Asahi Shuzo (旭酒造), maker of the iconic Dassai (獺祭) brand, has transformed from a struggling rural brewery in Yamaguchi Prefecture into Japan’s most recognized sake brand worldwide. With ¥19.5 billion ($125M) in annual revenue, exports to 30+ countries, an $80 million brewery in New York’s Hudson Valley, and an audacious ¥100 billion revenue target, Dassai represents the most ambitious global expansion in sake history. The company’s radical strategy — producing exclusively Junmai Daiginjo, the highest-grade sake — has rewritten industry rules and positioned Japanese sake as a luxury category on par with fine wine and premium spirits. This intelligence report examines every dimension of the Dassai phenomenon.

Company Overview

Item Details
Company Name Dassai Inc. (株式会社獺祭) — formerly Asahi Shuzo Co., Ltd. (旭酒造株式会社)
Name Change June 1, 2025 — rebranded from Asahi Shuzo to Dassai Inc. for global brand recognition
Founded 1948 — Iwakuni City, Yamaguchi Prefecture
Headquarters 2167-4 Shuto, Iwakuni City, Yamaguchi Prefecture, Japan
Chairman Hiroshi Sakurai (桜井博志) — 3rd generation; EY Entrepreneur of the Year Japan
President & CEO Kazuhiro Sakurai (桜井一宏) — 4th generation; CEO since 2015
Annual Revenue ¥19.5 billion (~$125M USD) as of FY2024/9
Revenue incl. Dassai Blue >¥20 billion (~$129M USD)
Export Markets 30+ countries across Asia, North America, Europe, and Oceania
Overseas Revenue Share ~47% of sake revenue (¥87 billion of ¥187 billion sake sales)
Core Product 100% Junmai Daiginjo — exclusively premium-grade sake
Rice Used Yamada Nishiki (山田錦) only — Japan’s finest sake rice
Revenue Target ¥100 billion ($639M) — ¥30B domestic + ¥70B overseas

Corporate History: From Near-Bankruptcy to Global Icon

Year Milestone
1948 Asahi Shuzo founded in rural Iwakuni, Yamaguchi Prefecture
1984 Hiroshi Sakurai becomes 3rd generation CEO; inherits a nearly bankrupt brewery with declining sales
1990 Launches the first Dassai Junmai Daiginjo — a radical pivot from cheap table sake to premium-only production
1999 Abolishes the traditional Toji (杜氏) master brewer system; shifts to year-round data-driven brewing with salaried employees
2006 Kazuhiro Sakurai joins the company after working in an unrelated industry in Tokyo
2013 Opens the massive 12-story Iwakuni headquarters brewery with state-of-the-art automation
2015 Kazuhiro Sakurai succeeds his father as 4th generation President & CEO
2018 Opens Dassaï Joël Robuchon restaurant in Paris — collaboration with legendary French chef
2023 Grand opening of $80M Dassai Blue Sake Brewery in Hyde Park, New York
2024 Revenue hits ¥19.5B; overseas share reaches 47%; Dassai Blue sales reach ¥660M ($4.24M)
2025 Company renamed to Dassai Inc. (effective June 1); sponsors Academy Awards with sake served at ceremony
2025 Opens L’IZAKAYA DASSAI Yannick Alléno in Paris with Michelin 3-star chef
2025 Collaborates with Austria on “DASSAI Composing the Future” for Osaka-Kansai Expo

The trajectory is remarkable: a 165-fold increase in revenue since Hiroshi Sakurai took over in 1984. From a rural brewery producing generic sake with annual revenue of roughly ¥100 million, Asahi Shuzo has become Japan’s most internationally recognized sake producer.

The Dassai Philosophy: Junmai Daiginjo or Nothing

What makes Dassai extraordinary in the sake industry is its refusal to produce anything other than Junmai Daiginjo — the highest classification of sake, which requires rice to be polished to at least 50% of its original size. While most sake breweries produce a range from basic Futsushu (table sake) to premium Daiginjo, Dassai eliminated everything below the premium tier. This is equivalent to a Bordeaux winery deciding to produce only Grand Cru.

Product Lineup

Product Rice Polishing Ratio Character Price Range (720ml)
Dassai 45 45% Clean, fruity, accessible entry point; elegant aromatics $20–$30
Dassai 39 39% Refined complexity; balanced sweetness and acidity $35–$50
Dassai 23 23% Dense aroma, tropical fruit notes; long, lingering finish $80–$120
Dassai Beyond Undisclosed (below 23%) Ultra-premium; 10 years of R&D; limited annual production $400–$700+
Dassai Nigori 45% Unfiltered, creamy texture; approachable for newcomers $25–$35

Why 23%?

The story behind Dassai 23 reveals the competitive spirit driving the brand. Originally planned at a 25% polishing ratio to be “Japan’s most polished sake,” Hiroshi Sakurai discovered a Nada producer already selling sake polished to 24%. He immediately pushed to 23% — and that number became the brand’s most iconic product. Yet the company insists: “We do not believe the sake is great simply because it has the best polishing ratio. We are striving for Japan’s best, most delicious sake.” Not all sake brewed with 23% polished rice meets quality standards — batches that fall short are downgraded and never bottled as Dassai 23.

