Introduction
After living in Japan for years, I welcome every traveler with open arms — but there are moments I think silently: "Oh no, please don't do that." Japanese people rarely say anything out loud. That's exactly why so many tourists leave without ever knowing.
This guide isn't criticism. It's to help you enjoy Japan more deeply — with the unwritten rules only locals truly know.
Part 1: Things That Quietly Uncomfortable Locals
1. Talking Loudly on the Train
Japanese trains are extraordinarily quiet. Locals almost never answer phone calls. Conversations happen in whispers. When a group of tourists speaks loudly in a foreign language, you'll often see nearby passengers quietly move to another car.
The rule: Cut your volume in half on trains. If you get a call, a simple "I'll call you back" gesture is enough.
2. Standing on the Wrong Side of the Escalator
In Tokyo, stand on the left and leave the right side free for people in a hurry. In Osaka it's the opposite — stand on the right. For busy commuters, a blocked escalator lane is a real source of stress.
The rule: Tokyo & Kyoto = stand left. Osaka = stand right.
3. Eating While Walking
Eating a convenience store onigiri or takoyaki while strolling through the streets is generally frowned upon in Japan — especially near temples, shrines, or residential areas. The correct move is to stop somewhere nearby and finish before continuing.
Exception: Street food stalls at festivals (yatai) are zones where eating while walking is fine. Context is everything.
4. Where Does the Trash Go?
Japan has almost no public trash cans. This traces back to the 1995 Tokyo subway sarin attack, after which most public bins were removed as a security measure. Feeling lost about where to put your trash is completely understandable — but leaving it on the street is absolutely not okay.
Solution: Bought something at a convenience store? Use their bin. Everything else? Carry it back to your hotel. Locals do this every day.
5. Photography at Shrines and Temples
Posing in front of a torii gate or a Buddha statue is one thing. Blocking the path to the offering altar, stepping into sacred areas for a photo, or accidentally capturing people praying in your background — that's where it gets uncomfortable.
The rule: Always check for no-photography signs. If people are nearby, a quick "is this okay?" gesture goes a long way.
🔒 The dining etiquette section (Part 2) covers 7 more essential rules — oshibori, chopstick taboos, itadakimasu, slurping noodles, izakaya toast culture, conveyor belt sushi, and why you should never tip.
Read the full article on Ghost → https://shogunjapan.ghost.io/i-live-in-japan-what-locals-wish-tourists-knew-especially-at-the-dinner-table/
Shogun_japan — Creator living in Japan, writing about culture, food, and travel from the inside.
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