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πŸ‡―πŸ‡΅ Japan Tip Calculator

Japan tip calculator for 2026. Tipping is NOT customary in Japan and can cause confusion. Japanese service culture (omotenashi) considers excellent hospitality a professional standard, not incentivized by tips. Default is 0%. Some upscale venues add a 10-15% service charge (sabisu-ryo). Use this tool to model optional amounts if needed.

Contexte de la Regle Regionale

JuridictionJapan
DeviseΒ₯ (JPY)
En vigueur depuis1 janv. 2025
Version1.0
Derniere verification1 mars 2026
Prochaine verification1 juil. 2026
Source: Japanese hospitality customs

Japan Taux et Regles

Fourchettes de Pourboire

Restaurant (standard)0%
Taxi0%
Ryokan (kokorozuke, optional)5%
Hotel porter (rare)5%

Tipping is NOT customary in Japan. Omotenashi (hospitality) culture views excellent service as a professional standard. Some upscale venues add 10-15% sabisu-ryo (service charge).

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$USD
0%100%

Resultat

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Avis : Avis : Ce calculateur utilise les regles publiques en vigueur a la date indiquee. Les resultats sont a titre informatif uniquement. Verifiez aupres des sources officielles. Derniere verification: 1 mars 2026.

Formule

Tip = Bill x (Tip Percent / 100), Total = Bill + Tip

Japan default tip is 0%. Excellent service is the cultural norm (omotenashi), not something earned by tipping. If a 10-15% service charge (sabisu-ryo) appears on the bill, it is automatically added by the venue. Izakayas may charge an otoshi (small appetizer, JPY 300-500) instead. No additional tip is expected in any scenario.

Questions Frequentes

Is tipping rude in Japan?

Tipping can be confusing or awkward for Japanese service staff. In restaurants, a waiter may chase you down to return money left on the table, thinking you forgot it. It is not deeply offensive, but it is outside cultural norms. The best way to show appreciation is through polite words (arigatou gozaimasu) and returning as a customer.

Do any Japanese restaurants add a service charge?

Yes. Some upscale restaurants, hotel dining rooms, and nightlife venues add a 10-15% service charge (sabisu-ryo) to the bill automatically. This is included in the total and there is no expectation to add more. Izakayas (casual pubs) often charge an otoshi (small appetizer charge of JPY 300-500) that functions similarly.

How do you tip at a ryokan?

The traditional practice of kokorozuke involves placing JPY 1,000-3,000 in a small envelope and giving it to your nakai-san (personal attendant) at the beginning of your stay. However, this tradition is fading and most modern ryokan do not expect it. Staff will not be offended if you skip kokorozuke.

Why does Japan have a no-tipping culture?

Japanese service culture (omotenashi) considers excellent hospitality a professional duty and point of pride, not something earned through financial incentive. Workers are paid fair wages. Tipping implies that good service requires extra payment, which contradicts the philosophy that every customer deserves the best service regardless.

What about tipping tour guides in Japan?

Private tour guides who work with international tourists may accept tips, as they understand Western customs. If offering a tip, present it in an envelope (never hand bare cash in Japan). Group tour guides from travel agencies generally do not expect tips. A thoughtful small gift from your home country is always more appropriate than cash in Japan.

What is the otoshi charge at izakayas?

Otoshi is a small appetizer (usually edamame, pickles, or a small salad) automatically served when you sit down at an izakaya, costing JPY 300-500 per person. It functions as a cover charge. You cannot refuse it. This is separate from any service charge and is a normal part of izakaya culture.

Do I tip at convenience stores or shops in Japan?

Never. Tipping at convenience stores (konbini), shops, supermarkets, or any retail establishment in Japan would cause confusion. Staff would likely try to return the money. A polite "arigatou gozaimashita" (thank you) as you leave is the appropriate gesture.

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