Data-Driven Brewing: Replacing the Toji System

In 1999, Dassai made a radical break with tradition by abolishing the Toji (杜氏) master brewer system — a centuries-old practice where an itinerant master brewer would come to the brewery during winter months. Instead, Dassai implemented:

This approach was initially controversial but proved essential for consistent quality at scale — something traditional Toji-dependent breweries struggle to achieve.

Global Expansion: 30+ Countries and Counting

Dassai’s international strategy is the most aggressive in the Japanese sake industry. With nearly half of revenue coming from overseas and a long-term target of 70% international sales, the company is building sake into a global luxury beverage category.

Key International Markets

Region Key Markets Strategy
North America United States, Canada Dassai Blue local production in New York; premium positioning in fine dining; Academy Awards sponsorship
Europe France, UK, Germany, Italy, Austria Paris restaurant partnerships (Joël Robuchon, Yannick Alléno); Michelin-starred dining integration
Asia China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Singapore, South Korea Premium gifting culture; high-end restaurant distribution; growing wine-alternative positioning
Oceania Australia Premium hospitality channels; Japanese restaurant networks
Middle East UAE, others Luxury hotel and restaurant distribution

International Restaurant Ventures

Venue Location Partner Opened
Dassaï Joël Robuchon Paris, France Late Joël Robuchon (Michelin 3-star) April 2018
L’IZAKAYA DASSAI Yannick Alléno Paris, France Yannick Alléno (Michelin 3-star) November 2024
Dassai Blue Tasting Room Hyde Park, New York Culinary Institute of America (CIA) September 2023

The New York Brewery: Dassai Blue

The Dassai Blue Sake Brewery in Hyde Park, New York, represents the boldest bet in modern sake history — and the first major Japanese sake brewery built in the United States designed to produce ultra-premium Junmai Daiginjo.

Dassai Blue Facility Overview

Specification Details
Location 5 St Andrew Road, Hyde Park, Dutchess County, New York
Investment $80 million
Facility Size 55,000 sq ft (brewery + tasting room) across two buildings
Annual Capacity 140,000 nine-liter cases (~1.26 million liters)
Production Volume (2024) ~110,000 liters
Revenue (2024) ¥660 million (~$4.24M USD)
Staff 32+ employees (veteran Iwakuni brewers + local recruits)
Architect Pelli Clarke & Partners
Opened September 2023 (Grand Opening December 2023)
Product Dassai Blue — three expressions of Junmai Daiginjo

Strategic Rationale

The Hyde Park location was chosen for its proximity to the Culinary Institute of America (CIA), America’s most prestigious culinary school, located just a five-minute walk away. This allows Dassai to:

CEO Kazuhiro Sakurai has stated the company’s ambition to “step into areas other than Japanese cuisine” — making sake a universal dining companion rather than a niche ethnic beverage.

Japanese Sake Export Market

Dassai’s global ambitions are riding a broader wave of Japanese sake export growth. The latest trade data confirms sake’s rising international profile.

Sake Export Performance (2020–2025)

Year Export Value (JPY) Export Volume (Liters) Markets Reached Avg. Price/Liter
2020 ¥24.1B ~23M ~70 ¥1,048
2021 ¥40.2B ~27M ~73 ¥1,489
2022 ¥47.5B ~31M ~76 ¥1,532
2023 ¥41.1B ~30M ~78 ¥1,370
2024 ¥43.3B ~31M ~79 ¥1,397
2025 ¥45.9B 33.55M 81 (record) ¥1,368

Top Sake Export Destinations (2025)

Rank Country Value (JPY) Volume (kL) YoY Change (Value)
1 China ¥13.3B 6,660 kL +13.9%
2 United States ¥11.0B 7,720 kL -3.5%
3 Hong Kong ¥4.5B 2,100 kL +5.2%
4 South Korea ¥2.8B 1,800 kL +8.1%
5 Taiwan ¥2.4B 1,500 kL +4.7%

Source: Japan Customs / Nippon.com. Asia accounts for 63% of total sake export value (¥28.8B). The average export price per liter has increased 1.8x over 10 years, reflecting premiumization — a trend Dassai has both driven and benefited from.

Financial Analysis

Revenue Growth Trajectory

Period Revenue Notes
1984 ~¥100M Hiroshi Sakurai takes over near-bankrupt brewery
2000 ~¥1B Dassai brand gaining domestic traction
2010 ~¥5B Rapid growth in premium sake market
2018 ~¥13B International expansion accelerating
2022 ¥16.5B Record high; 165x increase since 1984
FY2024/9 ¥19.5B Overseas revenue reaches ¥8.7B (47% of sake sales)
Target ¥100B ¥30B domestic + ¥70B overseas (90% overseas long-term)

Revenue Breakdown (FY2024/9)

Segment Revenue Share
Domestic Sake Sales ~¥100B ~53%
Overseas Exports ~¥87B ~47%
Dassai Blue (NY) ¥660M ~3.4% (separate entity)
Total (incl. Blue) >¥20B 100%

Key Financial Characteristics

Competitive Landscape

Dassai operates in a fragmented Japanese sake industry with approximately 1,400 active breweries. However, in the premium international segment, it faces competition from a select group of high-profile brands.

