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🧧 Japan Etiquette · First-Timer's Guide

Japanese Etiquette to Know Before You Go — How Not to Feel Awkward

Ever worried you'll break some unwritten rule in Japan without realising? Here's the honest truth: Japanese people are wonderfully kind to visitors. Learn a handful of basics — where to take off your shoes, why trains stay quiet, how to pray at a shrine, and what's off-limits — and you'll travel with total peace of mind.

Start Here

Japanese Etiquette Isn't Hard —You Only Need a Few Rules

Picture this: you've just landed in Japan for the first time, and everything looks so orderly it's almost intimidating — am I standing on the wrong side of the escalator? Am I talking too loudly? When am I supposed to bow? Honestly, that little knot of worry is something every traveller feels. But here's the good news: Japanese people are understanding and genuinely kind toward foreigners. Nobody expects you to do everything perfectly like a local — just seeing that you're making an effort to be respectful is enough to make them happy.

The heart of Japanese etiquette comes down to a single idea: "don't be a nuisance to others" (meiwaku). Almost every rule that seems odd at first traces back to it. Why stay quiet on the train, why carry your own rubbish, why queue so precisely — it's all about thinking of the people around you first. This page gathers the manners worth knowing before you go, broken down situation by situation, plus the things you should never do. Read it through and you'll travel with real confidence.

🧭 Straight up, before anything else: if you slip up on one or two things, don't panic or feel too embarrassed. Japanese people almost never call out tourists to their face — if you do something wrong, they'll usually tell you politely or quietly help out. The trick is simply to watch the people around you and follow their lead (see how others queue, where they take their shoes off). Do that and you'll get by just fine.
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Take Off Your Shoes
Before entering homes, ryokan, some temples, and any place with a raised floor (genkan).
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No Tipping
Restaurants, taxis, hotels — no tips needed. Good service is already in the price.
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Quiet on the Train
Phone on silent, no phone calls, and keep your voice down.
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Sort Your Rubbish
Bins are scarce, you must separate it, and you'll often carry it back to your room.
Table Manners

How to Eatthe Japanese Way

Japanese restaurants have a few small customs that, once you know them, let you relax and enjoy your meal — this table sums up what to do, what to avoid, and the things people most often get wrong.

SituationDo / It's fineDon't
Before & after eatingSay "itadakimasu" before you start · "gochisousama" when you finishStart eating silently without acknowledging the food
Slurping noodles (ramen/soba)Slurp loudly — go for it! It signals you're enjoying it and cools the noodles downEating slowly out of fear of the noise, or using a fork to scoop
The hot towel (oshibori)Wipe your hands before eating, then fold it and set it asideUse it on your face, neck, or to wipe the table
Soup / rice bowlsLift the small bowl up close to your mouth and sip the soup straight from itLean your face down to the table to eat (seen as animal-like)
Pouring drinksPour for others first, then let them pour for youFill your own glass before anyone else's
Paying / tippingTake the bill to the counter at the front (place cash on the tray)Tipping — don't, you may get chased down to have it returned
🍜 The thing that surprises most visitors: slurping your noodles loudly (susuru) isn't rude in Japan — it's actually a sign you're enjoying them, especially with ramen and soba. Give it a try and you'll feel like part of the place. As for chopsticks, there are a few important taboos to watch — read the "Things You Shouldn't Do" section below.
Etiquette by Situation

What to Do in Each Situation

Japanese manners change with the setting — quiet on the train, slurp away in a restaurant, a prayer ritual at a shrine. Here are the 6 situations travellers run into most often.

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🤫 Quiet first1
Trains & Public Transport
Trains & Public Transport

Japanese trains are so quiet you can hear the wheels, because everyone puts their phone on silent (manner mode) and nobody takes calls in the carriage. You can chat, but keep it low, and don't eat or drink on city trains (the shinkansen is fine).

📵Phone: silent mode, no calls in the carriage — if you must, go stand on the platform
🚶Escalators: stand on the left in Tokyo/Kanto · on the right in Osaka/Kansai (leave the other side for people in a hurry)
🚇Queueing: line up along the marks on the floor, and let people off before you board
Japan Travel Prep Guide →
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🥢 Slurping's fine2
At Restaurants
At Restaurants

Start your meal with "itadakimasu" and end with "gochisousama" to thank the food. The things that surprise people: you can slurp your noodles loudly (it means they're delicious) and you never tip. The oshibori hot towel is only for wiping your hands before you eat.

