If you have ever found something extraordinary on this site and then hit a wall trying to buy it, this page is for you.
I grew up in Japan, so for a long time I did not think of Japanese everyday products as especially rare or difficult to find. Good scissors, absorbent towels, sturdy notebooks, well-made pens, nail clippers that actually cut cleanly — these were just normal things you could buy at a stationery store, department store, hardware shop, or even a good neighborhood retailer.
It was only after I moved to the U.S. that I realized how difficult many of these products are to buy outside Japan.
People overseas may hear about a product on Reddit, in a forum, or in a review, but when they try to buy it, the process often becomes complicated. The Japanese retailer may not ship internationally. The brand may not have an English website. The exact model may not be listed on Amazon. Even when the product is available, it may be marked up, renamed, discontinued overseas, or sold through a third-party seller that is hard to verify.
This page is about that gap: why some of the best Japanese everyday products are hard to buy outside Japan, what usually causes the difficulty, and what to watch for before ordering.
Japan has no shortage of world-class products. It has a shortage of easy ways to get them to the rest of the world. That gap is exactly what we are here to close.
For products available on Amazon US or through international retailers, the process is straightforward. We link directly to those options, and you can order them like anything else.
But many of the best Japanese products are not sold that way. The ones with cult followings, the ones still made by small workshops, the ones that quietly last for decades — many of these are sold only inside Japan. They may be listed on Japanese e-commerce platforms like Yahoo! Japan Shopping, Rakuten Japan, or a brand’s own website. The pages are in Japanese, the payment systems are Japanese, and the seller may only ship to addresses in Japan.
In those cases, the easiest bridge is usually a Japanese buying or forwarding service, often called a proxy service.
A proxy service is a company with a warehouse address in Japan. You tell them what you want to buy, they buy it on your behalf, it gets shipped to their warehouse, and then they forward it to you wherever you are in the world. Think of it as having a friend in Tokyo who shops for you.
The service we recommend is Buyee. It is one of the largest and most established proxy services in Japan, with English-language support, a straightforward interface, and access to millions of Japanese listings across Yahoo! Japan, Mercari Japan, and other platforms. We link to Buyee on every Japan-only product page on this site.
Buyee is not the only option, but it is the one we feel comfortable recommending because of its track record and the breadth of what it covers. If you have used another proxy service and loved it, that works too.
Go to buyee.jp and sign up. It takes about three minutes. You will need an email address and a shipping address.
Every Japan-only product on this site has a gold-bordered “Buy from Japan” button. Click it and it will take you directly to the relevant listing or search results on Buyee.
Buyee handles the purchase from the Japanese seller on your behalf. You pay Buyee in your currency. No Japanese bank account, no Japanese address, no Japanese required.
The item arrives at Buyee’s Japan warehouse, gets inspected, and is forwarded to your door. Shipping options range from economy to express. Most items arrive within one to three weeks depending on where you are.
This is the part we like best.
Proxy services charge a fee on top of the product price, and you will pay international shipping on top of that. The exact cost depends on the item and where you are shipping to, but as a rough guide:
Buyee service fee: around 300 yen per item, plus a small percentage. Shipping: varies by weight and destination. A small item like a nail clipper or a fountain pen will be very reasonable. Something like a rice cooker will cost more to ship.
Our honest take: for most BIFL items, the total cost is still lower than what you would pay through a third-party reseller or a grey-market import. And for items that are genuinely unavailable outside Japan, there is no comparison to make.
If you are ordering multiple items, consolidate them in Buyee’s warehouse before shipping. Buyee offers a consolidation service that can significantly reduce your total shipping cost.
Buyee is a legitimate, established business that has been operating since 2008. Your payment goes through standard international payment processors. The items are real products from real Japanese sellers.
On customs: most personal-use items under a certain value threshold clear customs without issue. For higher-value items like a Grand Seiko watch, you may be asked to pay import duty depending on your country. This is worth checking for your specific country before you order. Buyee provides documentation to help with customs clearance.
Browse all the Japan-only products on this site, each one with a direct Buyee link ready to go.
Browse All Products Every JP Only badge on this site links through Buyee