• Japan faces a ¥7-8 trillion budget gap while experiencing record tourism of 3.7 million visitors in January 2025.
  • Proposed revenue measures include increased departure fees, hotel taxes, and eliminating tax rebates for tourists.
  • Combined measures could generate $7.5 billion but still fall short of fully addressing the budget shortfall.

Japan is exploring ways to monetize its surging tourism industry as the country faces a ¥7-8 trillion ($47-54 billion) budget gap.

With visitor numbers reaching a record 3.7 million in January alone and projections of 60 million tourists annually by the decade's end, experts suggest implementing targeted taxes could generate substantial revenue.

The current departure fee of ¥1,000 ($6.70), applied to everyone leaving Japan, is considered insufficient.

Proposals include increasing this fee and implementing a more substantial arrival tax similar to New Zealand's International Visitor Conservation and Tourism Levy, which was recently tripled to NZ$100.

Accommodation taxes represent another opportunity. Tokyo's current hotel tax amounts to less than $1.50 per night, significantly lower than comparable destinations like Hawaii (18%), Barcelona (soon €15), and Paris (€10+).

A 10% tax on projected 2030 hotel spending could generate approximately ¥480 billion ($3.2 billion).

Another target for reform is the consumption tax rebate system, which allows tourists to claim back the 10% tax on purchases over ¥ $5,000.

Eliminating this rebate entirely or raising the minimum purchase threshold could add another ¥ $120 billion ($800 million) in revenue.

Additional proposals include differential pricing at cultural sites, premium visa fees for wealthy long-term visitors, and reconsidering Japan's relatively permissive foreign property ownership rules which don't require residency or impose special taxes.

While these measures combined would generate approximately $7.5 billion—still short of fully addressing the budget gap—they represent practical steps toward balancing Japan's need for tourism with fiscal responsibility.

As one analyst noted, "Japan can approach this like a subscription service—once visitors are hooked, it's time to start gradually ratcheting up prices."

For a country increasingly dependent on foreign visitors, finding the balance between remaining attractive to tourists while ensuring they contribute fairly to national finances has become a pressing policy challenge.


Edited by Annette George