🙏Say: "itadakimasu" before eating · "gochisousama" when you finish
🍲Soup bowls: lift the bowl up close to your mouth — don't lean down to eat
💴Paying: take the bill to the front counter, place cash on the tray, no tip
Japanese Food Guide →
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🙇 A prayer ritual3
Temples & Shrines
Temples & Shrines

Before entering, purify yourself by rinsing your hands and mouth at the water basin (temizu). At a "Shinto shrine" (red torii gate) you bow twice, clap twice, pray, then bow once more. At a "Buddhist temple" you don't clap — just press your palms together and pray quietly. Remove hats and dark glasses in sacred areas.

💧temizu: rinse left hand then right, pour water into your hand to rinse your mouth (don't touch the ladle to your lips)
⛩️Shrine: bow 2 · clap 2 · bow 1 (Buddhist temple = palms together, quiet)
🚪Torii gate: avoid walking through the very centre (that's the path of the gods) — keep to the side
Kyoto Attractions →
♨️
🛁 Wash first4
At the Onsen
At the Onsen

The onsen is what makes first-timers most nervous, because you go fully nude and have to wash thoroughly before getting in. Your small towel must never touch the water, and some places still don't allow tattoos. There's a lot to it, so we've written a dedicated guide.

🚿The golden rule: sit and wash yourself clean at the shower before getting in, every time
🧖Small towel: rest it on your head or the bath's edge, never in the water — tie long hair up
📖Read in full: how to bathe, the etiquette, and tattoos in our onsen guide
Japan Onsen Guide →
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👘 Shoes off5
Ryokan & Lodging
Ryokan & Lodging

When you enter a ryokan you take off your shoes at the entrance (genkan) and switch to slippers — and you take those slippers off again before stepping onto the tatami mats. The yukata they provide is always worn left side over right. The full first-night details are in our dedicated guide.

🥿Shoes: off at the genkan · slippers off before stepping on tatami
👘Yukata: wear it left over right (right over left = for funerals)
📖Read in full: what a night in a ryokan is like, in our ryokan guide
Japan Ryokan Guide →
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🌳 Out and about6
Everyday Manners
On the Street & Everyday

On the street, Japanese people don't eat and walk (finish your food standing on the spot) and don't blow their nose loudly in public (dab with a tissue and deal with it in the restroom). A light bow with a smile works for greetings, thanks, and apologies on any occasion — and you carry your own rubbish because bins are scarce.

🍙Eating on the street: finish it standing on the spot, don't eat and walk
🤧Blowing your nose: avoid it in public — dab with a tissue and go to the restroom
🙇Bowing: a nod and a smile is enough — no handshakes or hugs
Essential Japanese Phrases →
Things You Shouldn't Do

6 Things toNever Do in Japan

Some of these seem like nothing, but Japanese people take them seriously — especially the chopstick ones, which are tied to funeral rites. Remember these 6 and you won't accidentally make your hosts uncomfortable.

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Standing chopsticks upright in rice
Absolutely not — sticking chopsticks straight up in a bowl of rice mirrors how rice is offered to the dead at funerals, and is seen as a bad omen. Rest them on a holder (hashioki) or across the rim of the bowl instead.
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Passing food chopstick to chopstick
Never pass food directly from your chopsticks to someone else's, because it resembles the bone-passing ritual after a cremation. If you're sharing, place the food on a plate first.
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Tipping
Japan has no tipping culture. Leaving a tip can come across as odd, or staff may chase you down to return it thinking you forgot. Good service is already in the price.
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Phone calls / video calls on the train
Carriages are meant to be quiet. Taking calls, playing clips out loud, or video-calling is seen as a real disturbance to others. Always set your phone to silent.
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Littering or mis-sorting rubbish
Street bins are very rare. Don't litter or jam rubbish into the wrong bin — carry it back to your accommodation, or use a konbini bin and sort it by the labels.
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Cutting in line
Japanese people queue neatly everywhere — boarding trains, waiting for lifts, entering shops. Pushing in or skipping the queue is just not acceptable. Always join the back of the line.
Survival Tips

6 Things That Make Travelling JapanSo Much Smoother

Beyond the main rules, there are small details that help you blend in with locals and avoid awkward moments. Know them and your trip gets a lot easier.

