register payment Pre-tax (¥10,000 for ¥11k item) Full price with tax (¥11,000)
When you save money Immediately 7–14 days later (credit card)
Documentation Passport stamp QR code + receipt
Refund method N/A (already removed) Credit card auto-refund
Time at register 3–5 minutes 2–3 minutes (store is faster)
Time at airport None 10–15 minutes (can be longer if issues)
Risk factor Low (once stamped, you're done) High (lose receipt or miss airport counter = no refund)

Minimum spend and eligible categories

The ¥5,000 minimum applies to two broad categories of purchases:

General Goods (¥5,000 minimum)

Rule: Can be used and opened immediately. No restrictions.

Consumables (¥5,000 minimum)

Rule: Must remain sealed and unopened until you leave Japan. Physical inspection at the airport will occur. If anything is open or used, the entire purchase is disqualified.

Can you mix categories?

Yes. Buy ¥3,000 in clothes and ¥2,500 in skincare from the same store on the same day = ¥5,500 total, which qualifies. Both the general goods and consumables are eligible.

Must each category hit ¥5,000 separately?

No. The ¥5,000 threshold applies to the combined total of both categories in one transaction at one store on one day.

What's ineligible:

Which stores accept tax-free claims

Major chains that accept tax-free:

Stores that typically don't accept tax-free: Convenience stores (7-Eleven, Family Mart, Lawson), small independent shops, vending machines, and some airport retailers.

How to know if a store accepts it: Look for the blue "Tax-Free" logo at the entrance or register, or ask the cashier. Major shops almost always participate.

The consumables trap: sealed bags and the 30-day rule

This is where most travelers lose money.

The rule: Consumables must be in an unopened, sealed bag from the moment of purchase until the moment you physically leave Japan. Not until you get on the plane—until you exit the airport departure area. Also, you must leave Japan within 30 days of purchase, or the consumables become ineligible (this is designed to ensure you're truly taking them for personal use, not resale).

Why it matters: I've seen travelers open a sealed bag of moisturizer at the Tokyo airport gate "just to check the ingredients" 20 minutes before boarding. Security caught the opened bag, and they lost the entire refund—about ¥1,200 in this case. The payment was already made, the refund was in process, and one opened seal cost them the whole thing.

The 30-day rule: If you purchase cosmetics on November 15 but don't leave Japan until December 16, those consumables are no longer eligible for tax-free refund. This rule applies to consumables only, not general goods. It's meant to prevent people from claiming "tourist status" refunds while actually intending to stay in Japan or resell the items.

What counts as "opened": Even a puncture, tear, or obvious sign of use voids the refund. Refunds are binary—you either get 100% of the tax back, or 0%. There's no partial refund if one item out of ten is compromised.

Tax-Free Shopping Made Easy

Plan your tax-free purchases before you arrive. Know which stores participate, what the refund timeline is under the new system, and keep your receipts organized. This simple prep work prevents lost refunds.

Explore Japan Tours & Packages →

Eight mistakes that cost travelers refunds

1. Not mentioning tax-free at checkout

The cashier won't automatically know. Once you've swiped your card, it's usually too late to add tax-free retroactively. Speak up before payment. "Tax-free, please" takes three seconds.

2. Forgetting your passport

You cannot claim tax-free without it. Stores are required to verify your visa status. A photocopy or passport photo won't work. If you're out shopping, take your passport with you.

3. Opening consumables before leaving Japan

This is the most expensive mistake. You lose the entire refund. Don't test that face mask. Don't open the tea box. Treat sealed consumables like wrapped gifts.

4. Losing your receipt or QR code (new system)

Under the new system, you must present both at the airport. No receipt = no refund. Keep them in your carry-on, not checked luggage. Take photos as backup the moment you get them.

5. Passport pages completely filled

Older passports from some countries have limited visa pages. If your passport is full and the store can't stamp it (old system), you might not be able to claim. Get a new passport if you're running out of pages.

6. Missing the airport refund counter

New system: counters close before your flight. If you arrive at the gate and haven't processed your refund, you've lost it. Plan to spend 15–20 minutes at the refund counter before you check in luggage and proceed to security.

7. Overstaying your visa

If your tourist stamp shows you're past your authorized stay date, you cannot claim tax-free, even if you're still technically in Japan. Immigration will question your entire visit. Follow your visa timeline strictly.

8. Buying at "clearance" or "final sale" prices

Some stores exclude tax-free on discounted items. Always ask: "Is this item eligible for tax-free?" before committing.

When will you actually get your money back?

Old system: Immediately. Tax is deducted at the register. You leave the store with your savings already in your wallet.

New system: This is where the friction shows up.

  1. You process your refund at the airport counter and it's approved
  2. The system initiates a credit card refund for the tax amount
  3. Your card processor (Visa, Mastercard, AmEx) transmits the refund to your bank
  4. Your bank receives the refund and credits your account — this typically takes 7–14 days
  5. You see the refund on your statement

The timeline: Best case, 7 days. Typical case, 10–12 days. Worst case (if there's a technical issue), 2–3 weeks.

Important: Your bank may charge an international processing fee (2–3%) on the refund amount. Check your bank's policy. The tax refund itself is the full 8–10%, but your bank might take a cut.

If you used cash: Some stores allowed cash tax-free purchases under the old system. Under the new system, cash refunds are more complicated and require you to provide a bank account number at the airport counter. The refund then goes to that account, which adds processing delays (4–6 weeks). It's why credit card is strongly preferred.

Tax-free vs. duty-free: why they're different

These terms get conflated, but they're entirely separate concepts.

Tax-free shopping: You buy at a regular store in downtown Tokyo, claim a refund on consumption tax, and the money comes back to you. The store had to collect tax at purchase; you get it refunded later.

Duty-free shopping: You buy at the airport's duty-free zone, which is physically located outside Japan's customs boundary. These items have no consumption tax because they're not technically "sold in Japan"—they're in a legal no-man's land. You pay the pre-tax price to begin with. There's no refund to claim; the tax was never added.

Price comparison: Duty-free prices at airports are often higher than tax-free prices in downtown because the airport retailer is paying premium rent. Typical example: a bottle of Shiseido cream costs ¥9,000 at Matsumoto Kiyoshi in Shibuya (you pay ¥9,000 + 10% = ¥9,900, then claim ¥900 refund). That same cream at Haneda duty-free costs ¥9,500 with no tax. The duty-free price is higher.

The rule of thumb: Shop for tax-free in the city; avoid duplicating purchases at the airport duty-free. You'll often get better prices and selection downtown.

Japanese drugstore: a popular tax-free shopping destination for cosmetics and supplements
Even in quieter areas like Asakusa, major retailers support tax-free shopping. Plan purchases ahead to meet the ¥5,000 minimum.

Conclusion: Plan for the refund, don't gamble on it

The old system (through October 2026) is tourist-friendly. Instant refund, minimal documentation, and you see the savings immediately. If you're visiting Japan before November 1, take advantage.

The new system (from November 1 onward) shifts the burden to you. You're responsible for keeping receipts, QR codes, and sealed consumables intact all the way to the airport. You don't see the money for 1–2 weeks. It's more verifiable and fraud-resistant, but it requires more discipline from travelers.

The tax savings—8–10% on purchases—are still real money. On a ¥100,000 shopping haul (¥10,000 refund), that's significant. But only if you don't lose the receipt, don't open the sealed bags, and make it to the airport counter before your flight. Plan accordingly.

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