Premium Sake Brand Comparison

Brand Brewery Prefecture Positioning Global Reach Key Differentiator
Dassai Dassai Inc. Yamaguchi 100% Junmai Daiginjo; data-driven brewing at scale 30+ countries; NY brewery Only Junmai Daiginjo; global brand recognition
Kubota Asahi Shuzo (Niigata) Niigata Clean, dry, food-friendly; 193-year heritage Moderate international Seasonality-driven; balanced dry style
Hakkaisan Hakkaisan Brewery Niigata Crisp, clean; quality at all tiers Growing international Even Futsushu at 60% polishing; shochu diversification
Juyondai Takagi Shuzo Yamagata Ultra-premium; cult following; extreme scarcity Very limited Near-impossible to find; bottles exceed $1,000
Kokuryu Kokuryu Sake Brewing Fukui Premium Daiginjo; traditional craftsmanship Moderate Ryu (Dragon) series; consistent award winner
Dewazakura Dewazakura Sake Brewery Yamagata Ginjo pioneer; fruit-forward profile Growing Credited with popularizing Ginjo-style sake

Dassai’s Competitive Advantages

Advantage Details
Brand Recognition Far and away the most recognized Japanese sake brand internationally; “the Dom Pérignon of sake”
Scale + Quality Unique ability to produce premium Junmai Daiginjo at industrial scale without quality compromise
Global Infrastructure Only major sake brand with a U.S. production facility; Paris restaurants; Academy Awards presence
Data-Driven Brewing Year-round production with precise digital monitoring; not dependent on seasonal Toji masters
Premium-Only Strategy 100% Junmai Daiginjo focus creates clear brand positioning that competitors with mixed portfolios cannot replicate

Business Opportunities

The Dassai story illuminates several significant business opportunities in the Japanese sake sector:

Opportunities for International Partners

Opportunity Description Potential Partners
Premium Sake Distribution As Dassai targets ¥70B in overseas revenue, distribution partnerships in underserved markets (Latin America, Africa, Eastern Europe) are opening up Beverage distributors, wine importers, luxury goods retailers
Restaurant & Hospitality Integration Dassai’s Paris model (partnering with Michelin chefs) can be replicated in London, New York, Singapore, Dubai Fine dining groups, hotel chains, chef partnerships
Sake Education & Tourism The CIA partnership model creates opportunities for culinary schools worldwide to integrate sake programs Culinary institutes, sommelier associations, tourism boards
Sake Brewing Technology Dassai’s data-driven brewing approach creates demand for IoT sensors, fermentation analytics, and quality control technology AgTech / FoodTech companies, automation providers
Yamada Nishiki Supply Chain As premium sake demand grows, Yamada Nishiki rice cultivation and supply chain optimization present agricultural opportunities Agricultural cooperatives, precision farming companies
Local Craft Sake Production The Dassai Blue model proves premium sake can be brewed outside Japan, opening doors for local production in other countries Craft beverage entrepreneurs, investors

Outlook & Strategic Assessment

Growth Drivers

Key Risks & Challenges

Risk Severity Mitigation
Yamada Nishiki supply constraints High Long-term contract farming; potential organic rice expansion
Brand dilution from mass availability Medium Dassai Beyond maintains ultra-premium tier; rigorous quality control
Currency volatility (JPY/USD) Medium NY local production hedges U.S. market; diversified export markets
Competition from local craft sake Low-Medium Brand heritage and scale create significant moat
Generational succession risk Low Successful CEO transition already completed (Hiroshi → Kazuhiro)
Japanese domestic sake market decline Medium Aggressive overseas expansion targets (90% overseas long-term)

Strategic Assessment

Dassai Inc. is executing what may be the most ambitious internationalization strategy in Japanese food and beverage history. The company’s ¥100 billion revenue target — a 5x increase from current levels — requires Dassai to transform sake from a niche category into a mainstream global luxury beverage. With the Dassai Blue production facility ramping up in the U.S., strategic partnerships with world-class chefs in Paris, an Academy Awards sponsorship, and the brand simplification of renaming the entire company after its flagship product, the pieces are in place for the next phase of growth.

The biggest question is not whether Dassai can grow — it is whether sake as a category can follow the path of Japanese whisky and achieve mainstream global recognition. If it can, Dassai is positioned to be the Yamazaki of sake: the breakout brand that defines the category for international consumers.


This report was researched and produced by Japonity.com — Japan Discovery & Business Intelligence Platform.

Need a custom market research report on Japanese industries, companies, or products? We accept commissioned research projects (調査代行). Contact us to discuss your specific intelligence needs.

Published: April 2026

Interested in Japanese business opportunities?

Whether you're looking for technology partners, engineering talent, or market insights — we can help connect you with the right Japanese organizations.

Get in Touch →