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A Light Bow Is Plenty
Don't fret about the angle. A small nod with a smile covers greetings, thanks, and apologies — and there's no need to shake hands or hug.
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Watch for Shoe-Off Points
If you see a raised floor (genkan), a shoe rack, or slippers laid out, take your shoes off. It happens in homes, ryokan, some temples, and floor-seating restaurants.
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Carry a Translation App
Outside the big cities few people speak English. Google Translate can translate signs and menus instantly with its camera — a big help for ordering or asking directions.
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Ask Before Photographing People
Don't photograph Japanese people (especially geisha in Kyoto) without asking. Some districts have no-photo signs, and some shops and museums ban photos too.
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Keep Cash on You
Big cities increasingly take cards and IC cards, but small shops, temples, shrines, and many coin-operated machines are still cash-only. Carry coins and small notes.
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Give and Receive With Both Hands
Hand over or take a business card, change, or a credit card with both hands, or place it on the tray the shop provides — it's a mark of respect in Japan.
Map

Japan's Major Citieson the Map

A handy detail to know — some manners differ by region. On escalators in Tokyo (Kanto) you stand on the left, but in Osaka (Kansai) you stand on the right. Here are the major cities on the map.

Related Guides

Read On Before You Go — Phrases, Onsen, and Prep

🗣️

Essential Japanese Phrases

Just enough to get by — greetings, ordering food, asking directions, shopping, emergencies, with romaji and kana readings.

Essential Phrases →
♨️

Japan Onsen Guide

How to bathe step by step, the etiquette in the baths, and the tattoo question every first-timer needs to know before their first onsen.

Onsen Guide →
🏮

Japan Ryokan Guide

What a ryokan is, what your first night is like, per-person pricing, kaiseki, yukata, and the etiquette inside.

Ryokan Guide →
🍜

Japanese Food Guide

Ramen, sushi, izakaya, street food, and regional dishes — everything you have to try, plus the table manners that go with them.

Japanese Food Guide →
ℹ️

Japan Travel Prep

Visa · eSIM · IC card · JR Pass · yen · power plugs · etiquette — everything to sort before you fly.

Travel Prep →
🇯🇵

Full Japan Travel Guide

Every region and city, with links into city guides, hotels, and attractions across Japan.

Japan Guide →
Frequently Asked Questions

Questions AboutJapanese Etiquette

Do I have to bow every time?
Don't stress about this at all. As a tourist, a small nod with a smile is plenty. Japanese people don't expect foreigners to get the exact angle right — a slight bow when you greet someone, say thank you, or apologise is already respectful. What matters more is that you don't try to shake hands or hug, because Japanese people aren't used to physical contact when greeting.
Is it really true you don't tip?
Yes. Japan has no tipping culture, and you never tip in ordinary restaurants or taxis. Good service is the standard and is already included in the price. If you leave money on the table, staff will often chase after you to return it, thinking you forgot. Some higher-end restaurants or hotels may already add a service charge to the bill.
Can I eat while walking?
Generally Japanese people don't eat and walk at the same time — it's considered impolite and risks spills. The custom is to buy your food and eat it standing right there (in front of the shop or beside the vending machine), then move on once you're done. The exceptions are street-food districts like Nishiki and festivals (matsuri), where eating on the spot is normal. And never eat or drink on city trains (the shinkansen and long-distance trains are fine).
Can I enter an onsen if I have a tattoo?
Many onsen still don't allow guests with tattoos because of the historical association with the yakuza. But there are ways around it: cover small tattoos with a waterproof sticker, choose an onsen that states it's tattoo-friendly, or book a private bath (kashikiri) or a ryokan with an in-room bath. The full details are in our onsen guide.
Can I speak English with Japanese people?
In big cities and tourist areas like Tokyo or Kyoto, you'll usually find English signage and staff who can communicate enough. But in the countryside or at small shops, few people speak English. We recommend carrying a translation app (Google Translate has a camera function that translates signs) and learning a few basic phrases — Japanese people really appreciate it when you try to speak their language.
Where do I throw away rubbish when bins are so hard to find?
Street bins in Japan are genuinely rare, and that's normal. The custom is to carry your rubbish back to your hotel or accommodation. Places that do have bins are convenience stores (konbini), beside drink vending machines, and inside train stations. When you do throw things out, sort them by the labels (burnable / PET plastic bottles / cans and glass). We suggest carrying a small bag for your rubbish through the day.
Ready to Travel Japan

Now You Know the Manners
It's Time to Plan the Trip

Open the full Japan travel guide to pick your cities, sights, and routes, or start finding well-located places to stay early — so you're set on both the planning and the etiquette.

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