Do You Tip in Japan? The Short Answer for Every Situation

No. Tipping is not the custom anywhere in Japan — not at restaurants, not in taxis, not at hotels, not for hairdressers, and not for the guide who spent all day showing you around. Good service is already what you paid for, and offering extra cash on top of the bill tends to confuse waitstaff more than flatter them. In the rare situations where a small gratuity is genuinely welcomed, there's a specific, low-key way to do it — that's what this page covers.
Why tipping isn't the default here
Two things explain most of it. First, service that anticipates your needs without being asked is simply considered part of doing the job well in Japan — a mindset called omotenashi (wholehearted hospitality, given without expecting anything back). A server, driver or ryokan attendant isn't performing extra effort to earn a tip; the attentiveness is the baseline. Second, the price you're quoted is understood to already cover the full cost of the service — there's no expectation of a top-up, and many businesses build a service charge or cover fee directly into the bill rather than leaving it to individual generosity.
What actually happens if you try to tip
Across taxis, restaurants and casual hotels, staff will typically decline politely — treating extra cash as an overpayment or a mistake rather than a gift, and doing their best to hand it back rather than keep it. It isn't a rebuke; returning the difference is itself considered part of doing the job properly. Save yourself (and them) the awkward exchange and simply pay the amount on the bill.
The handful of situations where a small tip is genuinely accepted
A few narrow exceptions exist, and all of them share the same shape: a personal, extended, one-on-one service rather than a standard transaction.
- Ryokan attendants (nakai) at high-end traditional inns. Guests occasionally leave a small cash gift called kokorozuke — commonly cited in the ¥1,000–¥3,000 range per stay — as thanks for exceptional personal service. It's optional, uncommon even at upscale ryokan, and never expected of a first-time guest. Our ryokan etiquette guide covers the rest of a ryokan stay.
- Private tour guides or interpreters who are used to working with international visitors, especially over a full day. Guiding services sometimes mention a range around ¥5,000–¥10,000 for a full day as a discreet thank-you, though there's no fixed rule and plenty of guides won't accept it either.
- Long private-car or intercity transfers, as opposed to an ordinary metered taxi ride, where a small gesture for the driver is sometimes offered and sometimes accepted — this is the exception, not the rule for everyday taxis.
Outside of these, don't tip — including at izakaya and casual restaurants, where the etiquette has its own local wrinkles (like the automatic otoshi starter charge) that Umami Hunt covers in more depth for dining specifically.
If you do decide to leave something
Never hand over loose cash directly, and never leave coins. The polite way is to put the money in a small envelope (a plain one from a convenience store works, or a decorative pochibukuro) and present it with both hands, ideally at the start of a stay or tour rather than as a parting transaction. Treat it as a personal thank-you gift, not a service charge you're settling.